History of research
Most Algonquian languages are similar enough that their relatedness has been recognized for centuries and was commented on by the early English and French colonists and explorers. For example, in 1787 (over a decade before Sir William Jones' famous speech on Indo-European), the theologian and linguist Jonathan Edwards Jr. deduced that the Algonquian languages of the eastern and central United States were "radically the same" ('radically' meaning having a common 'root', since ''radix'' is Latin for 'root'), and contrasted them with the neighboring Iroquoian languages. The earliest work on reconstructing the Algonquian proto-language was undertaken by the linguists Truman Michelson and Leonard Bloomfield. In 1925 Bloomfield reconstructed what he called "Primitive Central Algonquian", using what were at the time the four best-attested Algonquian languages: Fox,Urheimat
There remains some disagreement over the Algonquian '' Urheimat'' (homeland of the protolanguage). The initial theory, first put forth by Frank T. Siebert, Jr. in 1967 based on examining of the ranges of numerous species of plants and animals for which reliable AlgonquianPhonology
Vowels
Proto-Algonquian had four basic vowels, ''*i'', ''*e'', ''*a'', ''*o'', each of which had a long counterpart (commonly written ''*i·'', ''*e·'', ''*a·'', ''*o·''), for a total of eight vowels. The same inventory of eight vowels was found in Proto-Algic, but Proto-Algonquian did not inherit its inventory directly from Proto-Algic. Rather, several sound changes left pre-Proto-Algonquian without short *''i'' and *''o''. It is not clear that they had redeveloped by the time of Proto-Algonquian. All instances in which Bloomfield reconstructed ''*o'' can now be reconstructed as ''*we'' based on evidence from some of the Eastern languages (for example, Bloomfield's ''*nekotwi'' "one" is now reconstructed as ''*nekwetwi'' based on forms like Munsee ''nkwúti''). There are still a handful of instances where ''*o'' can be reconstructed, usually as the result of aConsonants
Proto-Algonquian had a smaller number of consonants than Proto-Algic. The reconstructed consonants are as follows (given in the Americanist phonetic notation common in the literature): The phoneme given in the table as ⟨r⟩ was reconstructed by Bloomfield as ''*l'', but Goddard has more recently argued that it should be reconstructed as ''*r'', largely because the earliest attestations of the majority of languages show some sort of rhotic as its reflex, which in many languages subsequently changed to a lateral within the historical period. The precise pronunciation of the phoneme written ⟨θ⟩ is unknown. It has merged with the reflex of ''*r'' in all Algonquian languages except forClusters
Reconstruction of the consonant clusters has been relatively difficult, and the paths the clusters take in their evolutions to the daughter languages have been complex. The current view is that the permissible consonant clusters were (first member on the left, second member across the top): In several cases the actual phonetic identity of the first member of the clusters was unknown, and Bloomfield's choice of symbols to represent them was purely arbitrary. Thus, ⟨x⟩ does not represent * ⟨ç⟩ does not represent * � and ⟨ʔ⟩ does not necessarily represent *[]. Goddard argues that Bloomfield's arbitrary symbol ⟨x⟩ be reconstructed as ''*s'', and Bloomfield's ⟨ç⟩ be reconstructed as ''*r''. While a glottal stop phoneme is not otherwise reconstructed, given that Bloomfield's ⟨ʔ⟩ in clusters seems to represent the neutralization of ''*p'' and ''*k'' and its realization in Menominee and Cheyenne is a glottal stop, it probably was indeed phonetically . The cluster written ⟨Hm⟩ shows up as ''p'' or ''m'' in most of the daughter languages, but as ''hm'' in Munsee (for example, PA ''*wi·kiwa·Hmi'' "house" becomes Ojibwe '' wiigiwaam'', Fox ''wîkiyâpi'', and Munsee ''wíikwahm''). The first member of the cluster may have been either *h or . The clusters ''*št'' and ''*hr'' are each reconstructed on the basis of only a single correspondence set (''*št'' in ''*weštikwa·ni'', "his/her head"; and ''*hr'' in ''*re·hre·wa'', "s/he breathes") and may not have been part of Proto-Algonquian. David Pentland, for example, argued that Ojibwe ''oshtigwaan'', claimed as the only form requiring the reconstruction of ''*št'', is a borrowing from Cree. However, evidence from Munsee and Blackfoot seem to also point toward ''*št'' as a valid separate cluster in PA (Munsee ''wìilùshtíikan'', Blackfoot ''moʼtokááni'', "head, hair"). Finally, all consonants and consonant clusters could be followed by ''*w'' or ''*y'' (although the sequences ''*čw'' and ''*hy'' did not occur; and ''*t'' and ''*θ'' were regularly replaced before ''*y'', for which see below).Phonological processes
Several allophonic processes, morphophonemic processes, and phonological constraints can be reconstructed. Among the most significant of these processes was that ''*t'' and ''*θ'' became ''*č'' and ''*š'' respectively before ''*i'', ''*i·'', and ''*y''. For example, the initial ''*went-'' "from there" (as in ''*wentenamwa'' "s/he takes it from there") is realized as ''*wenč-'' in the word ''*wenči·wa'' "s/he comes from there", since it precedes ''*i·''. There were several restrictions on phonotactics and the shape of the PA word that can be reconstructed. All words began with a single consonant (other than ''*h'') or vowel, or with a consonant plus ''*w'' or ''*y''; there were no sequences of consecutive vowels; and the word always ended in a short vowel. The vowels ''*i'' and ''*o'' never occurred in initial syllables. A sequence of consonant+semivowel could not be followed by ''*o'' or ''*o·''. There was also a restriction which prevented two-syllable nouns from ending in a sequence of short vowel + consonant + short vowel. In most cases, when the pronominal prefixes ''*ne-'' (first person), ''*ke-'' (second person), and ''*we-'' (third person) were added to a vowel-initial stem, an epenthetic ''*-t-'' was inserted between the prefix and the stem. Thus, the prefixes became ''*net-'', ''*ket-'', and ''*wet-'' respectively. For example, ''*ne-'' + ''*-ehkwa-'' = ''*netehkwa-'' "my louse". This feature goes back to Proto-Algic (compare Wiyot ''du-'' + ''híkw'' = ''dutíkw'' "my louse"). There were a handful of irregular exceptions to this pattern, however. For example, the prefixes lost their vowels before several kinship terms, as in ''*ne-'' + ''*-o·hkomehsa'' = ''*no·hkomehsa'' "my grandmother."Grammar
Proto-Algonquian nouns had an animate/inanimate contrast: nouns representing animate beings (and some traditional items viewed as having spiritual powers) were classed as ''animate'', while all other nouns were ''inanimate''. The plural marker differed in form depending on whether the noun was animate or inanimate: animate nouns took a plural suffix ''*-aki'', while inanimate nouns took a plural suffix ''*-ari''. Another important distinction involved the contrast between nouns marked as ''proximate'' and those marked as '' obviative''. Proximate nouns were those deemed most central or important to the discourse, while obviative nouns were those less important to the discourse. When two third person participants appeared in a sentence, one was marked as proximate and the other as obviative, in order to distinguish which one was the subject and which was the object (since verbs inflected for whether they had a proximate or obviative subject and a proximate or obviative object). In a given stretch of discourse, there will not be two proximate or two obviative participants. There were personal pronouns which distinguished three persons, two numbers (singular and plural), inclusive and exclusive first person plural, and proximate and obviative third persons. Demonstrative pronouns have been more difficult to reconstruct, as many of the daughter languages have innovated a great deal. PA had four classes of verbs: transitive verbs with an animate object (abbreviated TA), transitive verbs with an inanimate object (TI), intransitive verbs with an animate subject (AI), and intransitive verbs with an inanimate subject (II). Transitive verbs had two paradigms, termed ''objective'' and ''absolute''. Objective verbs were used when the object of the verb was not present as an overt noun elsewhere in the sentence, while absolute verbs were used when the object of the verb ''was'' marked with an overt noun in the sentence. Objective verbs could also be used when an object was present, and in such cases indicated that the object was definite, as opposed to indefinite.The verb system is surveyed by Hockett (1966) with particular reference to Potawatomi; see also Teeter (1965) and Weggelaar (1974).See also
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References
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