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Laryngeal theory

The laryngeal theory is a theory in historical linguistics positing that Proto-Indo-European had a number of laryngeal consonants that are not reconstructable by direct application of the comparative method to the Indo-European family. The 'missing' sounds remain consonants of an indeterminate place of articulation towards the back of the mouth, though further information is difficult to derive. Proponents aim to use the theory to:

  • Produce greater regularity in the reconstruction of PIE phonology than from the reconstruction that is produced by the comparative method.
  • Extend the general occurrence of the Indo-European ablaut to syllables with reconstructed vowel phonemes other than *e or *o.

In its earlier form (see below), the theory proposed two sounds in PIE. Combined with a reconstructed *e or *o, the sounds produce vowel phonemes that would not otherwise be predicted by the rules of ablaut. The theory received considerable support after the deciphering of Hittite, which revealed it to be an Indo-European language.

Many Hittite words were shown to be derived from PIE, with a phoneme represented as corresponding to one of the hypothetical PIE sounds. Subsequent scholarly work has established a set of rules by which an ever-increasing number of reflexes in daughter languages may be derived from PIE roots. The number of explanations thus achieved and the simplicity of the postulated system have both led to widespread acceptance of the theory.

In its most widely accepted version, the theory posits three laryngeal phonemes in PIE: h₁, h₂, and h₃ (see below). Daughter languages other than Hittite did not preserve the laryngeals themselves, but inherited sounds derived from the merger of these laryngeals with PIE short vowels and the subsequent loss of those laryngeals.

The phonemes are now recognized as consonants, related to articulation in the general area of the larynx, where a consonantal gesture may affect vowel quality. They are regularly known as laryngeal, but the actual place of articulation for each consonant remains a matter of debate. (see below).

The laryngeals got their name because they were believed by Hermann Möller and Albert Cuny to have had a pharyngeal, epiglottal, or glottal place of articulation, involving a constriction near the larynx. While this is still possible, many linguists now think of laryngeals, or some of them, as having been velar or uvular.

The evidence for their existence is mostly indirect, as will be shown below, but the theory serves as an elegant explanation for several properties of the PIE vowel system that made no sense until the theory, such as the independent schwas (as in *pəter- 'father'). Also, the hypothesis that PIE schwa was a consonant, not a vowel, provides an explanation for some apparent exceptions to Brugmann's law in Indo-Aryan languages.

History edit

 
Ferdinand de Saussure

The beginnings of the theory were proposed by Ferdinand de Saussure in 1879, in an article chiefly demonstrating that *a and *o were separate phonemes in PIE.

In the course of his analysis, Saussure proposed that what had then been reconstructed as long vowels *ā and *ō, alternating with *ǝ, was an ordinary type of PIE ablaut. That is, it was an alternation between e grade and zero grade like in "regular" ablaut (further explanations below), but followed by a previously unidentified element. This element accounted for both the changed vowel colour and the lengthening (short *e becoming long *ā or *ō).

So, rather than reconstructing *ā, *ō and *ǝ as others had done before, Saussure proposed *eA alternating with *A and *eO with *O, where A and O represented the unidentified elements. Saussure called them simply coefficients sonantiques, which was the term for what are now in English more usually called resonants; that is, the six elements present in PIE which can be either consonants (non-syllabic) or vowels (syllabic) depending on the sounds they are adjacent to: *y w r l m n.

These views were accepted by a few scholars, in particular Hermann Möller, who added important elements to the theory. Saussure's observations, however, did not achieve any general currency, as they were still too abstract and had little direct evidence to back them up.

This changed when Hittite was discovered and deciphered in the early 20th century. Hittite phonology included two sounds written with symbols from the Akkadian syllabary conventionally transcribed as , as in te-iḫ-ḫi 'I put, am putting'. This consonant did not appear to be related to any of the consonants then reconstructed for PIE, and various unsatisfactory proposals were made to explain this consonant in terms of the PIE consonant system as it had then been reconstructed.

It remained for Jerzy Kuryłowicz[1] to propose that these sounds lined up with Saussure's conjectures. He suggested that the unknown consonant of Hittite was, in fact, a direct reflex of the coefficients sonantiques that Saussure had proposed.

Their appearance explained some other matters as well: For example, why verb roots containing only a consonant and a vowel always have long vowels. For example, in *- "give", the new consonants allowed linguists to decompose this further into *deh₃-. This not only accounted for the patterns of alternation more economically than before (by requiring fewer types of ablaut) but also brought the structure of these roots into line with the basic PIE pattern which required roots to begin and end with a consonant.

The lateness of the discovery of these sounds by Indo-Europeanists is largely because Hittite and the other Anatolian languages are the only Indo-European languages for which at least some are attested directly and consistently as consonantal sounds. Otherwise, their presence is to be inferred mostly through the effects they have on neighboring sounds, and on patterns of alternation that they participate in. When a laryngeal is attested directly, it is usually as a special type of vowel and not as a consonant, best exemplified in Greek where syllabic laryngeals (when they appeared next to only consonants) developed as such: *h₁ > e, *h₂ > a, and *h₃ > o.

Varieties of laryngeals edit

There are many variations of the laryngeal theory. Some scholars, such as Oswald Szemerényi, reconstruct just one laryngeal. Some follow Jaan Puhvel's reconstruction of eight or more.[2]

Basic laryngeal set edit

Most scholars work with a basic three:

  • *h₁, the neutral laryngeal
  • *h₂, the a-colouring laryngeal
  • *h₃, the o-colouring laryngeal

Additional laryngeals edit

  • *h₄

Some scholars suggest the existence of a fourth consonant, *h₄, which differs from *h₂ in not being reflected as Anatolian [3][4] but being reflected, to the exclusion of all other laryngeals, as Albanian h when word-initial before an originally stressed vowel.[5]

E.g. PIE *h₄órǵʰiyeh₂ 'testicle' yields Albanian herdhe 'testicle' but Hittite arki- 'testicle' whereas PIE *h₂ŕ̥tkos '"bear' yields Albanian ari 'bear' but Hittite hart(ag)ga- (=/hartka-/) 'cultic official, bear-person'.[4][6]

When there is an uncertainty whether the laryngeal is *h₂ or *h₄, the symbol *ha may be used.[4]

  • *h₁ doublet

Another such theory, but much less generally accepted, is Winfred P. Lehmann's view, based on inconsistent reflexes in Hittite, that *h₁ was two separate sounds. (He assumed that one was a glottal stop and the other a glottal fricative.)

Direct evidence for laryngeals edit

Some direct evidence for laryngeal consonants comes from Anatolian: PIE *a is a fairly rare sound, and in an uncommonly large number of good etymologies, it is word-initial. Thus PIE (traditional) *anti 'in front of and facing' > Greek antí 'against'; Latin ante 'in front of, before'; Sanskrit ánti 'near; in the presence of'. But in Hittite there is the noun ḫants 'front, face', with various derivatives (ḫantezzi 'first', and so on), pointing to a PIE root-noun *h₂ent- 'face' (of which *h₂enti would be the locative singular). However, it does not follow that all reconstructed forms with initial *a should automatically be rewritten *h₂e.

Similarly, the traditional PIE reconstruction for 'sheep' is *owi- (a y-stem, not an i-stem) whence Sanskrit ávi-, Latin ovis, Greek ὄϊς. But Luwian has ḫawi-, indicating instead the reconstruction *h₃ewis.

Pronunciation edit

Considerable debate still surrounds the pronunciation of the laryngeals and various arguments have been given to pinpoint their exact place of articulation. Firstly the effect these sounds have had on adjacent phonemes is well documented. The evidence from Hittite and Uralic is sufficient to conclude that these sounds were guttural, pronounced rather back in the vocal tract. The same evidence is also consistent with the assumption that they were fricative sounds (as opposed to approximants or stops), an assumption that is strongly supported by the behaviour of laryngeals in consonant clusters.

*h₁ edit

J.E. Rasmussen (1983) suggested a consonantal realization for *h₁ as the voiceless glottal fricative [h] with a syllabic allophone [ə] (mid central unrounded vowel).[7] This is supported by the closeness of [ə] to [e] (with which it combines in Greek),[8] its failure (unlike *h₂ and *h₃) to create an auxiliary vowel in Greek and Tocharian when it occurs between a semivowel and a consonant,[9] and the typological likelihood of an [h] given the presence of aspirated consonants in PIE.[9]

W.P. Lehmann (1993) theorized, based on inconsistent reflexes in Hittite, that there were two *h₁ sounds: a glottal stop [ʔ] and an h sound [h] as in English hat. Beekes (1995) suggested that *h₁ is always a glottal stop [ʔ].[citation needed]

A. Kloekhorst (2004)[10] argued that the Hieroglyphic Luwian sign no. 19 (𔐓, conventionally transcribed á) stood for /ʔa/ (distinct from /a/, sign no. 450: 𔗷 a) and represents the reflex of *h; this would support the hypothesis that *h, or at least some cases of it, were [ʔ]. Later, Kloekhorst (2006)[11] claimed that also Hittite preserves PIE *h₁ as a glottal stop [ʔ], visible in words like Hittite e-eš-zi 'he is' < PIE *hés-ti, where an extra initial vowel sign (plene spelling) is used. This hypothesis has been met with serious criticism; e.g., from Rieken (2010),[12] Melchert (2010),[13] and Weeden (2011).[14]

Simon (2010)[15] supported Kloekhorst's thesis by suggesting that plene spelling in Cuneiform Luwian can be explained in a similar way. Additionally, Simon's (2013) article[16] revises the Hieroglyphic Luwian evidence and concludes that although some details of Kloekhorst's arguments could not be maintained, his theory can be confirmed.[clarification needed][16]

An occasionally advanced idea that the laryngeals were dorsal fricatives[17] corresponding directly to the three traditionally reconstructed series of dorsal stops (palatal, velar, and labiovelar; i.e., that the laryngeals *h₁ *h₂ and *h₃ are more accurately written *h́, *h, and *hʷ respectively) suggests a further possibility, a palatal fricative [ç(ʁ)].[citation needed]

*h₂ edit

From what is known of such phonetic conditioning in contemporary languages, notably Semitic languages, *h₂ (the a-colouring laryngeal) could have been a pharyngeal fricative such as [ħ] and [ʕ]. Pharyngeal consonants (like the Arabic letter ح (ħ) as in Muħammad) often cause a-colouring in the Semitic languages.[18]

Uvular fricatives may also colour vowels, thus [χ] is also a noteworthy candidate. Weiss (2016) suggests that this was the case in Proto-Indo-European proper, and that a shift from uvular into pharyngeal [ħ] may have been a common innovation of the non-Anatolian languages (before the consonant's eventual loss).[19] Rasmussen (1983) suggested a consonantal realization for *h₂ as a voiceless velar fricative [x], with a syllabic allophone [ɐ], i.e. a near-open central vowel.[7]

Kloekhorst (2018)[20] proposes, based on evidence from Anatolian languages, that *h₂ was originally a geminate uvular stop [qː] (he also holds the view that the traditionally voiceless stops of PIE were in fact geminate, as in Hittite), although he judges it plausible that already in PIE it had a fricative allophone.

*h₃ edit

Likewise it is generally assumed that *h₃ was rounded (labialized) due to its o-colouring effects. It is often taken to have been voiced based on the perfect form *pi-bh₃- from the root *peh₃ "drink". Rasmussen chose a consonantal realization for *h₃ as a voiced labialized velar fricative [ɣʷ], with a syllabic allophone [ɵ], i.e. a close-mid central rounded vowel.[7] Kümmel instead suggests [ʁ].[21]

Kloekhorst (2018)[20] reconstructs [qʷː] as the basic value, which in his view would be the labialized counterpart to *h₂ (see above).

Support for theory from daughter languages edit

The hypothetical existence of laryngeals in PIE finds support in the body of daughter language cognates which can be most efficiently explained through simple rules of development.

Direct reflexes of laryngeals edit

Unambiguous examples are confined to Anatolian languages. Words with Hittite (hh), Luwian h and Lycian x are explained as reflexes of PIE roots with h₂.[22]

Reflexes of h₂ in Anatolian[23]
PIE root Meaning Anatolian reflex Cognates
*peh₂-(s)- 'protect' Hittite paḫḫs- Sanskrit pā́ti, Latin pascere (pastus), Greek patéomai
*dʰewh₂- 'breath/smoke' Hittite tuḫḫāi- Sanskrit dhūmá-, Latin fūmus, Greek thūmos
*h₂ent- 'front' Hittite ḫant- Sanskrit ánti, Latin ante, Greek antí
*h₂erǵ- 'white/silver' Hittite ḫarki- Sanskrit árjuna, Latin argentum, Greek árguron, Tocharian A ārki
*h₂owi- 'sheep' Luwian hawi-, Lycian xawa- Sanskrit ávi-, Latin ovis, Greek ó(w)is
*péh₂wr̥ 'fire' Hittite paḫḫur, Luwian pāḫur English fire, Tocharian B puwar, Greek pûr
*h₂wéh₁n̥t- 'wind' Hittite ḫūwant- English wind, Tocharian A want, Latin ventus, Greek aént-, Sanskrit vāt-
*h₂stér- 'star' Hittite ḫasterz English star, Sanskrit stā́, Latin stella, Greek astḗr
*h₂ŕ̥tḱo- 'bear' Hittite ḫartaggaš Sanskrit ṛ́kṣa, Latin ursus, Greek árktos'
*h₂ewh₂os 'grandfather' Hittite ḫuḫḫa-, Luwian ḫuḫa-, Lycian χuge- Gothic awo, Latin avus, Armenian haw
*h₁ésh₂r̥ 'blood' Hittite ēšḫar, Luwian āšḫar Greek éar, Latin sanguīs, Armenian aryun, Latvian asinis, Tocharian A ysār

Some Hittitologists have also proposed that h₃ was preserved in Hittite as ḫ, although only word initially and after a resonant. Kortlandt holds that h₃ was preserved before all vowels except *o. Similarly, Kloekhorst believes they were lost before resonants as well.

Reflexes of h₃ in Anatolian
PIE root Meaning Anatolian reflex Cognates
*welh₃- 'to hit' Hittite walḫ- Latin vellō, Greek ealōn
*h₃esth₁ 'bone' Hittite ḫaštāi Latin os, Greek ostéon, Sanskrit ásthi
*h₃erbʰ- 'to change status' Hittite ḫarp- Latin orbus, Greek orphanós'
*h₃eron- 'eagle' Hittite ḫara(n)- Gothic ara, Greek ὄρνῑς (órnīs)
*h₃pus- 'to have sex' Hittite ḫapuš- Greek opuíō

In Germanic edit

Reconstructed instances of *kw in Proto-Germanic have been explained as reflexes of PIE *h₃w (and possibly *h₂w), a process known as Cowgill's law. The proposal has been challenged but is defended by Don Ringe.[24]

Examples
PIE Total H-loss * H > *k Reflexes
*n̥h₃we ('us two') Sanskrit āvā́m
Greek *nōwe > νώ (nó̜)
P-Gmc *unk(iz) (< *unkw) Gothic ugkis
Old English unc
*gʷih₃wós ('alive') Sanskrit jīvás
Latin vīvus
P-Gmc *kʷikʷaz Old Norse kvíkr
Old English cwic

In Albanian edit

In the Albanian language, a minority view proposes that some instances of word-initial h continue a laryngeal consonant.

PIE root Meaning Albanian Other cognates
*h₁órǵʰis testicles herdhe Greek orkhis
*h₁ed to eat ha Ancient Greek édō
*h₂eydʰ to ignite hith Ancient Greek aíthō

In Western Iranian edit

Martin Kümmel has proposed that some initial [x] and [h] in contemporary Western Iranian languages, commonly thought to be prothetic, are instead direct survivals of *h₂, lost in epigraphic Old Persian but retained in marginal dialects ancestral among others to Modern Persian.[25]

PIE root Meaning Modern Persian
*h₂ŕ̥tḱo- 'bear' xers
*h₂oHmo- 'raw' xâm
*h₂eh₁s- 'ashes' xâk 'dust, earth'
*h₂eydʰ-smo- 'ignite' hêzom 'firewood'
*h₁eyh₂s-mo-[P 1] 'passion' xešm 'anger'
  1. ^ sic, with *h₁ (Kümmel's h, versus χ = *h₂).

Proposed indirect reflexes edit

In all other daughter languages, a comparison of the cognates can support only hypothetical intermediary sounds derived from PIE combinations of vowels and laryngeals. Some indirect reflexes are required to support the examples above where the existence of laryngeals is uncontested.

PIE Intermediary Reflexes
eh₂ ā ā, a, ahh
uh₂ u ū, uhh
h₂e a a, ā
h₂o o o, a

The proposals in this table account only for attested forms in daughter languages. Extensive scholarship has produced a large body of cognates which may be identified as reflexes of a small set of hypothetical intermediary sounds, including those in the table above. Individual sets of cognates are explicable by other hypotheses but the sheer bulk of data and the elegance of the laryngeal explanation have led to widespread acceptance in principle.

Vowel coloration and lengthening edit

In the proposed Anatolian-language reflexes above, only some of the vowel sounds reflect PIE *e. In the daughter languages in general, many vowel sounds are not obvious reflexes.[26][27] The theory explains this as the result of H coloration and H loss.

1 H coloration. PIE *e is coloured (i.e. its sound value is changed) before or after h₂ and h₃, but not when next to h₁.
Laryngeal precedes Laryngeal follows
h₁e > h₁e eh₁ > eh₁
h₂e > h₂a eh₂ > ah₂
h₃e > h₃o eh₃ > oh₃
2 H loss. Any of the three laryngeals (symbolized here as H) is lost before a short vowel. Laryngeals are also lost before another consonant (symbolized here as C), with consequent lengthening of the preceding vowel.
Before vowel Before consonant
He > e eHC > ēC
Ha > a aHC > āC
Ho > o oHC > ōC
Hi > i iHC > īC
Hu > u uHC > ūC

The results of H coloration and H loss are recognized in daughter-language reflexes such as those in the table below:

After vowels
PIE Latin Sanskrit Greek Hittite
*iH > ī *gʷih₂-wós vīvus jīva bíos
*uH > ū *dʰweh₂- fūmus dhūma thūmós tuwaḫḫaš
*oH > ō *sóh₂wl̥ sōl sū́rya hḗlios
*eh₁ > ē *séh₁-mn̥ sēmen hêma
*eh₂ > ā *peh₂-(s)- pāscere (pastus) pā́ti patéomai paḫḫas
*eh₃ > ō *deh₃-r/n dōnum dāna dôron
Before vowels
PIE Latin Sanskrit Greek Hittite
*Hi > i *h₁íteros iterum ítara
*Hu > u *pélh₁us plūs purú- polús
*Ho > o *h₂owi- ovis ávi ó(w)is Luw. ḫawa
*h₁e > e *h₁ésti est ásti ésti ēšzi
*h₂e > a *h₂ent
*h₂erǵ-
ante
argentum
ánti
árjuna
antí
árguron
ḫanti
ḫarki
*h₃e > o *h₃érbʰ- orbus arbhas orphanós ḫarp-

Greek triple reflex vs schwa edit

Between three phonological contexts, Greek reflexes display a regular vowel pattern that is absent from the supposed cognates in other daughter languages.

Before the development of laryngeal theory, scholars compared Greek, Latin and Sanskrit (then considered earliest daughter languages) and concluded the existence in these contexts of a schwa (ə) vowel in PIE, the schwa indogermanicum. The contexts are: 1. between consonants (short vowel); 2. word initial before a consonant (short vowel); 3. combined with a liquid or nasal consonant [r, l, m, n] (long vowel).

1 Between consonants
Latin displays a and Sanskrit i, whereas Greek displays e, a, or o.
2 Word initial before a consonant
Greek alone displays e, a, or o.
3 Combined with a liquid or nasal
Latin displays a liquid/nasal consonant followed by ā; Sanskrit displays either īr/ūr or the vowel ā alone; Greek displays a liquid/nasal consonant followed by ē, ā (in dialects such as Doric), or ō.

Laryngeal theory provides a more elegant general description than reconstructed schwa by assuming that the Greek vowels are derived through vowel colouring and H loss from PIE h₁, h₂, and h₃, constituting a triple reflex.

*CHC *HC- *r̥H l̥H *m̥H *n̥H
*h₁ Greek e e
Latin a lost
Sanskrit i lost īr/ūr īr/ūr ā ā
*h₂ Greek a a
Latin a lost
Sanskrit i lost īr/ūr īr/ūr ā ā
*h₃ Greek o o
Latin a lost
Sanskrit i lost īr/ūr īr/ūr ā ā
1 Between consonants
An explanation is provided for the existence of three vowel reflexes in Greek corresponding to single reflexes in Latin and in Sanskrit.
2 Word initial
The assumption of *HC- in PIE yields an explanation for a dichotomy exhibited below between cognates in the Anatolian, Greek, and Armenian languages reflexes with initial a and cognates in the remaining daughters which lack that syllable, The theory assumes initial *h₂e in the PIE root, which has been lost in most of the daughter languages.
*h₂ster- 'star': Hittite hasterza, Greek astḗr, Armenian astí, Latin stella, Sanskrit tár-
*h₂wes 'live, spend time': Hittite huis- 'live', Greek á(w)esa 'I spent a night', Sanskrit vásati 'spend the night', English was
*h₂ner- 'man': Greek anḗr, Armenian ayr (from *anir), Oscan niir, Sanskrit nár[23]
3 Combined with a liquid or nasal
These presumed sonorant reflexes are completely distinct from those deemed to have developed from single phonemes.
*r̥ *l̥ *m̥ *n̥
Greek ra, ar la, al a a
Latin or ul em en
Sanskrit a a

The phonology of the sonorant examples in the previous table can only be explained by the presence of adjacent phonemes in PIE. Assuming the phonemes to be a following h₁, h₂, or h₃ allows the same rules of vowel coloration and H-loss to apply to both PIE *e and PIE sonorants.

Support from Greek ablaut edit

The hypothetical values for sounds with laryngeals after H coloration and H loss (such as seen above in the triple reflex) draw much of their support for the regularization they allow in ablaut patterns, specifically the uncontested patterns found in Greek.

Ablaut in the root edit

In the following table, each row shows undisputed Greek cognates sharing the three ablaut grades of a root. The four sonorants and the two semivowels are represented as individual letters, other consonants as C and the vowel or its absence as (V).[28]

e grade o grade zero grade root meaning
C(V)C πέτεσθαι
pétesthai
ποτή
potḗ
πτέσθαι
ptésthai
'fly'
C(V)iC λείπειν
leípein
λέλοιπα
léloipa
λιπεῖν
lipeîn
'leave'
C(V)uC φεύγειν
pheúgein
φυγεῖν
phugeîn
'flee'
C(V)r δέρκομαι
dérkomai
δέδορκα
dédorka
δρακεῖν
drakeîn
'see clearly'
C(V)l πέλομαι
pélomai
πόλος
pólos
πλέσθαι
plésthai
'become'
C(V)m τέμω
témō
τόμος
tómos
ταμεῖν
tameîn
'cut'
C(V)n γένος
génos
γόνος
gónos
γίγνομαι
gígnomai
'birth'

The reconstructed PIE e grade and zero grade of the above roots may be arranged as follows:

e grade zero grade
C(V)C *pet *pt
C(V)iC *leikʷ *likʷ
C(V)uC *bʰeug *bʰug
C(V)r *derk *drk
C(V)l *kʷel *kʷl
C(V)m *tem *tm
C(V)n *gen *gn

An extension of the table to PIE roots ending in presumed laryngeals allows many Greek cognates to follow a regular ablaut pattern.

e grade
(I)
zero grade
(II)
root meaning

cognates

C(V)h₁ *dʰeh₁ *dʰh₁ 'put' I : ē : τίθημι (títhēmi)
II : e : θετός (thetós)
C(V)h₂ *steh₂ *sth₂ 'stand' I : ā : Doric ἳστᾱμι (hístāmi)
II : a : στατός (statós)
C(V)h₃ *deh₃ *dh₃ 'give' I : ō : δίδωμι (dídōmi)
II : o : δοτός (dotós)
Ablaut in the suffix edit

The first row of the following table shows how uncontested cognates relate to reconstructed PIE stems with e-grade or zero-grade roots, followed by e grade or zero grade of the suffix –w-. The remaining rows show how the ablaut pattern of other cognates is preserved if the stems are presumed to include the suffixes h₁, h₂, and h₃.[29]

e-grade root
zero-grade suffix
I
zero-grade root
e-grade suffix
II
zero-grade root
zero-grade suffix
III
root meaning cognates
*gen+w- *gn+ew- *gn+w- 'knee' I Hittite genu
II Gothic kniu
III γνύξ (gnuks)
*gen+h₁- *gn+eh₁ *gn+h₁- 'become' I γενετήρ (genetḗr)
II γνήσιος (gnḗsios)
III γίγνομαι (gígnomai)
*tel+h₂- *tl+eh₂- *tl+h₂- 'lift, bear' I τελαμών (telamṓn)
II ἔτλᾱν (étlān)
III τάλας (tálas)
*ter+h₃- *tr+eh₃- *tr+h₃- 'bore, wound' II τιτρώσκω (titrṓskō)
III ἔτορον (étoron)

Intervocalic H loss edit

In the preceding sections, forms in the daughter languages were explained as reflexes of laryngeals in PIE stems. Since these stems are judged to have contained only one vowel, the explanations involved H loss either when a vowel preceded or when a vowel followed. However, the possibility of H loss between two vowels is present when a stem combines with an inflexional suffix.

It has been proposed that PIE H loss resulted in hiatus, which in turn was contracted to a vowel sound distinct from other long vowels by being disyllabic or of extra length.

Early Indo-Iranian disyllables edit

A number of long vowels in Avestan were pronounced as two syllables, and some examples also exist in early Sanskrit, particularly in the Rigveda. These can be explained as reflexes of contraction following a hiatus caused by the loss of intervocalic H in PIE.

Proto-Germanic trimoraic o edit

The reconstructed phonology of Proto-Germanic (PG), the ancestor of the Germanic languages, includes a long *ō phoneme, which is in turn the reflex of PIE ā. As outlined above, laryngeal theory has identified instances of PIE ā as reflexes of earlier *h₂e, *eh₂ or *aH before a consonant.

However, a distinct long PG *ō phoneme has been recognized with a different set of reflexes in daughter languages. The vowel length has been calculated by observing the effect of the shortening of final vowels in Gothic.[30]

length PG Gothic
one mora *a, *i, *u ∅, ∅, u
two morae *ē, *ī, *ō, *ū a, i?, a, u?
three morae *ê, *ô ē, ō

Reflexes of trimoraic or overlong *ô are found in the final syllable of nouns or verbs, and are thus associated with inflectional endings. Thus four PG sounds are proposed, shown here with Gothic and Old English reflexes:

PG Reflexes PG Reflexes
bimoraic oral *ō Gothic -a
OE -u/-∅
trimoraic oral *ô Gothic
Old English -a
nasal *ō̜ Gothic -a
OE -æ/-e
nasal *ǫ̂ Gothic
Old English -a

A different contrast is observed in endings with final *z:

PG Reflexes PG Reflexes
bimoraic *ōz Gothic -ōs
Old English -æ/-e
trimoraic *ôz Gothic -ōs
Old English -a

Laryngeal theory preserves regularities in declensions and conjugations by explaining the trimoraic sound as a reflex of H loss between vowels followed by contraction. Thus

  • by H loss *oHo > *oo > *ô;
  • by H coloration and H loss *eh₂e > *ae > *â > *ô.
Trimoraic
ending PIE Reflex PG Reflexes
all stems
genitive plural
*-oHom Sanskrit -ām
[often disyllabic in Rig Veda]
Greek -ῶν (ô̜:n)
*-ǫ̂ Gothic
Old English -a
eh₂-stems
nominative plural
*-eh₂es Sanskrit –ās
Lithuanian –ōs
*-ôz Gothic -ōs
Old English -a
Bimoraic
ending PIE Reflex PG Reflexes
thematic verbs
present indicative
1st person singular
*-oh₂ Latin
Lithuanian -u
*-ō Gothic -a
Old English -u
(Anglian)
eh₂-stems
nominative singular
*-eh₂ Sanskrit
Lithuanian
*-ō Gothic -a
Old English -u
eh₂-stems
accusative singular
*-eh₂m Sanskrit -ām
Latin -am
*-ō̜ Gothic -a
Old English -e
eh₂-stems
accusative plural
*-eh₂ns Sanskrit -ās
Latin *-ans > -ās
*-ōz Gothic -ōs
Old English -e

(Trimoraic *ô is also reconstructed as word final in contexts that are not explained by laryngeal theory.)

Balto-Slavic long vowel accent edit

The reconstructed phonology of the Balto-Slavic languages posits two distinct long vowels in almost exact correspondence to bimoraic and trimoraic vowels in Proto-Germanic. The Balto-Slavic vowels are distinguished not by length but by intonation; long vowels with circumflex accent correspond to Proto-Germanic trimoraic vowels. A significant proportion of long vowels with an acute accent (also described as with acute register) correspond to Proto-Germanic bimoric vowels. These correspondences have led to the suggestion that the split between them occurred in the last common ancestor of the two daughters.

It has been suggested that acute intonation was associated with glottalization, a suggestion supported by glottalized reflexes in Latvian. This could lend support to a theory that laryngeal consonants developed into glottal stops before their disappearance in Balto-Slavic and Proto-Germanic.[31]

H loss adjacent to other sounds edit

After stop consonants edit

A significant number of instances of voiceless aspirates in the Indo-Iranian languages may be explained as reflexes of PIE stop consonants immediately followed by laryngeals (*CH > *Cʰ).

After resonants edit

PIE resonants (sonorants) *r̥,*l̥,*m̥,*n̥ are predicted to become consonantal allophones *r, *l, *m, *n when immediately followed by a vowel. Using R to symbolize any resonant (sonorant) and V for any vowel, *R̥V>*RV. Instances in the daughter languages of a vocalic resonant immediately followed by a vowel (RV) can sometimes be explained as reflexes of PIE *R̥HV with a laryngeal between the resonant and the vowel giving rise to a vocalic allophone. This original vocalic quality was preserved following H loss.

Next to semivowels edit

(see Holtzmann's law)

Laryngeal theory has been used to explain the occurrence of a reconstructed sound change known as Holtzmann's law or sharpening (German Verschärfung) in North Germanic and East Germanic languages. The existing theory explains that PIE semivowels *y and *w were doubled to Proto-Germanic *-yy- and *-ww-, and that these in turn became -ddj- and -ggw- respectively in Gothic and -ggj- and -ggw- in early North Germanic languages. However, the existing theory had difficulty in predicting which instances of PIE semivowels led to sharpening and which instances failed to do so. The new explanation proposes that words exhibiting sharpening are derived from PIE words with laryngeals.

Example
PIE early Proto-Germanic later Proto-Germanic Reflexes
*drewh₂yo
'trustworthy'
*trewwjaz with sharpening *triwwjaz Gothic triggws

Old Norse tryggr

without sharpening *triuwjaz Old English trēowe
Old High German gitriuwi

Many of these techniques rely on the laryngeal being preceded by a vowel, and so they are not readily applicable for word-initial laryngeals except in Greek and Armenian. However, occasionally languages have compounds in which a medial vowel is unexpectedly lengthened or otherwise shows the effect of the following laryngeal. This shows that the second word originally began with a laryngeal and that this laryngeal still existed at the time the compound was formed.

Support for theory from external borrowings edit

Further evidence of the laryngeals has been found in Uralic languages, and some marginal cases also in Kartvelian. While the protolanguages of these families have not been convincingly demonstrated to be genetically related to PIE, some word correspondences have been identified as likely borrowings from very early Indo-European dialects to early Uralic and Kartvelian dialects. In a few such instances, laryngeal consonants reconstructed in PIE stems show correspondences with overt dorsal or laryngeal consonants in the Proto-Uralic and Proto-Kartvelian forms, in effect suggesting that these forms result from very old PIE borrowings where the consonantal nature of the PIE laryngeals was preserved.

Laryngeals reflected in the Kartvelian languages edit

The evidence for the preservation of laryngeals by borrowings into Proto-Kartvelian is meagre, but intriguing.

It has been suggested that some examples of an initial Proto-Kartvelian sequence *γw- may reflect sequences of the form *hxw- borrowed from PIE—cp. e.g. PK *γweb- 'to weave' alongside PIE *h₁webʰ- 'id.', PK *γwel- 'to turn, to twist' alongside PIE *(h₁)wel- 'to turn, to roll'—although evidence for *hxw- sequences in most of the proposed PIE source terms is controversial and other possible explanations for Proto-Kartvelian *γw- sequences exist.[32]

A separate suggestion proposes that the PIE *a-colouring laryngeal *h₂ is reflected as Proto-Kartvelian *x in two fruit names borrowed from PIE *(s)méh₂lo- 'apple', namely Proto-Kartvelian *msxal- 'pear' and *sxmart'l̥- 'medlar', the latter etymologically the 'rotten (*t'l̥-) pear'.[33]

Laryngeals reflected in the Uralic languages edit

Evidence for the PIE laryngeals has been suggested in ancient loans into Proto-Uralic. Work particularly associated with research of the scholar Jorma Koivulehto has identified several additions to the list of Finnic loanwords from an Indo-European source or sources whose particular interest is the apparent correlation of PIE laryngeals with three postalveolar phonemes (or their later reflexes) in the Finnic forms. If so, this would suggest great antiquity for the borrowings; since no attested Indo-European language neighbouring Uralic has consonants as reflexes of laryngeals, this would bolster the idea that laryngeals were phonetically distinct consonants.

However, Koivulehto's theories are not universally accepted and have been sharply criticized (e.g. by Finno-Ugricist Eugene Helimski[34]) because many of the reconstructions involve a great deal of far-fetched hypotheses and the chronology is not in good agreement with the history of Bronze Age and Iron Age migrations in the Eastern Europe established by archaeologists and historians.

Three Uralic phonemes have been posited to reflect PIE laryngeals. In post-vocalic positions both the postalveolar fricatives that ever existed in Uralic are represented: firstly a possibly velar one, theoretically reconstructed much as the PIE laryngeals (conventionally marked *x), in the very oldest borrowings and secondly a grooved one (*š as in shoe becoming modern Finnic h) in some younger ones. The velar plosive k is the third reflex and the only one found word-initially. In intervocalic position, the reflex k is probably younger than either of the two former ones.[citation needed] The fact that Finno-Ugric may have plosive reflexes for PIE laryngeals is to be expected under well documented Finnic phonological behaviour and does not mean much for tracing the phonetic value of PIE laryngeals (cf. Finnish kansa 'people' < PGmc *xansā 'company, troupe, party, crowd' (cf. German Hanse), Finnish kärsiä 'suffer, endure' < PGmc *xarđia- 'endure' (cf. E. hard), Finnish pyrkiä < PGmc. *wurk(i)ja- 'work, work for' etc.).

The correspondences do not differentiate between h₁, h₂ and h₃. Thus

  1. PIE laryngeals correspond to the PU laryngeal *x in wordstems like:
    • Finnish na-inen 'woman' / naa-ras 'female' < PU *näxi-/*naxi- < PIE *[gʷnah₂-] = */gʷneh₂-/ > Sanskrit gnā́ 'goddess', OIr. mná (gen. of ben), ~ Greek gunē 'woman' (cognate to Engl. queen)
    • Finnish sou-ta- ~ Samic *sukë- 'to row' < PU *suxi- < PIE *sewh-
    • Finnish tuo- 'bring' ~ Samic *tuokë- ~ Tundra Nenets tāś 'give' < PU *toxi- < PIE *[doh₃-] = */deh₃-/ > Greek didōmi, Lat. dō-, Old Lith. dúomi 'give', Hittite 'take'
    Note the consonantal reflex /k/ in Samic.
  2. PIE laryngeals correspond to Finnic *h, whose normal origin is a Pre-Finnic fricative *š in wordstems like:
    • Finnish rohto 'medical plant, green herb' < PreFi *rošto < PreG *groH-tu- > Gmc. *grōþu 'green growth' > Swedish grodd 'germ (shoot)'
    • Old Finnish inhi-(m-inen) 'human being' < PreFi *inši- 'descendant' < PIE *ǵnh₁-(i)e/o- > Sanskrit jā́- 'born, offspring, descendant', Gmc. *kunja- 'generation, lineage, kin'
  3. PIE laryngeals correspond to Pre-Finnic *k in wordstems like:
    • Finnish kesä 'summer' < PFS *kesä < PIE *h₁es-en- (*h₁os-en-/-er-) > Balto-Slavic *eseni- 'autumn', Gothic asans 'summer'
    • Finnish kaski 'burnt-over clearing' < Proto-Finnic *kaski < PIE/PreG *[h₂a(h₁)zg-] = */h₂e(h₁)sg-/ > Gmc. *askōn 'ashes'
    • Finnish koke- 'to perceive, sense' < PreFi *koki- < PIE *[h₃okw-ie/o] = */h₃ekw-ie/o/ > Greek opsomai 'look, observe' (cognate to Lat. oculus 'eye')
    • Finnish kulke- 'to go, walk, wander' ~ Hungarian halad- 'to go, walk, proceed' < PFU *kulki- < PIE *kʷelH-e/o- > Greek pelomai '(originally) to be moving', Sanskrit cárati 'goes, walks, wanders (about)', cognate Lat. colere 'to till, cultivate, inhabit'
    • Finnish teke- 'do, make' ~ Hungarian tëv-, të-, tesz- 'to do, make, put, place' < PFU *teki- < PIE *dʰeh₁ > Greek títhēmi, Sanskrit dádhāti 'put, place', but 'do, make' in the western IE languages, e.g. the Germanic forms do, German tun, etc., and Latin faciō (though OE dón and into Early Modern English do still sometimes means "put", and doen or tun still does in Dutch and colloquial German).

This list is not exhaustive, especially when one also considers several etymologies with laryngeal reflexes in Finno-Ugric languages other than Finnish. For most cases no other plausible etymology exists. While some single etymologies may be challenged, the case for this oldest stratum itself seems conclusive from the Uralic point of view, and corresponds well with all that is known about the dating of the other most ancient borrowings and contacts with Indo-European populations. Yet acceptance for this evidence is far from unanimous among Indo-European linguists, some even regard the hypothesis as controversial (see above). If, on the other hand, the Indo-Uralic hypothesis is supported, the explanation of why the correspondences do not differentiate between h₁, h₂ and h₃ is that Pre-PIE or Indo-Hittite innovated this difference as a part of developing ablaut, where the zero grade matched h₁ ([ʔ] and [h]), the unrounded full (“e”) grade matched h₂ ([χ] > [ħ] and [x] < ʁ]) and the rounded full (“o”) grade matched h₃ ([ɣʷ]).

PIE laryngeals and Proto-Semitic edit

Several linguists have posited a relationship between PIE and Semitic, almost right after the discovery of Hittite. Among these were Hermann Möller, though a few had argued that such a relationship existed before the 20th century, like Richard Lepsius in 1836. The postulated correspondences between the IE laryngeals and that of Semitic assist in demonstrating their evident existence. Given here are a few lexical comparisons between the two respective proto-languages based on Blažek (2012), who discusses these correspondences in the context of a proposed relation between IE and Afroasiatic, the language family to which the Semitic languages belong:[35]

  1. Semitic ʼ-b-y 'to want, desire' ~ PIE *[hyebʰ-] 'to fuck'
  2. Semitic ʼ-m-m/y ~ PIE *[h₁em-] 'to take'
  3. Semitic ʼin-a 'in', 'on', 'by' ~ PIE *[h₁en-] > Sanskrit ni, ~ Greek enōpḗ
  4. Semitic ʼanāku ~ PIE *h₁eǵ(hom)- 'I'
  5. Semitic ʻ-d-w 'to pass (over), move, run' ~ PIE *[weh₂dʰ-] 'to pass through'
  6. Semitic ʻ-l-y 'to rise, grow, go up, be high' ~ PIE *[h₂el-] 'to grow, nourish'
  7. Semitic ʻ-k-w: Arabic ʻakā 'to rise, be big' ~ PIE *[h₂ewg-] 'to grow, nourish'
  8. Semitic ʻl 'next, in addition' ~ PIE *[h₂el-] 'in'
  9. Semitic: Arabic ʻanan 'side', ʻan 'from, for; upon; in' ~ PIE *[h₂en h₂e/u-] 'on'


Comments edit

The Greek forms ánemos and árotron are particularly valuable because the verb roots in question are extinct in Greek as verbs. This means that there is no possibility of some sort of analogical interference, as, for example, happened in the case of Latin arātrum "plow", whose shape has been distorted by the verb arāre "to plow" (the exact cognate to the Greek form would have been *aretrum). It used to be standard to explain the root vowels of Greek thetós, statós, dotós "put, stood, given" as analogical. Most scholars nowadays probably take them as original, but in the case of "wind" and "plow", the argument can't even come up.

Regarding Greek híeros, the pseudo-participle affix *-ro- is added directly to the verb root, so *ish₁-ro- > *isero- > *ihero- > híeros (with regular throwback of the aspiration to the beginning of the word), and Sanskrit iṣirá-. There seems to be no question of the existence of a root *eysH- "vigorously move/cause to move". If the word began with a laryngeal, and most scholars would agree that it did, it would have to be *h₁-, specifically; and that's a problem. A root of the shape *h₁eysh₁- is not possible. Indo-European had no roots of the type *mem-, *tet-, *dhredh-, i.e., with two copies of the same consonant. But Greek attests an earlier (and rather more widely attested) form of the same meaning, híaros. If we reconstruct *h₁eysh₂-, all of our problems are solved in one stroke. The explanation for the híeros/híaros business has long been discussed, without much result; laryngeal theory now provides the opportunity for an explanation which did not exist before, namely the metathesis of the two laryngeals. It is still only a guess, but it is a much simpler and more elegant guess than the guesses available before.

The syllabic *h₂ in *ph₂ter- "father" might not be isolated. Certain evidence shows that the kinship affix seen in "mother, father" etc. might have been *-h₂ter- instead of *-ter-. The laryngeal syllabified after a consonant (thus Greek patḗr, Latin pater, Sanskrit pitár-; Greek thugátēr, Sanskrit duhitár- "daughter") but lengthened a preceding vowel (thus say Latin māter "mother", frāter "brother") — even when the "vowel" in question was a syllabic resonant, as in Sanskrit yātaras "husbands' wives" < *yṆt- < *yṇ-h₂ter-).

Laryngeals in morphology edit

Like any other consonant, Laryngeals feature in the endings of verbs and nouns and derivational morphology, the only difference being the greater difficulty of telling what's going on. Indo-Iranian, for example, can retain forms that pretty clearly reflect a laryngeal, but there is no way of knowing which one.

The following is a rundown of laryngeals in Proto-Indo-European morphology.

  • *h₁ is seen in the instrumental ending (probably originally indifferent to number, like English expressions of the type by hand and on foot). In Sanskrit, feminine i- and u-stems have instrumentals in -ī, -ū, respectively. In the Rigveda, there are a few old a-stems (PIE o-stems) with an instrumental in -ā; but even in that oldest text the usual ending is -enā, from the n-stems.
Greek has some adverbs in -ē, but more important are the Mycenaean forms like e-re-pa-te "with ivory" (i.e. elephantē? -ě?)
The marker of the neuter dual was *-iH, as in Sanskrit bharatī "two carrying ones (neut.)", nāmanī "two names", yuge "two yokes" (< yuga-i? *yuga-ī?). Greek to the rescue: the Homeric form ósse "the (two) eyes" is manifestly from *h₃ekʷ-ih₁ (formerly *okʷ-ī) via fully regular sound laws (intermediately *okʷye).
*-eh₁- derives stative verb senses from eventive roots: PIE *sed- "sit (down)": *sed-eh₁- "be in a sitting position" (> Proto-Italic *sed-ē-ye-mos "we are sitting" > Latin sedēmus). It is attested in Celtic, Italic, Germanic (the Class IV weak verbs), and Baltic/Slavic, with some traces in Indo-Iranian (In Avestan the affix seems to form past-habitual stems).
It seems likely, though it is less certain, that this same *-h₁ underlies the nominative-accusative dual in o-stems: Sanskrit vṛkā, Greek lúkō "two wolves". (The alternative ending -āu in Sanskrit cuts a small figure in the Rigveda, but eventually becomes the standard form of the o-stem dual.)
*-h₁s- derives desiderative stems as in Sanskrit jighāṃsati "desires to slay" < *gʷhi-gʷhṇ-h₁s-e-ti- (root *gʷhen-, Sanskrit han- "slay"). This is the source of Greek future tense formations and (with the addition of a thematic suffix *-ye/o-) the Indo-Iranian one as well: bhariṣyati "will carry" < *bher-h₁s-ye-ti.
*-yeh₁-/*-ih₁- is the optative suffix for root verb inflections, e.g. Latin (old) siet "may he be", sīmus "may we be", Sanskrit syāt "may he be", and so on.
  • *h₂ is seen as the marker of the neuter plural: *-h₂ in the consonant stems, *-eh₂ in the vowel stems. Much levelling and remodelling are seen in the daughter languages that preserve any ending at all, thus Latin has generalized *-ā throughout the noun system (later regularly shortened to -a), Greek generalized -ǎ < *-h₂.
The categories masculine/feminine plainly did not exist in the most original form of Proto-Indo-European, and there are very few noun types which are formally different in the two genders. The formal differences are mostly to be seen in adjectives (and not all of them) and pronouns. Both types of derived feminine stems feature *h₂: a type that is patently derived from the o-stem nominals; and an ablauting type showing alternations between *-yeh₂- and *-ih₂-. Both are peculiar in having no actual marker for the nominative singular, and at least as far as the *-eh₂- type, two features seem clear: it is based on the o-stems, and the nom.sg. is probably in origin a neuter plural. (An archaic trait of Indo-European morpho-syntax is that plural neuter nouns construe with singular verbs, and quite possibly *yugeh₂ was not so much "yokes" in our sense, but "yokage; a harnessing-up".) Once that much is thought of, however, it is not easy to pin down the details of the "ā-stems" in the Indo-European languages outside of Anatolia, and such an analysis sheds no light at all on the *-yeh₂-/*-ih₂- stems, which (like the *eh₂-stems) form feminine adjective stems and derived nouns (e.g. Sanskrit devī- "goddess" from deva- "god") but unlike the "ā-stems" have no foundation in any neuter category.
*-eh₂- seems to have formed factitive verbs, as in *new-eh₂- "to renew, make new again", as seen in Latin novāre, Greek neáō and Hittite ne-wa-aḫ-ḫa-an-t- (participle) all "renew" but all three with the pregnant sense of "plow anew; return fallow land to cultivation".
*-h₂- marked the 1st person singular, with a confusing distribution: in the thematic active (the familiar -ō ending of Greek and Latin, and Indo-Iranian -ā(mi)), and also in the perfect tense (not really a tense in PIE): *-h₂e as in Greek oîda "I know" < *woyd-h₂e. It is the basis of the Hittite ending -ḫḫi, as in da-aḫ-ḫi "I take" < *-ḫa-i (original *-ḫa embellished with the primary tense marker with subsequent smoothing of the diphthong).
  • *-eh₃ may be tentatively identified in a directive case. No such case is found in Indo-European noun paradigms, but such a construct accounts for a curious collection of Hittite forms like ne-pi-ša "(in)to the sky", ták-na-a "to, into the ground", a-ru-na "to the sea". These are sometimes explained as o-stem datives in -a < *-ōy, an ending attested in Greek and Indo-Iranian, among others, but there are serious problems with such a view, and the forms are highly coherent, functionally. And there are also appropriate adverbs in Greek and Latin (elements lost in productive paradigms sometimes survive in stray forms, like the old instrumental case of the definite article in English expressions like the more the merrier): Greek ánō "upwards, kátō "downwards", Latin quō "whither?", "to that place"; and perhaps even the Indic preposition/preverb â "to(ward)" which has no satisfactory competing etymology. (These forms must be distinguished from the similar-looking ones formed to the ablative in *-ōd and with a distinctive "fromness" sense: Greek ópō "whence, from where".)

Criticism edit

Throughout its history, the laryngeal theory in its various forms has been subject to extensive criticism and revision.

The original argument of Saussure was not accepted by anyone in the Neogrammarian school, primarily based at the University of Leipzig, then reigning at the cutting-edge of Indo-European linguistics. Several of them attacked the Mémoire savagely. Osthoff's criticism was particularly virulent, often descending into personal invective.[36]

For the first half-century of its existence, the laryngeal theory was widely seen as ‘an eccentric fancy of outsiders’.[37] In Germany it was roundly rejected.[38] Among its early proponents were H. Möller, who extended Saussure's system with a third, non-colouring laryngeal, A. Cuny, H. Pedersen, and K. Oštir. The fact that these scholars were engaged in highly speculative long-range linguistic comparison further contributed to its isolation.

Although the founding fathers were able to provide some indirect evidence of a lost consonantal element (for example, the origin of the Indo-Iranian voiceless aspirates in *CH sequences and the ablaut pattern of the heavy bases, *CeRə- ~ *CR̥̄- in the traditional formulation[39]), the direct evidence so crucial for the Neogrammarian thinking was lacking. Saussure's structural considerations were foreign to the leading contemporary linguists.[36]

After J. Kuryłowicz's convincing demonstration[40] that the Hittite language preserved at least some of Saussure's coefficients sonantiques, the focus of the debate shifted. It was still unclear how many laryngeals are to be posited to account for the new facts and what effect they have had exactly. Kuryłowicz, after a while, settled on four laryngeals,[41] an approach further accepted by E. Sapir, E. Sturtevant, and through them much of American linguistics. The three-laryngeal system was defended, among others, by W. Couvreur and by É. Benveniste. Many individual proposals were made, which assumed up to ten laryngeals (A. Martinet). While some scholars, like H. Kronasser and G. Bonfante, attempted to disregard Anatolian evidence altogether, the ‘minimal’ serious proposal (with roots in Pedersen's early ideas) was put forward by Hans Hendriksen, L. Hammerich, and later L. Zgusta, who assumed a single /H/ phoneme with no vowel-colouring effects.

However, by the 2000s a widespread agreement was reached in the field – though not unanimous – on reconstructing Möller's three laryngeals.[42] One of the last major critics of this approach was O. Szemerényi, who subscribed to a theory similar to Zgusta's.[43]

Today the laryngeal theory is almost universally accepted in this new standard form. Nevertheless, marginal attempts to undermine its bases are occasionally undertaken.[44][45]

References edit

  1. ^ Kuryłowicz, Jerzy (1927). "ə indoeuropéen et ḫ hittite". Études indoeuropéennes. I: 1935.
  2. ^ Puhvel, Jaan (2018) [1965]. "Evidence in Anatolian". In Winter, Werner (ed.). Evidence for Laryngeals. Janua Linguarum. Vol. 11 (reprint ed.). Berlin; Boston: de Gruyter-Mouton. pp. 79–92. ISBN 9783111657080. OCLC 1029811535.
    Puhvel, Jaan (1965). "Evidence in Anatolian". In Winter, Werner (ed.). Evidence for Laryngeals (1st ed.). The Hague: Mouton. pp. 79–92. ISBN 3111657086. OCLC 177878.
  3. ^ Zair, N. (2012). The Reflexes of the Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Celtic. Brill. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-90-04-23309-6.
  4. ^ a b c Mallory, J. P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (2006). The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. Oxford University Press. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-19-929668-2.
  5. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture (Illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 462. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5.
  6. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, Douglas Q. (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture (Illustrated ed.). Taylor & Francis. pp. 9–10, 13–14, 55. ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5.
  7. ^ a b c Rasmussen (1999), p. 77
  8. ^ Rasmussen (1999), p. 71
  9. ^ a b Rasmussen (1999), p. 76
  10. ^ Kloekhorst, Alwin (2004). "The preservation of *h₁ in hieroglyphic Luwian. Two separate a-signs". Historische Sprachforschung. 117: 26–49.
  11. ^ Kloekhorst, Alwin (2006). "Initial laryngeals in Anatolian". Historische Sprachforschung. 119: 77–108.
  12. ^ Rieken, Elisabeth (2010). "Review of A. Kloekhorst, Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon". Kratylos (book review). 55: 125–133. doi:10.29091/KRATYLOS/2010/1/17.
  13. ^ Melchert, Craig (2010). "Spelling of initial /a-/ in hieroglyphic Luwian". In Singer, Itamar (ed.). Ipamati kistamati pari tumatimis. Institute of Archaeology. Tel Aviv University. pp. 147–58.
  14. ^ Weeden, Mark (2011). "Spelling, phonology and etymology in Hittite historical linguistics" (PDF). Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 74: 59–76. doi:10.1017/s0041977x10000716. S2CID 56459900.
  15. ^ Simon, Zsolt (2010). "Das Problem der phonetischen Interpretation der anlautenden scriptio plena im Keilschriftluwischen". Babel und Bibel. 4: 249–265.
  16. ^ a b Simon, Zsolt (2013). "Once again on the hieroglyphic Luwian sign *19 〈á〉". Indogermanische Forschungen. 118 (2013): 1–22, p 17. doi:10.1515/indo.2013.118.2013.1. S2CID 171055457.
  17. ^ Compare Lindeman (1997), p. 24
  18. ^ Watson, Janet C.E. (2002). The Phonology and Morphology of Arabic. Oxford Univ. Press. p. 46. ISBN 9780199257591. Retrieved 2012-03-18.
  19. ^ Weiss, Michael (2016). "The Proto-Indo-European laryngeals and the name of Cilicia in the Iron Age". In Byrd, Andrew Miles; DeLisi, Jessica; Wenthe, Mark (eds.). Tavet Tata Satyam: Studies in honor of Jared H. Klein on the occasion of his seventieth birthday. Ann Arbor, MI: Beech Stave Press. pp. 331–340.
  20. ^ a b Kloekhorst, Alwin (2018). "Anatolian evidence suggests that the Indo-European laryngeals *h₂ and *h₃ were uvular stops". Indo-European Linguistics. 6: 69–94. doi:10.1163/22125892-00601003. hdl:1887/81567. S2CID 199270523.
  21. ^ Kümmel, Martin (November 2012). "On historical phonology, typology, and reconstruction" (PDF). Enlil.ff.cuni.cz. Prague, CZ: Institute of Comparative Linguistics, Charles University. p. 4. Retrieved 17 June 2019.
  22. ^ Clackson p. 56.
  23. ^ a b Clackson p. 58.
  24. ^ Ringe pp. 68–70
  25. ^ Kümmel, Martin (2016). "Is ancient old and modern new? Fallacies of attestation and reconstruction (with special focus on Indo-Iranian)". Proceedings of the 27th Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference. Bremen: Hempen.
  26. ^ Ramat p. 41.
  27. ^ Clackson p. 57.
  28. ^ Palmer pp. 216–218
  29. ^ Palmer pp. 219–220
  30. ^ Ringe pp. 73–74
  31. ^ Ringe pp. 74–75
  32. ^ Klimov, Georgiy A. (1994). "Kartvelian evidence for the Indo-European laryngeal?". Indogermanische Forschungen. 99: 62–71.
  33. ^ Fenwick, Rhona S. H. (2017). "An Indo-European origin of Kartvelian names for two maloid fruits". Iran and the Caucasus. 21 (3): 310–323. doi:10.1163/1573384X-20170306.
  34. ^ http://inslav.ru/images/stories/books/BSI1988-1996(1997).pdf (in Russian)
  35. ^ Blažek, Václav (2012). "Indo-European laryngeals in the light of Afroasiatic". In Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead; Thomas Olander; Birgit Annette Olsen; Jens Elmegård Rasmussen (eds.). The Sound of Indo-European: Phonetics, Phonemics and Morphophonemics. ISBN 9788763538381.
  36. ^ a b de Mauro, Tullio (1972). "Notes bibliographiques et critiques sur F. de Saussure". Cours de linguistique générale. By de Saussure, Ferdinand. Paris, FR: Payot. pp. 327–328. ISBN 2-22-850070-4.
  37. ^ Szemerényi (1996), p. 123.
  38. ^ Szemerényi (1996), p. 134.
  39. ^ Cuny, A. (1912). "Notes phonétique historique. Indo-européen et sémitique". Révue de phonétique. 2.
  40. ^ Kuryłowicz, J. (1927). "ə indo-européen et hittite". In Taszycki, W.; Doroszewski, W. (eds.). Symbolae grammaticae in honorem Ioannis Rozwadowski. Kraków, PL: Gebethner & Wolff.
  41. ^ Kuryłowicz, J. (1935). "Sur les éléments consonantiques disparus en indoeuropéen". Études indoeuropéens. Kraków, PL: Gebethner & Wolff.
  42. ^ Meier-Brügger, M. (2003). Indo-European Linguistics. Berlin, DE / New York, NY: De Gruyter. p. 107. ISBN 3-11-017433-2.
  43. ^ Szemerényi (1996).
  44. ^ Lehrman, Alexander [in Russian] (2002). "Indo-Hittite laryngeals in Anatolian and Indo-European". In Shevoroshkin, V.; Sidwell, P. (eds.). Anatolian Languages. Canberra: Association for the History of Language. ISBN 0-95-772514-0.
  45. ^ Voyles, Joseph; Barrack, Charles (2015). On Laryngealism. München, DE: Lincom. ISBN 978-3-86-288651-7. A coursebook in the history of a science.

Bibliography edit

  • Beekes, R.S.P. (1969). The Development of Proto-Indo-European Laryngeals in Greek (Thesis). The Hague: Mouton.
  • Beekes, R.S.P. (1995). Comparative Indo-European Linguistics: An introduction. Amsterdam, DN: John Benjamins. ISBN 1-55619-504-4.
  • Clackson, James (2007). Indo-European Linguistics: An introduction. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-65367-1.
  • Feuillet, Jack (2016). "Quelques réflexions sur la reconstruction du système phonologique indo-européen" [Some thoughts on the reconstruction of the Indo-European phonological system]. Historische Sprachforschung (in French). 129: 39–65. doi:10.13109/hisp.2016.129.1.39.
  • Koivulehto, J. (1991). Uralische Evidenz für die Laryngaltheorie. Veröffentlichungen der Komission für Linguistik und Kommunikationsforschung. Vol. 24. Wien, DE: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften. ISBN 3-7001-1794-9.
  • Koivulehto, J. (2001). "The earliest contacts between Indo-European and Uralic speakers in the light of lexical loans". In Carpelan, C.; Parpola, A.; Koskikallio, P. (eds.). The earliest contacts between Uralic and Indo-European: Linguistic and Archeological Considerations. Vol. 242. Helsinki, FI: Mémoires de la Société Finno-Ougrienne. pp. 235–263. ISBN 952-5150-59-3.
  • Lehmann, Winfred P. (1993). Theoretical Bases of Indo-European Linguistics. London, UK: Routledge. pp. 107–110.
  • Lindeman, Frederik Otto (1970). Einführung in die Laryngaltheorie [Introduction to the Laryngeal theory] (in German). Berlin, DE: Walter de Gruyter & Co.
  • Lindeman, Frederik Otto (1997) [1970]. Introduction to the Laryngeal Theory. Innsbruck, DE: Institut für Sprachwissenschaft der Universität Innsbruck.
  • Möller, Hermann (1970) [1911]. Vergleichendes indogermanisch-semitisches Wörterbuch. Göttingen, DE: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht.
  • Palmer, L.R. (1995). The Greek Language. London, UK: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 1-85399-466-9.
  • Gicalone, Anna; Ramat, Paolo (1998). The Indo-European Languages. Abingdon, UK / New York, NY: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-41263-6.
  • Rasmussen, J.E. (1999) [1983]. "Determining Proto-Phonetics by Circumstantial Evidence: The case of the Indo-European laryngeals". Selected Papers on Indo-European Linguistics. Copenhagen: Museum of Tusculanum Press. pp. 67–81. ISBN 87-7289-529-2.
  • Ringe, D. (2006). From Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Germanic. A Linguistic History of English. Vol. 1. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-955229-0.
  • Rix, H. (1976). Historische Grammatik der Griechischen: Laut- und Formenlehre. Darmstadt, DE: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.
  • de Saussure, F. (1879). Memoire sur le systeme primitif des voyelles dans les langues indo-europeennes. Leipzig, DE: Vieweg.
  • Sihler, A. (1996). New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  • Szemerényi, O. (1996). Introduction to Indo-European Linguistics. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press.
  • Winter, Werner, ed. (1965). Evidence for Laryngeals (2nd ed.). The Hague: Mouton.


External links edit

  • "Proto-Indo-European phonology (Nonstandard and Theoretical)". Retrieved 11 November 2005.
  • Kortlandt, Frederik (2001): Initial laryngeals in Anatolian (pdf)
  • Lexicon of Early Indo-European Loanwords Preserved in Finnish

laryngeal, theory, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, technical, most, readers, understand, please, help, improve, make, understandable, exp. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details June 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article contains characters used to write reconstructed Proto Indo European words for an explanation of the notation see Proto Indo European phonology Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode combining characters and Latin characters The laryngeal theory is a theory in historical linguistics positing that Proto Indo European had a number of laryngeal consonants that are not reconstructable by direct application of the comparative method to the Indo European family The missing sounds remain consonants of an indeterminate place of articulation towards the back of the mouth though further information is difficult to derive Proponents aim to use the theory to Produce greater regularity in the reconstruction of PIE phonology than from the reconstruction that is produced by the comparative method Extend the general occurrence of the Indo European ablaut to syllables with reconstructed vowel phonemes other than e or o In its earlier form see below the theory proposed two sounds in PIE Combined with a reconstructed e or o the sounds produce vowel phonemes that would not otherwise be predicted by the rules of ablaut The theory received considerable support after the deciphering of Hittite which revealed it to be an Indo European language Many Hittite words were shown to be derived from PIE with a phoneme represented as ḫ corresponding to one of the hypothetical PIE sounds Subsequent scholarly work has established a set of rules by which an ever increasing number of reflexes in daughter languages may be derived from PIE roots The number of explanations thus achieved and the simplicity of the postulated system have both led to widespread acceptance of the theory In its most widely accepted version the theory posits three laryngeal phonemes in PIE h h and h see below Daughter languages other than Hittite did not preserve the laryngeals themselves but inherited sounds derived from the merger of these laryngeals with PIE short vowels and the subsequent loss of those laryngeals The phonemes are now recognized as consonants related to articulation in the general area of the larynx where a consonantal gesture may affect vowel quality They are regularly known as laryngeal but the actual place of articulation for each consonant remains a matter of debate see below The laryngeals got their name because they were believed by Hermann Moller and Albert Cuny to have had a pharyngeal epiglottal or glottal place of articulation involving a constriction near the larynx While this is still possible many linguists now think of laryngeals or some of them as having been velar or uvular The evidence for their existence is mostly indirect as will be shown below but the theory serves as an elegant explanation for several properties of the PIE vowel system that made no sense until the theory such as the independent schwas as in peter father Also the hypothesis that PIE schwa e was a consonant not a vowel provides an explanation for some apparent exceptions to Brugmann s law in Indo Aryan languages Contents 1 History 2 Varieties of laryngeals 2 1 Basic laryngeal set 2 2 Additional laryngeals 3 Direct evidence for laryngeals 4 Pronunciation 4 1 h 4 2 h 4 3 h 5 Support for theory from daughter languages 5 1 Direct reflexes of laryngeals 5 1 1 In Germanic 5 1 2 In Albanian 5 1 3 In Western Iranian 5 2 Proposed indirect reflexes 5 2 1 Vowel coloration and lengthening 5 2 2 Greek triple reflex vs schwa 5 2 3 Support from Greek ablaut 5 2 3 1 Ablaut in the root 5 2 3 2 Ablaut in the suffix 5 2 4 Intervocalic H loss 5 2 4 1 Early Indo Iranian disyllables 5 2 4 2 Proto Germanic trimoraic o 5 2 4 3 Balto Slavic long vowel accent 5 2 5 H loss adjacent to other sounds 5 2 5 1 After stop consonants 5 2 5 2 After resonants 5 2 5 3 Next to semivowels 6 Support for theory from external borrowings 6 1 Laryngeals reflected in the Kartvelian languages 6 2 Laryngeals reflected in the Uralic languages 6 3 PIE laryngeals and Proto Semitic 7 Comments 8 Laryngeals in morphology 9 Criticism 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory edit nbsp Ferdinand de SaussureThe beginnings of the theory were proposed by Ferdinand de Saussure in 1879 in an article chiefly demonstrating that a and o were separate phonemes in PIE In the course of his analysis Saussure proposed that what had then been reconstructed as long vowels a and ō alternating with ǝ was an ordinary type of PIE ablaut That is it was an alternation between e grade and zero grade like in regular ablaut further explanations below but followed by a previously unidentified element This element accounted for both the changed vowel colour and the lengthening short e becoming long a or ō So rather than reconstructing a ō and ǝ as others had done before Saussure proposed eA alternating with A and eO with O where A and O represented the unidentified elements Saussure called them simply coefficients sonantiques which was the term for what are now in English more usually called resonants that is the six elements present in PIE which can be either consonants non syllabic or vowels syllabic depending on the sounds they are adjacent to y w r l m n These views were accepted by a few scholars in particular Hermann Moller who added important elements to the theory Saussure s observations however did not achieve any general currency as they were still too abstract and had little direct evidence to back them up This changed when Hittite was discovered and deciphered in the early 20th century Hittite phonology included two sounds written with symbols from the Akkadian syllabary conventionally transcribed as ḫ as in te iḫ ḫi I put am putting This consonant did not appear to be related to any of the consonants then reconstructed for PIE and various unsatisfactory proposals were made to explain this consonant in terms of the PIE consonant system as it had then been reconstructed It remained for Jerzy Kurylowicz 1 to propose that these sounds lined up with Saussure s conjectures He suggested that the unknown consonant of Hittite was in fact a direct reflex of the coefficients sonantiques that Saussure had proposed Their appearance explained some other matters as well For example why verb roots containing only a consonant and a vowel always have long vowels For example in dō give the new consonants allowed linguists to decompose this further into deh This not only accounted for the patterns of alternation more economically than before by requiring fewer types of ablaut but also brought the structure of these roots into line with the basic PIE pattern which required roots to begin and end with a consonant The lateness of the discovery of these sounds by Indo Europeanists is largely because Hittite and the other Anatolian languages are the only Indo European languages for which at least some are attested directly and consistently as consonantal sounds Otherwise their presence is to be inferred mostly through the effects they have on neighboring sounds and on patterns of alternation that they participate in When a laryngeal is attested directly it is usually as a special type of vowel and not as a consonant best exemplified in Greek where syllabic laryngeals when they appeared next to only consonants developed as such h gt e h gt a and h gt o Varieties of laryngeals editThere are many variations of the laryngeal theory Some scholars such as Oswald Szemerenyi reconstruct just one laryngeal Some follow Jaan Puhvel s reconstruction of eight or more 2 Basic laryngeal set edit Most scholars work with a basic three h the neutral laryngeal h the a colouring laryngeal h the o colouring laryngealAdditional laryngeals edit h Some scholars suggest the existence of a fourth consonant h which differs from h in not being reflected as Anatolian ḫ 3 4 but being reflected to the exclusion of all other laryngeals as Albanian h when word initial before an originally stressed vowel 5 E g PIE h orǵʰiyeh testicle yields Albanian herdhe testicle but Hittite arki testicle whereas PIE h ŕ tkos bear yields Albanian ari bear but Hittite hart ag ga hartka cultic official bear person 4 6 When there is an uncertainty whether the laryngeal is h or h the symbol ha may be used 4 h doubletAnother such theory but much less generally accepted is Winfred P Lehmann s view based on inconsistent reflexes in Hittite that h was two separate sounds He assumed that one was a glottal stop and the other a glottal fricative Direct evidence for laryngeals editSome direct evidence for laryngeal consonants comes from Anatolian PIE a is a fairly rare sound and in an uncommonly large number of good etymologies it is word initial Thus PIE traditional anti in front of and facing gt Greek anti against Latin ante in front of before Sanskrit anti near in the presence of But in Hittite there is the noun ḫants front face with various derivatives ḫantezzi first and so on pointing to a PIE root noun h ent face of which h enti would be the locative singular However it does not follow that all reconstructed forms with initial a should automatically be rewritten h e Similarly the traditional PIE reconstruction for sheep is owi a y stem not an i stem whence Sanskrit avi Latin ovis Greek ὄis But Luwian has ḫawi indicating instead the reconstruction h ewis Pronunciation editConsiderable debate still surrounds the pronunciation of the laryngeals and various arguments have been given to pinpoint their exact place of articulation Firstly the effect these sounds have had on adjacent phonemes is well documented The evidence from Hittite and Uralic is sufficient to conclude that these sounds were guttural pronounced rather back in the vocal tract The same evidence is also consistent with the assumption that they were fricative sounds as opposed to approximants or stops an assumption that is strongly supported by the behaviour of laryngeals in consonant clusters h edit J E Rasmussen 1983 suggested a consonantal realization for h as the voiceless glottal fricative h with a syllabic allophone e mid central unrounded vowel 7 This is supported by the closeness of e to e with which it combines in Greek 8 its failure unlike h and h to create an auxiliary vowel in Greek and Tocharian when it occurs between a semivowel and a consonant 9 and the typological likelihood of an h given the presence of aspirated consonants in PIE 9 W P Lehmann 1993 theorized based on inconsistent reflexes in Hittite that there were two h sounds a glottal stop ʔ and an h sound h as in English hat Beekes 1995 suggested that h is always a glottal stop ʔ citation needed A Kloekhorst 2004 10 argued that the Hieroglyphic Luwian sign no 19 𔐓 conventionally transcribed a stood for ʔa distinct from a sign no 450 𔗷 a and represents the reflex of h this would support the hypothesis that h or at least some cases of it were ʔ Later Kloekhorst 2006 11 claimed that also Hittite preserves PIE h as a glottal stop ʔ visible in words like Hittite e es zi he is lt PIE h es ti where an extra initial vowel sign plene spelling is used This hypothesis has been met with serious criticism e g from Rieken 2010 12 Melchert 2010 13 and Weeden 2011 14 Simon 2010 15 supported Kloekhorst s thesis by suggesting that plene spelling in Cuneiform Luwian can be explained in a similar way Additionally Simon s 2013 article 16 revises the Hieroglyphic Luwian evidence and concludes that although some details of Kloekhorst s arguments could not be maintained his theory can be confirmed clarification needed 16 An occasionally advanced idea that the laryngeals were dorsal fricatives 17 corresponding directly to the three traditionally reconstructed series of dorsal stops palatal velar and labiovelar i e that the laryngeals h h and h are more accurately written h h and hʷ respectively suggests a further possibility a palatal fricative c ʁ citation needed h edit From what is known of such phonetic conditioning in contemporary languages notably Semitic languages h the a colouring laryngeal could have been a pharyngeal fricative such as ħ and ʕ Pharyngeal consonants like the Arabic letter ح ħ as in Muħammad often cause a colouring in the Semitic languages 18 Uvular fricatives may also colour vowels thus x is also a noteworthy candidate Weiss 2016 suggests that this was the case in Proto Indo European proper and that a shift from uvular into pharyngeal ħ may have been a common innovation of the non Anatolian languages before the consonant s eventual loss 19 Rasmussen 1983 suggested a consonantal realization for h as a voiceless velar fricative x with a syllabic allophone ɐ i e a near open central vowel 7 Kloekhorst 2018 20 proposes based on evidence from Anatolian languages that h was originally a geminate uvular stop qː he also holds the view that the traditionally voiceless stops of PIE were in fact geminate as in Hittite although he judges it plausible that already in PIE it had a fricative allophone h edit Likewise it is generally assumed that h was rounded labialized due to its o colouring effects It is often taken to have been voiced based on the perfect form pi bh from the root peh drink Rasmussen chose a consonantal realization for h as a voiced labialized velar fricative ɣʷ with a syllabic allophone ɵ i e a close mid central rounded vowel 7 Kummel instead suggests ʁ 21 Kloekhorst 2018 20 reconstructs qʷː as the basic value which in his view would be the labialized counterpart to h see above Support for theory from daughter languages editThe hypothetical existence of laryngeals in PIE finds support in the body of daughter language cognates which can be most efficiently explained through simple rules of development Direct reflexes of laryngeals edit Unambiguous examples are confined to Anatolian languages Words with Hittite ḫ hh Luwian h and Lycian x are explained as reflexes of PIE roots with h 22 Reflexes of h in Anatolian 23 PIE root Meaning Anatolian reflex Cognates peh s protect Hittite paḫḫs Sanskrit pa ti Latin pascere pastus Greek pateomai dʰewh breath smoke Hittite tuḫḫai Sanskrit dhuma Latin fumus Greek thumos h ent front Hittite ḫant Sanskrit anti Latin ante Greek anti h erǵ white silver Hittite ḫarki Sanskrit arjuna Latin argentum Greek arguron Tocharian A arki h owi sheep Luwian hawi Lycian xawa Sanskrit avi Latin ovis Greek o w is peh wr fire Hittite paḫḫur Luwian paḫur English fire Tocharian B puwar Greek pur h weh n t wind Hittite ḫuwant English wind Tocharian A want Latin ventus Greek aent Sanskrit vat h ster star Hittite ḫasterz English star Sanskrit sta Latin stella Greek astḗr h ŕ tḱo bear Hittite ḫartaggas Sanskrit ṛ kṣa Latin ursus Greek arktos h ewh os grandfather Hittite ḫuḫḫa Luwian ḫuḫa Lycian xuge Gothic awo Latin avus Armenian haw h esh r blood Hittite esḫar Luwian asḫar Greek ear Latin sanguis Armenian aryun Latvian asinis Tocharian A ysarSome Hittitologists have also proposed that h was preserved in Hittite as ḫ although only word initially and after a resonant Kortlandt holds that h was preserved before all vowels except o Similarly Kloekhorst believes they were lost before resonants as well Reflexes of h in Anatolian PIE root Meaning Anatolian reflex Cognates welh to hit Hittite walḫ Latin vellō Greek ealōn h esth bone Hittite ḫastai Latin os Greek osteon Sanskrit asthi h erbʰ to change status Hittite ḫarp Latin orbus Greek orphanos h eron eagle Hittite ḫara n Gothic ara Greek ὄrnῑs ornis h pus to have sex Hittite ḫapus Greek opuiōIn Germanic edit Main article Cowgill s law in Germanic Reconstructed instances of kw in Proto Germanic have been explained as reflexes of PIE h w and possibly h w a process known as Cowgill s law The proposal has been challenged but is defended by Don Ringe 24 Examples PIE Total H loss H gt k Reflexes n h we us two Sanskrit ava mGreek nōwe gt nw no P Gmc unk iz lt unkw Gothic ugkisOld English unc gʷih wos alive Sanskrit jivasLatin vivus P Gmc kʷikʷaz Old Norse kvikrOld English cwicIn Albanian edit In the Albanian language a minority view proposes that some instances of word initial h continue a laryngeal consonant PIE root Meaning Albanian Other cognates h orǵʰis testicles herdhe Greek orkhis h ed to eat ha Ancient Greek edō h eydʰ to ignite hith Ancient Greek aithōIn Western Iranian edit Martin Kummel has proposed that some initial x and h in contemporary Western Iranian languages commonly thought to be prothetic are instead direct survivals of h lost in epigraphic Old Persian but retained in marginal dialects ancestral among others to Modern Persian 25 PIE root Meaning Modern Persian h ŕ tḱo bear xers h oHmo raw xam h eh s ashes xak dust earth h eydʰ smo ignite hezom firewood h eyh s mo P 1 passion xesm anger sic with h Kummel s h versus x h Proposed indirect reflexes edit In all other daughter languages a comparison of the cognates can support only hypothetical intermediary sounds derived from PIE combinations of vowels and laryngeals Some indirect reflexes are required to support the examples above where the existence of laryngeals is uncontested PIE Intermediary Reflexeseh a a a ahhuh u u uhhh e a a ah o o o aThe proposals in this table account only for attested forms in daughter languages Extensive scholarship has produced a large body of cognates which may be identified as reflexes of a small set of hypothetical intermediary sounds including those in the table above Individual sets of cognates are explicable by other hypotheses but the sheer bulk of data and the elegance of the laryngeal explanation have led to widespread acceptance in principle Vowel coloration and lengthening edit In the proposed Anatolian language reflexes above only some of the vowel sounds reflect PIE e In the daughter languages in general many vowel sounds are not obvious reflexes 26 27 The theory explains this as the result of H coloration and H loss 1 H coloration PIE e is coloured i e its sound value is changed before or after h and h but not when next to h Laryngeal precedes Laryngeal followsh e gt h e eh gt eh h e gt h a eh gt ah h e gt h o eh gt oh 2 H loss Any of the three laryngeals symbolized here as H is lost before a short vowel Laryngeals are also lost before another consonant symbolized here as C with consequent lengthening of the preceding vowel Before vowel Before consonantHe gt e eHC gt eCHa gt a aHC gt aCHo gt o oHC gt ōCHi gt i iHC gt iCHu gt u uHC gt uCThe results of H coloration and H loss are recognized in daughter language reflexes such as those in the table below After vowels PIE Latin Sanskrit Greek Hittite iH gt i gʷih wos vivus jiva bios uH gt u dʰweh fumus dhuma thumos tuwaḫḫas oH gt ō soh wl sōl su rya hḗlios eh gt e seh mn semen hema eh gt a peh s pascere pastus pa ti pateomai paḫḫas eh gt ō deh r n dōnum dana doronBefore vowels PIE Latin Sanskrit Greek Hittite Hi gt i h iteros iterum itara Hu gt u pelh us plus puru polus Ho gt o h owi ovis avi o w is Luw ḫawa h e gt e h esti est asti esti eszi h e gt a h ent h erǵ ante argentum anti arjuna anti arguron ḫantiḫarki h e gt o h erbʰ orbus arbhas orphanos ḫarp Greek triple reflex vs schwa edit Between three phonological contexts Greek reflexes display a regular vowel pattern that is absent from the supposed cognates in other daughter languages Before the development of laryngeal theory scholars compared Greek Latin and Sanskrit then considered earliest daughter languages and concluded the existence in these contexts of a schwa e vowel in PIE the schwa indogermanicum The contexts are 1 between consonants short vowel 2 word initial before a consonant short vowel 3 combined with a liquid or nasal consonant r l m n long vowel 1 Between consonantsLatin displays a and Sanskrit i whereas Greek displays e a or o dd 2 Word initial before a consonantGreek alone displays e a or o dd 3 Combined with a liquid or nasalLatin displays a liquid nasal consonant followed by a Sanskrit displays either ir ur or the vowel a alone Greek displays a liquid nasal consonant followed by e a in dialects such as Doric or ō dd Laryngeal theory provides a more elegant general description than reconstructed schwa by assuming that the Greek vowels are derived through vowel colouring and H loss from PIE h h and h constituting a triple reflex CHC HC r H l H m H n H h Greek e e re le me neLatin a lost ra la ma naSanskrit i lost ir ur ir ur a a h Greek a a ra la ma naLatin a lost ra la ma naSanskrit i lost ir ur ir ur a a h Greek o o rō lō mō nōLatin a lost ra la ma naSanskrit i lost ir ur ir ur a a1 Between consonantsAn explanation is provided for the existence of three vowel reflexes in Greek corresponding to single reflexes in Latin and in Sanskrit dd 2 Word initialThe assumption of HC in PIE yields an explanation for a dichotomy exhibited below between cognates in the Anatolian Greek and Armenian languages reflexes with initial a and cognates in the remaining daughters which lack that syllable The theory assumes initial h e in the PIE root which has been lost in most of the daughter languages dd h ster star Hittite hasterza Greek astḗr Armenian asti Latin stella Sanskrit tar dd h wes live spend time Hittite huis live Greek a w esa I spent a night Sanskrit vasati spend the night English was dd h ner man Greek anḗr Armenian ayr from anir Oscan niir Sanskrit nar 23 dd 3 Combined with a liquid or nasalThese presumed sonorant reflexes are completely distinct from those deemed to have developed from single phonemes dd r l m n Greek ra ar la al a aLatin or ul em enSanskrit r r a aThe phonology of the sonorant examples in the previous table can only be explained by the presence of adjacent phonemes in PIE Assuming the phonemes to be a following h h or h allows the same rules of vowel coloration and H loss to apply to both PIE e and PIE sonorants Support from Greek ablaut edit The hypothetical values for sounds with laryngeals after H coloration and H loss such as seen above in the triple reflex draw much of their support for the regularization they allow in ablaut patterns specifically the uncontested patterns found in Greek Ablaut in the root edit In the following table each row shows undisputed Greek cognates sharing the three ablaut grades of a root The four sonorants and the two semivowels are represented as individual letters other consonants as C and the vowel or its absence as V 28 e grade o grade zero grade root meaningC V C petes8aipetesthai pothpotḗ ptes8aiptesthai fly C V iC leipeinleipein leloipaleloipa lipeῖnlipein leave C V uC feygeinpheugein fygeῖnphugein flee C V r derkomaiderkomai dedorkadedorka drakeῖndrakein see clearly C V l pelomaipelomai polospolos ples8aiplesthai become C V m temwtemō tomostomos tameῖntamein cut C V n genosgenos gonosgonos gignomaigignomai birth The reconstructed PIE e grade and zero grade of the above roots may be arranged as follows e grade zero gradeC V C pet ptC V iC leikʷ likʷC V uC bʰeug bʰugC V r derk drkC V l kʷel kʷlC V m tem tmC V n gen gnAn extension of the table to PIE roots ending in presumed laryngeals allows many Greek cognates to follow a regular ablaut pattern e grade I zero grade II root meaning cognatesC V h dʰeh dʰh put I e ti8hmi tithemi II e 8etos thetos C V h steh sth stand I a Doric ἳstᾱmi histami II a statos statos C V h deh dh give I ō didwmi didōmi II o dotos dotos Ablaut in the suffix edit The first row of the following table shows how uncontested cognates relate to reconstructed PIE stems with e grade or zero grade roots followed by e grade or zero grade of the suffix w The remaining rows show how the ablaut pattern of other cognates is preserved if the stems are presumed to include the suffixes h h and h 29 e grade rootzero grade suffix I zero grade root e grade suffix II zero grade root zero grade suffix III root meaning cognates gen w gn ew gn w knee I Hittite genu II Gothic kniuIII gny3 gnuks gen h gn eh gn h become I genethr genetḗr II gnhsios gnḗsios III gignomai gignomai tel h tl eh tl h lift bear I telamwn telamṓn II ἔtlᾱn etlan III talas talas ter h tr eh tr h bore wound II titrwskw titrṓskō III ἔtoron etoron Intervocalic H loss edit In the preceding sections forms in the daughter languages were explained as reflexes of laryngeals in PIE stems Since these stems are judged to have contained only one vowel the explanations involved H loss either when a vowel preceded or when a vowel followed However the possibility of H loss between two vowels is present when a stem combines with an inflexional suffix It has been proposed that PIE H loss resulted in hiatus which in turn was contracted to a vowel sound distinct from other long vowels by being disyllabic or of extra length Early Indo Iranian disyllables edit A number of long vowels in Avestan were pronounced as two syllables and some examples also exist in early Sanskrit particularly in the Rigveda These can be explained as reflexes of contraction following a hiatus caused by the loss of intervocalic H in PIE Proto Germanic trimoraic o edit The reconstructed phonology of Proto Germanic PG the ancestor of the Germanic languages includes a long ō phoneme which is in turn the reflex of PIE a As outlined above laryngeal theory has identified instances of PIE a as reflexes of earlier h e eh or aH before a consonant However a distinct long PG ō phoneme has been recognized with a different set of reflexes in daughter languages The vowel length has been calculated by observing the effect of the shortening of final vowels in Gothic 30 length PG Gothicone mora a i u utwo morae e i ō u a i a u three morae e o e ōReflexes of trimoraic or overlong o are found in the final syllable of nouns or verbs and are thus associated with inflectional endings Thus four PG sounds are proposed shown here with Gothic and Old English reflexes PG Reflexes PG Reflexesbimoraic oral ō Gothic aOE u trimoraic oral o Gothic ōOld English anasal ō Gothic aOE ae e nasal ǫ Gothic ōOld English aA different contrast is observed in endings with final z PG Reflexes PG Reflexesbimoraic ōz Gothic ōsOld English ae e trimoraic oz Gothic ōsOld English aLaryngeal theory preserves regularities in declensions and conjugations by explaining the trimoraic sound as a reflex of H loss between vowels followed by contraction Thus by H loss oHo gt oo gt o by H coloration and H loss eh e gt ae gt a gt o Trimoraic ending PIE Reflex PG Reflexesall stemsgenitive plural oHom Sanskrit am often disyllabic in Rig Veda Greek ῶn o n ǫ Gothic ōOld English aeh stemsnominative plural eh es Sanskrit asLithuanian ōs oz Gothic ōsOld English aBimoraic ending PIE Reflex PG Reflexesthematic verbs present indicative1st person singular oh Latin ōLithuanian u ō Gothic aOld English u Anglian eh stemsnominative singular eh Sanskrit aLithuanian a ō Gothic aOld English ueh stemsaccusative singular eh m Sanskrit am Latin am ō Gothic aOld English eeh stemsaccusative plural eh ns Sanskrit as Latin ans gt as ōz Gothic ōsOld English e Trimoraic o is also reconstructed as word final in contexts that are not explained by laryngeal theory Balto Slavic long vowel accent edit The reconstructed phonology of the Balto Slavic languages posits two distinct long vowels in almost exact correspondence to bimoraic and trimoraic vowels in Proto Germanic The Balto Slavic vowels are distinguished not by length but by intonation long vowels with circumflex accent correspond to Proto Germanic trimoraic vowels A significant proportion of long vowels with an acute accent also described as with acute register correspond to Proto Germanic bimoric vowels These correspondences have led to the suggestion that the split between them occurred in the last common ancestor of the two daughters It has been suggested that acute intonation was associated with glottalization a suggestion supported by glottalized reflexes in Latvian This could lend support to a theory that laryngeal consonants developed into glottal stops before their disappearance in Balto Slavic and Proto Germanic 31 H loss adjacent to other sounds edit After stop consonants edit A significant number of instances of voiceless aspirates in the Indo Iranian languages may be explained as reflexes of PIE stop consonants immediately followed by laryngeals CH gt Cʰ After resonants edit PIE resonants sonorants r l m n are predicted to become consonantal allophones r l m n when immediately followed by a vowel Using R to symbolize any resonant sonorant and V for any vowel R V gt RV Instances in the daughter languages of a vocalic resonant immediately followed by a vowel RV can sometimes be explained as reflexes of PIE R HV with a laryngeal between the resonant and the vowel giving rise to a vocalic allophone This original vocalic quality was preserved following H loss Next to semivowels edit see Holtzmann s law Laryngeal theory has been used to explain the occurrence of a reconstructed sound change known as Holtzmann s law or sharpening German Verscharfung in North Germanic and East Germanic languages The existing theory explains that PIE semivowels y and w were doubled to Proto Germanic yy and ww and that these in turn became ddj and ggw respectively in Gothic and ggj and ggw in early North Germanic languages However the existing theory had difficulty in predicting which instances of PIE semivowels led to sharpening and which instances failed to do so The new explanation proposes that words exhibiting sharpening are derived from PIE words with laryngeals Example PIE early Proto Germanic later Proto Germanic Reflexes drewh yo trustworthy trewwjaz with sharpening triwwjaz Gothic triggwsOld Norse tryggrwithout sharpening triuwjaz Old English treoweOld High German gitriuwiMany of these techniques rely on the laryngeal being preceded by a vowel and so they are not readily applicable for word initial laryngeals except in Greek and Armenian However occasionally languages have compounds in which a medial vowel is unexpectedly lengthened or otherwise shows the effect of the following laryngeal This shows that the second word originally began with a laryngeal and that this laryngeal still existed at the time the compound was formed Support for theory from external borrowings editFurther evidence of the laryngeals has been found in Uralic languages and some marginal cases also in Kartvelian While the protolanguages of these families have not been convincingly demonstrated to be genetically related to PIE some word correspondences have been identified as likely borrowings from very early Indo European dialects to early Uralic and Kartvelian dialects In a few such instances laryngeal consonants reconstructed in PIE stems show correspondences with overt dorsal or laryngeal consonants in the Proto Uralic and Proto Kartvelian forms in effect suggesting that these forms result from very old PIE borrowings where the consonantal nature of the PIE laryngeals was preserved Laryngeals reflected in the Kartvelian languages edit The evidence for the preservation of laryngeals by borrowings into Proto Kartvelian is meagre but intriguing It has been suggested that some examples of an initial Proto Kartvelian sequence gw may reflect sequences of the form hxw borrowed from PIE cp e g PK gweb to weave alongside PIE h webʰ id PK gwel to turn to twist alongside PIE h wel to turn to roll although evidence for hxw sequences in most of the proposed PIE source terms is controversial and other possible explanations for Proto Kartvelian gw sequences exist 32 A separate suggestion proposes that the PIE a colouring laryngeal h is reflected as Proto Kartvelian x in two fruit names borrowed from PIE s meh lo apple namely Proto Kartvelian msxal pear and sxmart l medlar the latter etymologically the rotten t l pear 33 Laryngeals reflected in the Uralic languages edit Evidence for the PIE laryngeals has been suggested in ancient loans into Proto Uralic Work particularly associated with research of the scholar Jorma Koivulehto has identified several additions to the list of Finnic loanwords from an Indo European source or sources whose particular interest is the apparent correlation of PIE laryngeals with three postalveolar phonemes or their later reflexes in the Finnic forms If so this would suggest great antiquity for the borrowings since no attested Indo European language neighbouring Uralic has consonants as reflexes of laryngeals this would bolster the idea that laryngeals were phonetically distinct consonants However Koivulehto s theories are not universally accepted and have been sharply criticized e g by Finno Ugricist Eugene Helimski 34 because many of the reconstructions involve a great deal of far fetched hypotheses and the chronology is not in good agreement with the history of Bronze Age and Iron Age migrations in the Eastern Europe established by archaeologists and historians Three Uralic phonemes have been posited to reflect PIE laryngeals In post vocalic positions both the postalveolar fricatives that ever existed in Uralic are represented firstly a possibly velar one theoretically reconstructed much as the PIE laryngeals conventionally marked x in the very oldest borrowings and secondly a grooved one s as in shoe becoming modern Finnic h in some younger ones The velar plosive k is the third reflex and the only one found word initially In intervocalic position the reflex k is probably younger than either of the two former ones citation needed The fact that Finno Ugric may have plosive reflexes for PIE laryngeals is to be expected under well documented Finnic phonological behaviour and does not mean much for tracing the phonetic value of PIE laryngeals cf Finnish kansa people lt PGmc xansa company troupe party crowd cf German Hanse Finnish karsia suffer endure lt PGmc xarđia endure cf E hard Finnish pyrkia lt PGmc wurk i ja work work for etc The correspondences do not differentiate between h h and h Thus PIE laryngeals correspond to the PU laryngeal x in wordstems like Finnish na inen woman naa ras female lt PU naxi naxi lt PIE gʷnah gʷneh gt Sanskrit gna goddess OIr mna gen of ben Greek gune woman cognate to Engl queen Finnish sou ta Samic suke to row lt PU suxi lt PIE sewh Finnish tuo bring Samic tuoke Tundra Nenets tas give lt PU toxi lt PIE doh deh gt Greek didōmi Lat dō Old Lith duomi give Hittite da take Note the consonantal reflex k in Samic PIE laryngeals correspond to Finnic h whose normal origin is a Pre Finnic fricative s in wordstems like Finnish rohto medical plant green herb lt PreFi rosto lt PreG groH tu gt Gmc grōthu green growth gt Swedish grodd germ shoot Old Finnish inhi m inen human being lt PreFi insi descendant lt PIE ǵnh i e o gt Sanskrit ja born offspring descendant Gmc kunja generation lineage kin PIE laryngeals correspond to Pre Finnic k in wordstems like Finnish kesa summer lt PFS kesa lt PIE h es en h os en er gt Balto Slavic eseni autumn Gothic asans summer Finnish kaski burnt over clearing lt Proto Finnic kaski lt PIE PreG h a h zg h e h sg gt Gmc askōn ashes Finnish koke to perceive sense lt PreFi koki lt PIE h okw ie o h ekw ie o gt Greek opsomai look observe cognate to Lat oculus eye Finnish kulke to go walk wander Hungarian halad to go walk proceed lt PFU kulki lt PIE kʷelH e o gt Greek pelomai originally to be moving Sanskrit carati goes walks wanders about cognate Lat colere to till cultivate inhabit Finnish teke do make Hungarian tev te tesz to do make put place lt PFU teki lt PIE dʰeh gt Greek tithemi Sanskrit dadhati put place but do make in the western IE languages e g the Germanic forms do German tun etc and Latin faciō though OE don and into Early Modern English do still sometimes means put and doen or tun still does in Dutch and colloquial German This list is not exhaustive especially when one also considers several etymologies with laryngeal reflexes in Finno Ugric languages other than Finnish For most cases no other plausible etymology exists While some single etymologies may be challenged the case for this oldest stratum itself seems conclusive from the Uralic point of view and corresponds well with all that is known about the dating of the other most ancient borrowings and contacts with Indo European populations Yet acceptance for this evidence is far from unanimous among Indo European linguists some even regard the hypothesis as controversial see above If on the other hand the Indo Uralic hypothesis is supported the explanation of why the correspondences do not differentiate between h h and h is that Pre PIE or Indo Hittite innovated this difference as a part of developing ablaut where the zero grade matched h ʔ and h the unrounded full e grade matched h x gt ħ and x lt cʁ and the rounded full o grade matched h ɣʷ PIE laryngeals and Proto Semitic edit Several linguists have posited a relationship between PIE and Semitic almost right after the discovery of Hittite Among these were Hermann Moller though a few had argued that such a relationship existed before the 20th century like Richard Lepsius in 1836 The postulated correspondences between the IE laryngeals and that of Semitic assist in demonstrating their evident existence Given here are a few lexical comparisons between the two respective proto languages based on Blazek 2012 who discusses these correspondences in the context of a proposed relation between IE and Afroasiatic the language family to which the Semitic languages belong 35 Semitic ʼ b y to want desire PIE hyebʰ to fuck Semitic ʼ m m y PIE h em to take Semitic ʼin a in on by PIE h en gt Sanskrit ni Greek enōpḗ Semitic ʼanaku PIE h eǵ hom I Semitic ʻ d w to pass over move run PIE weh dʰ to pass through Semitic ʻ l y to rise grow go up be high PIE h el to grow nourish Semitic ʻ k w Arabic ʻaka to rise be big PIE h ewg to grow nourish Semitic ʻl next in addition PIE h el in Semitic Arabic ʻanan side ʻan from for upon in PIE h en h e u on Comments editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Greek forms anemos andarotron are particularly valuable because the verb roots in question are extinct in Greek as verbs This means that there is no possibility of some sort of analogical interference as for example happened in the case of Latin aratrum plow whose shape has been distorted by the verb arare to plow the exact cognate to the Greek form would have been aretrum It used to be standard to explain the root vowels of Greek thetos statos dotos put stood given as analogical Most scholars nowadays probably take them as original but in the case of wind and plow the argument can t even come up Regarding Greek hieros the pseudo participle affix ro is added directly to the verb root so ish ro gt isero gt ihero gt hieros with regular throwback of the aspiration to the beginning of the word and Sanskrit iṣira There seems to be no question of the existence of a root eysH vigorously move cause to move If the word began with a laryngeal and most scholars would agree that it did it would have to be h specifically and that s a problem A root of the shape h eysh is not possible Indo European had no roots of the type mem tet dhredh i e with two copies of the same consonant But Greek attests an earlier and rather more widely attested form of the same meaning hiaros If we reconstruct h eysh all of our problems are solved in one stroke The explanation for the hieros hiaros business has long been discussed without much result laryngeal theory now provides the opportunity for an explanation which did not exist before namely the metathesis of the two laryngeals It is still only a guess but it is a much simpler and more elegant guess than the guesses available before The syllabic h in ph ter father might not be isolated Certain evidence shows that the kinship affix seen in mother father etc might have been h ter instead of ter The laryngeal syllabified after a consonant thus Greek patḗr Latin pater Sanskrit pitar Greek thugater Sanskrit duhitar daughter but lengthened a preceding vowel thus say Latin mater mother frater brother even when the vowel in question was a syllabic resonant as in Sanskrit yataras husbands wives lt yṆt lt yṇ h ter Laryngeals in morphology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Like any other consonant Laryngeals feature in the endings of verbs and nouns and derivational morphology the only difference being the greater difficulty of telling what s going on Indo Iranian for example can retain forms that pretty clearly reflect a laryngeal but there is no way of knowing which one The following is a rundown of laryngeals in Proto Indo European morphology h is seen in the instrumental ending probably originally indifferent to number like English expressions of the type by hand and on foot In Sanskrit feminine i and u stems have instrumentals in i u respectively In the Rigveda there are a few old a stems PIE o stems with an instrumental in a but even in that oldest text the usual ending is ena from the n stems Greek has some adverbs in e but more important are the Mycenaean forms like e re pa te with ivory i e elephante e dd The marker of the neuter dual was iH as in Sanskrit bharati two carrying ones neut namani two names yuge two yokes lt yuga i yuga i Greek to the rescue the Homeric form osse the two eyes is manifestly from h ekʷ ih formerly okʷ i via fully regular sound laws intermediately okʷye dd eh derives stative verb senses from eventive roots PIE sed sit down sed eh be in a sitting position gt Proto Italic sed e ye mos we are sitting gt Latin sedemus It is attested in Celtic Italic Germanic the Class IV weak verbs and Baltic Slavic with some traces in Indo Iranian In Avestan the affix seems to form past habitual stems dd It seems likely though it is less certain that this same h underlies the nominative accusative dual in o stems Sanskrit vṛka Greek lukō two wolves The alternative ending au in Sanskrit cuts a small figure in the Rigveda but eventually becomes the standard form of the o stem dual dd h s derives desiderative stems as in Sanskrit jighaṃsati desires to slay lt gʷhi gʷhṇ h s e ti root gʷhen Sanskrit han slay This is the source of Greek future tense formations and with the addition of a thematic suffix ye o the Indo Iranian one as well bhariṣyati will carry lt bher h s ye ti dd yeh ih is the optative suffix for root verb inflections e g Latin old siet may he be simus may we be Sanskrit syat may he be and so on dd h is seen as the marker of the neuter plural h in the consonant stems eh in the vowel stems Much levelling and remodelling are seen in the daughter languages that preserve any ending at all thus Latin has generalized a throughout the noun system later regularly shortened to a Greek generalized ǎ lt h The categories masculine feminine plainly did not exist in the most original form of Proto Indo European and there are very few noun types which are formally different in the two genders The formal differences are mostly to be seen in adjectives and not all of them and pronouns Both types of derived feminine stems feature h a type that is patently derived from the o stem nominals and an ablauting type showing alternations between yeh and ih Both are peculiar in having no actual marker for the nominative singular and at least as far as the eh type two features seem clear it is based on the o stems and the nom sg is probably in origin a neuter plural An archaic trait of Indo European morpho syntax is that plural neuter nouns construe with singular verbs and quite possibly yugeh was not so much yokes in our sense but yokage a harnessing up Once that much is thought of however it is not easy to pin down the details of the a stems in the Indo European languages outside of Anatolia and such an analysis sheds no light at all on the yeh ih stems which like the eh stems form feminine adjective stems and derived nouns e g Sanskrit devi goddess from deva god but unlike the a stems have no foundation in any neuter category dd eh seems to have formed factitive verbs as in new eh to renew make new again as seen in Latin novare Greek neaō and Hittite ne wa aḫ ḫa an t participle all renew but all three with the pregnant sense of plow anew return fallow land to cultivation dd h marked the 1st person singular with a confusing distribution in the thematic active the familiar ō ending of Greek and Latin and Indo Iranian a mi and also in the perfect tense not really a tense in PIE h e as in Greek oida I know lt woyd h e It is the basis of the Hittite ending ḫḫi as in da aḫ ḫi I take lt ḫa i original ḫa embellished with the primary tense marker with subsequent smoothing of the diphthong dd eh may be tentatively identified in a directive case No such case is found in Indo European noun paradigms but such a construct accounts for a curious collection of Hittite forms like ne pi sa in to the sky tak na a to into the ground a ru na to the sea These are sometimes explained as o stem datives in a lt ōy an ending attested in Greek and Indo Iranian among others but there are serious problems with such a view and the forms are highly coherent functionally And there are also appropriate adverbs in Greek and Latin elements lost in productive paradigms sometimes survive in stray forms like the old instrumental case of the definite article in English expressions like the more the merrier Greek anō upwards katō downwards Latin quō whither eō to that place and perhaps even the Indic preposition preverb a to ward which has no satisfactory competing etymology These forms must be distinguished from the similar looking ones formed to the ablative in ōd and with a distinctive fromness sense Greek opō whence from where Criticism editThroughout its history the laryngeal theory in its various forms has been subject to extensive criticism and revision The original argument of Saussure was not accepted by anyone in the Neogrammarian school primarily based at the University of Leipzig then reigning at the cutting edge of Indo European linguistics Several of them attacked the Memoire savagely Osthoff s criticism was particularly virulent often descending into personal invective 36 For the first half century of its existence the laryngeal theory was widely seen as an eccentric fancy of outsiders 37 In Germany it was roundly rejected 38 Among its early proponents were H Moller who extended Saussure s system with a third non colouring laryngeal A Cuny H Pedersen and K Ostir The fact that these scholars were engaged in highly speculative long range linguistic comparison further contributed to its isolation Although the founding fathers were able to provide some indirect evidence of a lost consonantal element for example the origin of the Indo Iranian voiceless aspirates in CH sequences and the ablaut pattern of the heavy bases CeRe CR in the traditional formulation 39 the direct evidence so crucial for the Neogrammarian thinking was lacking Saussure s structural considerations were foreign to the leading contemporary linguists 36 After J Kurylowicz s convincing demonstration 40 that the Hittite language preserved at least some of Saussure s coefficients sonantiques the focus of the debate shifted It was still unclear how many laryngeals are to be posited to account for the new facts and what effect they have had exactly Kurylowicz after a while settled on four laryngeals 41 an approach further accepted by E Sapir E Sturtevant and through them much of American linguistics The three laryngeal system was defended among others by W Couvreur and by E Benveniste Many individual proposals were made which assumed up to ten laryngeals A Martinet While some scholars like H Kronasser and G Bonfante attempted to disregard Anatolian evidence altogether the minimal serious proposal with roots in Pedersen s early ideas was put forward by Hans Hendriksen L Hammerich and later L Zgusta who assumed a single H phoneme with no vowel colouring effects However by the 2000s a widespread agreement was reached in the field though not unanimous on reconstructing Moller s three laryngeals 42 One of the last major critics of this approach was O Szemerenyi who subscribed to a theory similar to Zgusta s 43 Today the laryngeal theory is almost universally accepted in this new standard form Nevertheless marginal attempts to undermine its bases are occasionally undertaken 44 45 References editThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kurylowicz Jerzy 1927 e indoeuropeen et ḫ hittite Etudes indoeuropeennes I 1935 Puhvel Jaan 2018 1965 Evidence in Anatolian In Winter Werner ed Evidence for Laryngeals Janua Linguarum Vol 11 reprint ed Berlin Boston de Gruyter Mouton pp 79 92 ISBN 9783111657080 OCLC 1029811535 Puhvel Jaan 1965 Evidence in Anatolian In Winter Werner ed Evidence for Laryngeals 1st ed The Hague Mouton pp 79 92 ISBN 3111657086 OCLC 177878 Zair N 2012 The Reflexes of the Proto Indo European Laryngeals in Celtic Brill pp 3 4 ISBN 978 90 04 23309 6 a b c Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q 2006 The Oxford Introduction to Proto Indo European and the Proto Indo European World Oxford University Press p 55 ISBN 978 0 19 929668 2 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European culture Illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis p 462 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Mallory J P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European culture Illustrated ed Taylor amp Francis pp 9 10 13 14 55 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 a b c Rasmussen 1999 p 77 Rasmussen 1999 p 71 a b Rasmussen 1999 p 76 Kloekhorst Alwin 2004 The preservation of h in hieroglyphic Luwian Two separate a signs Historische Sprachforschung 117 26 49 Kloekhorst Alwin 2006 Initial laryngeals in Anatolian Historische Sprachforschung 119 77 108 Rieken Elisabeth 2010 Review of A Kloekhorst Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon Kratylos book review 55 125 133 doi 10 29091 KRATYLOS 2010 1 17 Melchert Craig 2010 Spelling of initial a in hieroglyphic Luwian In Singer Itamar ed Ipamati kistamati pari tumatimis Institute of Archaeology Tel Aviv University pp 147 58 Weeden Mark 2011 Spelling phonology and etymology in Hittite historical linguistics PDF Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 74 59 76 doi 10 1017 s0041977x10000716 S2CID 56459900 Simon Zsolt 2010 Das Problem der phonetischen Interpretation der anlautenden scriptio plena im Keilschriftluwischen Babel und Bibel 4 249 265 a b Simon Zsolt 2013 Once again on the hieroglyphic Luwian sign 19 a Indogermanische Forschungen 118 2013 1 22 p 17 doi 10 1515 indo 2013 118 2013 1 S2CID 171055457 Compare Lindeman 1997 p 24 Watson Janet C E 2002 The Phonology and Morphology of Arabic Oxford Univ Press p 46 ISBN 9780199257591 Retrieved 2012 03 18 Weiss Michael 2016 The Proto Indo European laryngeals and the name of Cilicia in the Iron Age In Byrd Andrew Miles DeLisi Jessica Wenthe Mark eds Tavet Tata Satyam Studies in honor of Jared H Klein on the occasion of his seventieth birthday Ann Arbor MI Beech Stave Press pp 331 340 a b Kloekhorst Alwin 2018 Anatolian evidence suggests that the Indo European laryngeals h and h were uvular stops Indo European Linguistics 6 69 94 doi 10 1163 22125892 00601003 hdl 1887 81567 S2CID 199270523 Kummel Martin November 2012 On historical phonology typology and reconstruction PDF Enlil ff cuni cz Prague CZ Institute of Comparative Linguistics Charles University p 4 Retrieved 17 June 2019 Clackson p 56 a b Clackson p 58 Ringe pp 68 70 Kummel Martin 2016 Is ancient old and modern new Fallacies of attestation and reconstruction with special focus on Indo Iranian Proceedings of the 27th Annual UCLA Indo European Conference Bremen Hempen Ramat p 41 Clackson p 57 Palmer pp 216 218 Palmer pp 219 220 Ringe pp 73 74 Ringe pp 74 75 Klimov Georgiy A 1994 Kartvelian evidence for the Indo European laryngeal Indogermanische Forschungen 99 62 71 Fenwick Rhona S H 2017 An Indo European origin of Kartvelian names for two maloid fruits Iran and the Caucasus 21 3 310 323 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20170306 http inslav ru images stories books BSI1988 1996 1997 pdf in Russian Blazek Vaclav 2012 Indo European laryngeals in the light of Afroasiatic In Benedicte Nielsen Whitehead Thomas Olander Birgit Annette Olsen Jens Elmegard Rasmussen eds The Sound of Indo European Phonetics Phonemics and Morphophonemics ISBN 9788763538381 a b de Mauro Tullio 1972 Notes bibliographiques et critiques sur F de Saussure Cours de linguistique generale By de Saussure Ferdinand Paris FR Payot pp 327 328 ISBN 2 22 850070 4 Szemerenyi 1996 p 123 Szemerenyi 1996 p 134 Cuny A 1912 Notes phonetique historique Indo europeen et semitique Revue de phonetique 2 Kurylowicz J 1927 e indo europeen et ḫ hittite In Taszycki W Doroszewski W eds Symbolae grammaticae in honorem Ioannis Rozwadowski Krakow PL Gebethner amp Wolff Kurylowicz J 1935 Sur les elements consonantiques disparus en indoeuropeen Etudes indoeuropeens Krakow PL Gebethner amp Wolff Meier Brugger M 2003 Indo European Linguistics Berlin DE New York NY De Gruyter p 107 ISBN 3 11 017433 2 Szemerenyi 1996 Lehrman Alexander in Russian 2002 Indo Hittite laryngeals in Anatolian and Indo European In Shevoroshkin V Sidwell P eds Anatolian Languages Canberra Association for the History of Language ISBN 0 95 772514 0 Voyles Joseph Barrack Charles 2015 On Laryngealism Munchen DE Lincom ISBN 978 3 86 288651 7 A coursebook in the history of a science Bibliography editBeekes R S P 1969 The Development of Proto Indo European Laryngeals in Greek Thesis The Hague Mouton Beekes R S P 1995 Comparative Indo European Linguistics An introduction Amsterdam DN John Benjamins ISBN 1 55619 504 4 Clackson James 2007 Indo European Linguistics An introduction Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 65367 1 Feuillet Jack 2016 Quelques reflexions sur la reconstruction du systeme phonologique indo europeen Some thoughts on the reconstruction of the Indo European phonological system Historische Sprachforschung in French 129 39 65 doi 10 13109 hisp 2016 129 1 39 Koivulehto J 1991 Uralische Evidenz fur die Laryngaltheorie Veroffentlichungen der Komission fur Linguistik und Kommunikationsforschung Vol 24 Wien DE Osterreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 3 7001 1794 9 Koivulehto J 2001 The earliest contacts between Indo European and Uralic speakers in the light of lexical loans In Carpelan C Parpola A Koskikallio P eds The earliest contacts between Uralic and Indo European Linguistic and Archeological Considerations Vol 242 Helsinki FI Memoires de la Societe Finno Ougrienne pp 235 263 ISBN 952 5150 59 3 Lehmann Winfred P 1993 Theoretical Bases of Indo European Linguistics London UK Routledge pp 107 110 Lindeman Frederik Otto 1970 Einfuhrung in die Laryngaltheorie Introduction to the Laryngeal theory in German Berlin DE Walter de Gruyter amp Co Lindeman Frederik Otto 1997 1970 Introduction to the Laryngeal Theory Innsbruck DE Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft der Universitat Innsbruck Moller Hermann 1970 1911 Vergleichendes indogermanisch semitisches Worterbuch Gottingen DE Vandenhoek amp Ruprecht Palmer L R 1995 The Greek Language London UK Bristol Classical Press ISBN 1 85399 466 9 Gicalone Anna Ramat Paolo 1998 The Indo European Languages Abingdon UK New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 41263 6 Rasmussen J E 1999 1983 Determining Proto Phonetics by Circumstantial Evidence The case of the Indo European laryngeals Selected Papers on Indo European Linguistics Copenhagen Museum of Tusculanum Press pp 67 81 ISBN 87 7289 529 2 Ringe D 2006 From Proto Indo European to Proto Germanic A Linguistic History of English Vol 1 New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 955229 0 Rix H 1976 Historische Grammatik der Griechischen Laut und Formenlehre Darmstadt DE Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft de Saussure F 1879 Memoire sur le systeme primitif des voyelles dans les langues indo europeennes Leipzig DE Vieweg Sihler A 1996 New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin Oxford UK Oxford University Press Szemerenyi O 1996 Introduction to Indo European Linguistics Oxford UK Clarendon Press Winter Werner ed 1965 Evidence for Laryngeals 2nd ed The Hague Mouton External links edit Proto Indo European phonology Nonstandard and Theoretical Retrieved 11 November 2005 Kortlandt Frederik 2001 Initial laryngeals in Anatolian pdf Lexicon of Early Indo European Loanwords Preserved in Finnish Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Laryngeal theory amp oldid 1193897207, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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