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A summary of Goidelic developments chapter by chapter of Kim McCone's ''Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change'' (1996). | A summary of Goidelic developments chapter by chapter of Kim McCone's ''Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change'' (1996). | ||
Details marked in {{color|red|red}} are additional information not directly sourced from the book. | |||
= Chapter One: The Phonology and Orthography of the Attested Celtic Languages = | = Chapter One: The Phonology and Orthography of the Attested Celtic Languages = | ||
Line 5: | Line 7: | ||
== I.1 Introduction == | == I.1 Introduction == | ||
* Irish Ogam inscriptions date to the 5th and 6th | * Irish Ogam inscriptions date to the 5th and 6th CE. | ||
* The Irish manuscript record emerged in the 7th | * The Irish manuscript record emerged in the 7th CE. | ||
* Church literacy provided the model for vernacular writing. | * Church literacy provided the model for vernacular writing. | ||
* Ogam is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet. | * Ogam is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet. | ||
* Manuscript orthography from the 5th to 12th | * Manuscript orthography from the 5th to 12th CE was based on British Latin pronunciation. | ||
* After the 12th | * After the 12th CE, the orthography underwent experimental changes. | ||
== I.5 Ogam Irish == | == I.5 Ogam Irish == | ||
=== I.5.1 === | === I.5.1 The Origins of Ogam === | ||
'''Cultural Influences''' | |||
* The earliest attested method of writing Irish is Ogam. | * The earliest attested method of writing Irish is Ogam. | ||
* It is written on a line formed by the edge of a stone. | * It is written on a line formed by the edge of a stone. | ||
* It consists of: | * It consists of: | ||
** one to five notches ({{smallcaps|a}}, {{smallcaps|o}}, {{smallcaps|u}}, {{smallcaps|e}}, {{smallcaps|i}}); | ** one to five notches ({{color|red|᚛ᚐ᚜, ᚛ᚑ᚜, ᚛ᚒ᚜, ᚛ᚓ᚜, ᚛ᚔ᚜}}, transcribed as {{smallcaps|a}}, {{smallcaps|o}}, {{smallcaps|u}}, {{smallcaps|e}}, {{smallcaps|i}}); | ||
** one to five horizontal strokes to the right ({{smallcaps|b}}, {{smallcaps|l}}, {{smallcaps|f}}, {{smallcaps|s}}, {{smallcaps|n}}); | ** one to five horizontal strokes to the right ({{color|red|down in the manuscript tradition; ᚛ᚁ᚜, ᚛ᚂ᚜, ᚛ᚃ᚜, ᚛ᚄ᚜, ᚛ᚅ᚜}}, transcribed as {{smallcaps|b}}, {{smallcaps|l}}, {{smallcaps|f}}, {{smallcaps|s}}, {{smallcaps|n}}); | ||
** one to five horizontal strokes to the left ({{smallcaps|h}}, {{smallcaps|d}}, {{smallcaps|t}}, {{smallcaps|c}}, {{smallcaps|q}}); | ** one to five horizontal strokes to the left ({{color|red|up in the manuscript tradition; ᚛ᚆ᚜, ᚛ᚇ᚜, ᚛ᚈ᚜, ᚛ᚉ᚜, ᚛ᚊ᚜}}, transcribed as {{smallcaps|h}}, {{smallcaps|d}}, {{smallcaps|t}}, {{smallcaps|c}}, {{smallcaps|q}}); | ||
** one to five diagonal strokes across ({{smallcaps|m}}, {{smallcaps|g}}, {{smallcaps|ng}}, {{smallcaps|z}}, {{smallcaps|r}}). | ** one to five diagonal strokes across ({{color|red|᚛ᚋ᚜, ᚛ᚌ᚜, ᚛ᚍ᚜, ᚛ᚎ᚜, ᚛ᚏ᚜}}, transcribed as {{smallcaps|m}}, {{smallcaps|g}}, {{smallcaps|ng}}, {{smallcaps|z}}, {{smallcaps|r}}). | ||
* It is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet. | * It is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet. | ||
* Its twenty signs in four groups of five obviously had a numeric basis. | * Its twenty signs in four groups of five obviously had a numeric basis. | ||
* It was probably devised in the 4th | * It was probably devised in the 4th CE. | ||
* There was probably already an established Christian community in the south of Ireland at the time. | * There was probably already an established Christian community in the south of Ireland at the time. | ||
* The Latin-based literacy of Christianity possibly influenced its creation. | * The Latin-based literacy of Christianity possibly influenced its creation. | ||
* Irish colonies were being established in Wales in the 4th | * Irish colonies were being established in Wales in the 4th CE, providing another possible link to the learning of Latin. | ||
* Archaeological evidence shows a material link between Ireland and Roman-based communities at the time. | * Archaeological evidence shows a material link between Ireland and Roman-based communities at the time. | ||
* Cultural contact between these communities would have helped provide the environment and influence for its creation. | * Cultural contact between these communities would have helped provide the environment and influence for its creation. | ||
'''Innovations''' | |||
* The alphabetic characters substituted for the Ogam symbols were assigned during the much later manuscript tradition. | * The alphabetic characters substituted for the Ogam symbols were assigned during the much later manuscript tradition. | ||
* The omission of Latin ''p'', and phonetic pairings of {{smallcaps|d}}/{{smallcaps|t}} and {{smallcaps|c}}/{{smallcaps|q}}, show innovation with a practical focus on Primitive Irish phonology. | * The omission of Latin ''p'', and phonetic pairings of {{smallcaps|d}}/{{smallcaps|t}} and {{smallcaps|c}}/{{smallcaps|q}}, show innovation with a practical focus on Primitive Irish phonology. | ||
* These innovations help show the phonemic structure of Irish of the 4th | * These innovations help show the phonemic structure of Irish of the 4th CE. | ||
* The later substitution of alphabetic characters shows deviation from the original phonemic values. | * The later substitution of alphabetic characters shows deviation from the original phonemic values. | ||
* Bilingual inscriptions from Wales show the transcription of {{smallcaps|v}} instead of the substituted {{smallcaps|f}} assigned during the manuscript tradition, considering {{IPA|/f/}} was unlikely to have arisen from {{IPA|/w/}} during the 4th | |||
'''Phonemic Considerations''' | |||
* Bilingual inscriptions from Wales show the transcription of {{smallcaps|v}} instead of the substituted {{smallcaps|f}} assigned during the manuscript tradition, considering {{IPA|/f/}} was unlikely to have arisen from {{IPA|/w/}} during the 4th CE ([[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#V.2.2|V.2.2]]). | |||
* The later reanalysis was probably due to the historical change found in the initial sound of the name of the letter: | * The later reanalysis was probably due to the historical change found in the initial sound of the name of the letter: | ||
** ''fern'' “alder” < ''*wernā''. | ** ''fern'' “alder” < ''*wernā''. | ||
* The manuscript tradition did seem to recognise a written distinction between {{smallcaps|c}} and {{smallcaps|q}} even though the latter was lost in speech by the 6th | * The manuscript tradition did seem to recognise a written distinction between {{smallcaps|c}} and {{smallcaps|q}} even though the latter was lost in speech by the 6th CE ([[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#IV.3.4|IV.3.4]]). | ||
* There was an obvious phonetic connection between the initials of the names for the letters but a lack of phonemic distinction between velar and labiovelar counterparts: | * There was an obvious phonetic connection between the initials of the names for the letters but a lack of phonemic distinction between velar and labiovelar counterparts: | ||
** ''coll'' “hazel” (< ''*kollo-'' < ''*koslo-'') for {{smallcaps|c}}; | ** ''coll'' “hazel” (< ''*kollo-'' < ''*koslo-'') for {{smallcaps|c}}; | ||
** ''cert'' “apple-tree” (< ''*kʷerto-'' < ''*kʷerxto-'' < ''*kʷerkʷ-to-'' < ''*perkʷ-''; [[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#II.1.5|II.1.5b]]) for {{smallcaps|q}}. | ** ''cert'' {{color|red|“apple-tree”}} (< ''*kʷerto-'' < ''*kʷerxto-'' < ''*kʷerkʷ-to-'' < ''*perkʷ-''; [[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#II.1.5|II.1.5b]]) for {{smallcaps|q}}. | ||
* Since the 6th | * Since the 6th CE merger of {{IPA|/kʷ/}} with {{IPA|/k/}}, a second letter was needed for this written distinction and {{smallcaps|q}} was coincidentally chosen for historical {{IPA|/kʷ/}}. | ||
* Like {{smallcaps|f}}, the signs {{smallcaps|h}}, {{smallcaps|ng}} and {{smallcaps|z}} seem unlikely to have been devised to represent the sounds ascribed to them in the manuscript tradition as {{IPA|/h/}}, {{IPA|/ŋ/}} and {{IPA|/z/}} were hardly distinct phonemes in 4th or 5th | * Like {{smallcaps|f}}, the signs {{smallcaps|h}}, {{smallcaps|ng}} and {{smallcaps|z}} seem unlikely to have been devised to represent the sounds ascribed to them in the manuscript tradition as {{IPA|/h/}}, {{IPA|/ŋ/}} and {{IPA|/z/}} were hardly distinct phonemes in 4th or 5th CE Irish. | ||
* Their assignment seems to have been a Latin-based cosmetic choice with their name initials being a contributing factor. | * Their assignment seems to have been a Latin-based cosmetic choice with their name initials being a contributing factor. | ||
* Their true values may have been {{IPA|/j/}}, {{IPA|/ɡʷ/}} and {{IPA|/sᵗ/}} respectively, or something similar, but this cannot be directly tested due to their lack of attestation on available inscriptions. | * Their true values may have been {{IPA|/j/}}, {{IPA|/ɡʷ/}} and {{IPA|/sᵗ/}} respectively, or something similar, but this cannot be directly tested due to their lack of attestation on available inscriptions. | ||
'''Phonemic Developments''' | |||
* For as long as {{IPA|/kʷ/}} existed in Irish, so too did {{IPA|/ɡʷ/}}. | |||
* They first dissimilated to {{IPA|/k/}} and {{IPA|/ɡ/}} respectively before a following rounded back vowel (i.e. {{IPA|/u(ː)/}} or {{IPA|/o(ː)/}}). | |||
** Consider the attested {{smallcaps|dego(s)}} (which predates apocope) rather than {{smallcaps|*dengo(s)}} “flame”, “fire” < ''*degw-i-s''. | |||
** The {{smallcaps|⟨q⟩}} in {{smallcaps|qunacanos}} is a hypercorrection since the distinction with {{smallcaps|⟨c⟩}} became lost in this environment before lowering occurred. | |||
** Cases like {{smallcaps|tria maqa}} “(of the) three sons” and {{smallcaps|ineqaglas}} {{color|red|“''Enechglass''”}} show that this dissimilation was only restricted to back vowels which were rounded. | |||
** The {{color|red|partially Latinised}} Wroxeter Stone inscription {{smallcaps|cvnorix macvs maqvi coline}} {{color|red|“''Cunorīx'' son of ''Maqqos Colinī''”}} shows how {{IPA|/kʷ/}} dissimilated to {{IPA|/k/}} first when followed by (rounded) back vowels before it became lost later before front vowels (and all other positions). | |||
* They then rounded a following {{IPA|/a/}} and {{IPA|/i/}} to {{IPA|/o/}} and {{IPA|/u/}} respectively ([[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#IV.3.4|IV.3.4]]). | |||
* Both finally merged with {{IPA|/k/}} and {{IPA|/ɡ/}} respectively in the 6th CE ([[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#II.1.2|II.1.2]]) after both raising and lowering ([[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#IV.2.1|IV.2.1b/c]] and [[User:Erisceres/McCone%27s_Relative_Chronology#IV.3.4|IV.3.4]]). | |||
=== I.5.2 === | === I.5.2 === | ||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;" | |||
|+ PIr. Consonants | |||
! colspan="2" | | |||
! Plosive | |||
! Fricative | |||
! Nasal | |||
! Liquid | |||
! Glide | |||
|- | |||
! Labial | |||
! <small>Voiced</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/b{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|b(b)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| {{IPA|/m(ː)/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|m(m)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
! rowspan="2" | Coronal | |||
! <small>Voiceless</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/t{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|t(t)}}}} | |||
| {{IPA|/s/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|s(s)}}}} | |||
{{IPA|/sᵗ/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|z(z)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
! <small>Voiced</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/d{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|d(d)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| {{IPA|/n{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|n(n)}}}} | |||
| {{IPA|/l{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|l(l)}}}} | |||
{{IPA|/r{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|n(n)}}}} | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
! rowspan="2" | Dorsal | |||
! <small>Voiceless</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/k{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|k(k)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
! <small>Voiced</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/ɡ{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|g(g)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| {{IPA|/j/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|h(h)}}}} | |||
|- | |||
! rowspan="2" | Labiodorsal | |||
! <small>Voiceless</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/kʷ{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|q(q)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
|- | |||
! <small>Voiced</small> | |||
| {{IPA|/ɡʷ{{color|red|(ː)}}/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|ng(ng)}}}} | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| | |||
| {{IPA|/w/}} {{color|red|{{smallcaps|f(f)}}}} | |||
|} | |||
== I.6 Old Irish == | == I.6 Old Irish == |
Latest revision as of 13:45, 5 October 2022
A summary of Goidelic developments chapter by chapter of Kim McCone's Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change (1996).
Details marked in red are additional information not directly sourced from the book.
Chapter One: The Phonology and Orthography of the Attested Celtic Languages
I.1 Introduction
- Irish Ogam inscriptions date to the 5th and 6th CE.
- The Irish manuscript record emerged in the 7th CE.
- Church literacy provided the model for vernacular writing.
- Ogam is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet.
- Manuscript orthography from the 5th to 12th CE was based on British Latin pronunciation.
- After the 12th CE, the orthography underwent experimental changes.
I.5 Ogam Irish
I.5.1 The Origins of Ogam
Cultural Influences
- The earliest attested method of writing Irish is Ogam.
- It is written on a line formed by the edge of a stone.
- It consists of:
- one to five notches (᚛ᚐ᚜, ᚛ᚑ᚜, ᚛ᚒ᚜, ᚛ᚓ᚜, ᚛ᚔ᚜, transcribed as a, o, u, e, i);
- one to five horizontal strokes to the right (down in the manuscript tradition; ᚛ᚁ᚜, ᚛ᚂ᚜, ᚛ᚃ᚜, ᚛ᚄ᚜, ᚛ᚅ᚜, transcribed as b, l, f, s, n);
- one to five horizontal strokes to the left (up in the manuscript tradition; ᚛ᚆ᚜, ᚛ᚇ᚜, ᚛ᚈ᚜, ᚛ᚉ᚜, ᚛ᚊ᚜, transcribed as h, d, t, c, q);
- one to five diagonal strokes across (᚛ᚋ᚜, ᚛ᚌ᚜, ᚛ᚍ᚜, ᚛ᚎ᚜, ᚛ᚏ᚜, transcribed as m, g, ng, z, r).
- It is almost certainly based on the Roman alphabet.
- Its twenty signs in four groups of five obviously had a numeric basis.
- It was probably devised in the 4th CE.
- There was probably already an established Christian community in the south of Ireland at the time.
- The Latin-based literacy of Christianity possibly influenced its creation.
- Irish colonies were being established in Wales in the 4th CE, providing another possible link to the learning of Latin.
- Archaeological evidence shows a material link between Ireland and Roman-based communities at the time.
- Cultural contact between these communities would have helped provide the environment and influence for its creation.
Innovations
- The alphabetic characters substituted for the Ogam symbols were assigned during the much later manuscript tradition.
- The omission of Latin p, and phonetic pairings of d/t and c/q, show innovation with a practical focus on Primitive Irish phonology.
- These innovations help show the phonemic structure of Irish of the 4th CE.
- The later substitution of alphabetic characters shows deviation from the original phonemic values.
Phonemic Considerations
- Bilingual inscriptions from Wales show the transcription of v instead of the substituted f assigned during the manuscript tradition, considering /f/ was unlikely to have arisen from /w/ during the 4th CE (V.2.2).
- The later reanalysis was probably due to the historical change found in the initial sound of the name of the letter:
- fern “alder” < *wernā.
- The manuscript tradition did seem to recognise a written distinction between c and q even though the latter was lost in speech by the 6th CE (IV.3.4).
- There was an obvious phonetic connection between the initials of the names for the letters but a lack of phonemic distinction between velar and labiovelar counterparts:
- coll “hazel” (< *kollo- < *koslo-) for c;
- cert “apple-tree” (< *kʷerto- < *kʷerxto- < *kʷerkʷ-to- < *perkʷ-; II.1.5b) for q.
- Since the 6th CE merger of /kʷ/ with /k/, a second letter was needed for this written distinction and q was coincidentally chosen for historical /kʷ/.
- Like f, the signs h, ng and z seem unlikely to have been devised to represent the sounds ascribed to them in the manuscript tradition as /h/, /ŋ/ and /z/ were hardly distinct phonemes in 4th or 5th CE Irish.
- Their assignment seems to have been a Latin-based cosmetic choice with their name initials being a contributing factor.
- Their true values may have been /j/, /ɡʷ/ and /sᵗ/ respectively, or something similar, but this cannot be directly tested due to their lack of attestation on available inscriptions.
Phonemic Developments
- For as long as /kʷ/ existed in Irish, so too did /ɡʷ/.
- They first dissimilated to /k/ and /ɡ/ respectively before a following rounded back vowel (i.e. /u(ː)/ or /o(ː)/).
- Consider the attested dego(s) (which predates apocope) rather than *dengo(s) “flame”, “fire” < *degw-i-s.
- The ⟨q⟩ in qunacanos is a hypercorrection since the distinction with ⟨c⟩ became lost in this environment before lowering occurred.
- Cases like tria maqa “(of the) three sons” and ineqaglas “Enechglass” show that this dissimilation was only restricted to back vowels which were rounded.
- The partially Latinised Wroxeter Stone inscription cvnorix macvs maqvi coline “Cunorīx son of Maqqos Colinī” shows how /kʷ/ dissimilated to /k/ first when followed by (rounded) back vowels before it became lost later before front vowels (and all other positions).
- They then rounded a following /a/ and /i/ to /o/ and /u/ respectively (IV.3.4).
- Both finally merged with /k/ and /ɡ/ respectively in the 6th CE (II.1.2) after both raising and lowering (IV.2.1b/c and IV.3.4).
I.5.2
Plosive | Fricative | Nasal | Liquid | Glide | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Labial | Voiced | /b(ː)/ b(b) | /m(ː)/ m(m) | |||
Coronal | Voiceless | /t(ː)/ t(t) | /s/ s(s)
/sᵗ/ z(z) |
|||
Voiced | /d(ː)/ d(d) | /n(ː)/ n(n) | /l(ː)/ l(l)
/r(ː)/ n(n) |
|||
Dorsal | Voiceless | /k(ː)/ k(k) | ||||
Voiced | /ɡ(ː)/ g(g) | /j/ h(h) | ||||
Labiodorsal | Voiceless | /kʷ(ː)/ q(q) | ||||
Voiced | /ɡʷ(ː)/ ng(ng) | /w/ f(f) |