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Proto-Albanian language

Proto-Albanian is the ancestral reconstructed language of Albanian, before the GhegTosk dialectal split. Albanian evolved from an ancient Paleo-Balkan language, traditionally thought to be Illyrian,[3] or otherwise a totally unattested Balkan Indo-European language that was closely related to Illyrian and Messapic.[4] The ancestor of Albanian is also labelled Albanoid in reference to a "specific ethnolinguistically pertinent and historically compact language group".[5]

Proto-Albanian
Albanoid
Reconstruction ofAlbanian (Albanian dialects)
RegionBalkan Peninsula
Erac. 1000 BCE[1] – 600 CE[2]
Reconstructed
ancestor

Proto-Albanian is reconstructed by way of the comparative method between the Tosk and Gheg dialects, as well as the treatment of loanwords, which can be traced back as early as the first contats with Ancient Greek, but the most important of which are those from Latin (dated by De Vaan to the period 167 BCE to 400 CE) and from Slavic (dated from 600 CE onward).[6] The evidence from loanwords allows linguists to construct in great detail the shape of native words at the points of major influxes of loans from well-attested languages.[7]

Proto-Albanian is broken up into different stages which are usually delimited by the onset of contact with different well-attested languages.[6] Its earliest stages are dated to the early Roman Empire, just before the period of intense Latin-Albanian contact, while in its late stages it experienced contact with Slavic languages.[8][9][10] The Tosk-Gheg split is known to predate Slavic contact circa 600 CE, as evidenced by the fact that Latin and ancient Greek loanwords are treated like native words with regard to taxonomical differences between Gheg and Tosk, but the same is not true of Slavic loans.[11][12][13]

Nomenclature of periodization of Proto-Albanian edit

Vladimir Orel distinguishes the following periods of Proto-Albanian:

  • Early Proto-Albanian (EPA): spoken before the 1st century CE, when Albanian had not yet acquired extensive influence via language contact from Latin/Proto-Romance
  • Late Proto-Albanian (LPA): after extensive Latin contact, with the end of the period seeing contacts between ancient Slavic idioms still close to the Proto-Slavic language, in the 6th and 7th centuries CE. During this period the structure of Proto-Albanian was "shattered" by major changes.[8]

However, another periodization paradigm does exist, and is used by some scholars in the field, such as Ranko Matasović:

  • Pre-Proto-Albanian: essentially equivalent to Vladimir Orel's "Early Proto-Albanian", except that the newer paradigm of Matasović dates Latin/Albanian contact a century earlier, and thus it ends for Matasović in the 1st century BCE rather than the 1st century CE.[14] After this period ends, Latin contact begins to transform the language.
  • Early Proto-Albanian: corresponds to the earlier phases of what is for Orel "Late Proto-Albanian". For Matasović, the period spans the 1st century BCE to the 6th century CE, halting before contact with Slavic idioms begins.[14]
  • Late Proto-Albanian: includes the last two centuries of LPA for Orel, plus most of the unattested period of Old Albanian, halting before Turkish influence begins.[14] In this paradigm, Gheg and Tosk split from Early Proto-Albanian, not Late Proto-Albanian, consistent with our knowledge that the split preceded Slavic contact.
  • Early Albanian: corresponds to the late, Ottoman, phase of Old Albanian in the traditional paradigm, ending in 1800, at which point it transitions to Modern Albanian.[14]

Demiraj, like Matasović and unlike Orel, observes the 5th/6th centuries as a boundary between stages, but instead places the "emergence of Albanian" from its parent after this point, rather than the 14th.[10]

In an Albanian chapter penned by Michiel de Vaan within Klein, Joseph and Fritz' 2018 Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics,[6] Demiraj's periods are adhered to. Orel's "Later Proto-Albanian", which is for them also definitively placed before Slavic contact, is referred to as simply "Proto-Albanian" (PAlb) or, in German, Uralbanisch, reflecting the terminology of earlier writing in German.[15][16][17] What is for Orel "Early Proto-Albanian" (EPA), dated definitively before the onset of Latin contact, is for De Vaan, "Pre-Proto-Albanian" (PPAlb); in German, this stage is called Voruralbanisch or Frühuralbanisch.[6] De Vaan also discusses the possibility of breaking Pre-Proto-Albanian into two stages: one before the first Greek loanwords, and one that is after the first Greek loanwords, but before contact with Latin.[6]

This page at present is using the paradigm of Orel.

History of study edit

Vladimir Orel is one of the main modern international linguists to have dealt with the passage from Proto-Indo-European to Proto-Albanian to Modern Albanian. According to Orel, the study of Proto-Albanian syntax remains in its infancy so there are some limitations to the work. However, there have been developments in the understanding of the historical development of phonetics and vocabulary.[18] Other major work has been done by Eqrem Çabej and Shaban Demiraj as well as by major scholars in the field of Romanian historical linguistics as it relates to Albanian (see Albanian–Romanian linguistic relationship) as well as other Balkan linguists. A large amount of work done on Proto-Albanian is published in German, rather than English.

Phonology edit

 
Albanian in the Paleo-Balkanic branch based on the chapter on Albanian by Adam Hyllested and Brian D. Joseph in Thomas Olander (ed.) "The Indo-European Language Family" (2022).

Extensive recent studies on Proto-Albanian phonology have been published by Huld (1984), Beekes (1995), Shaban Demiraj (1996), Bardhyl Demiraj (1997), Orel (2000), Hock (2005), Matzinger (2006), Vermeer (2008), Schumacher (2013), and De Vaan (2018).[6]

At present, this page follows Orel's paradigm for periods of Proto-Albanian, and presents the relationship between the synchronic phonologies of both "EPA" and "LPA" with diachronic relationships to each other and to ancestral Indo-European forms as well as descendant Albanian forms.

Stress edit

In Early Proto-Albanian, stress was paradigmatic, and behaved according to morphological class,[19] with a base on the first syllable.[9] In different paradigms, the stress pattern was varyingly barytonic, oxytonic, and mobile.[19] Unstressed vowels lost one mora—long vowels were shortened, already short vowels were often deleted. In Later Proto-Albanian, however, a new system of unstressed vowel reduction emerged where *a reduced to *ë while all others were simply deleted (except for post-tonic inlaut vowels, which became *ë).[19] Orel gives the following examples:

  • EPA *dáusas "ram" (sg) > *dauš > ... > modern dash
  • EPA *dáusai "rams" (pl) > *dauši > ... > modern desh
  • EPA *dwáigā "branch" (sg) > *déga > ... > modern degë
  • EPA *dwáigāi "branches" (pl) > *dégai > ... > modern degë

Vowels edit

Simple vowels in EPA[20]
Front Central Back
High *i • *iː *u • *uː
Mid *e • *eː • *oː
Low *a • *aː
Diphthongs in EPA[20]
Nucleus -i -u
*e *ei *eu
*a *ai *au

Early Proto-Albanian possessed four distinctive short vowels: *a, *e, *i and *u. Proto-Indo-European *o had merged into *a by the Early Proto-Albanian stage. A five-way distinction was maintained for long vowels: *aː, *eː, *iː, *oː and *uː. Early Proto-Albanian also had four diphthongs: *ei, *ai, *eu and *au.

Early Proto-Albanian's vowel inventory began to change as a result of Latin contact. Initially Albanian was resistant to the restoration of short *o as a separate phoneme, with Latin unstressed *o being replaced by *a, and stressed Latin *o being replaced by *u. However, in later loans, Latin *o is maintained in Albanian as *o. Additionally, some Latin loans with short *u saw Latin *u replaced by *o, as well as *ə specifically in unstressed positions before sonorants. In two cases, Orel argues that Latin short /u/ was lengthened in Albanian to /u:/, ultimately to render /y/. On the other hand, whatever effect Ancient Greek loanwords had at their time of absorption is unclear, but diachronically the vowels always agree with regular internal Albanian developments.

LPA simple vowels
Front Back
High *i *u •
Mid (*e)[Note 1] (*o)[Note 2]
Low *a • *å[21]
(Earlier) LPA diphthongs
-u -i -e
u- *ui *ue
i- *ie
e- *eu *ei
a- *au *ai

Late Proto-Albanian

Late Proto-Albanian exhibited *a, *i and *u throughout its development as distinctive short vowels. *o was restored to the phonemic inventory as a result of loanwords where it was increasingly maintained instead of replaced. Although *e was eliminated by breaking to *ie (which would render je and ja), it was restored by the leveling of /ai/ to /e/ and other phenomena that replaced /a/, /ie/, and /ue/ with /e/. The only long vowel preserved in its original form was *iː. *o: was replaced by *ue, *eː was merged into *aː and both were rounded and eventually raised to *o, while *uː merged with the diphthong *ui, ultimately rendering *y. By Late Proto-Albanian, all the original Indo-European diphthongs had now leveled, but new diphthongs were absorbed in loans, and were also innovated by breaking phenomena: *ie, *ue and *ui. *ai in Latin words with AE shared the fate of inherited Early Proto-Albanian *ai, becoming *e, while Latin AU similarly shared the fate of inherited *au and became *a.

Phonemically nasal vowels emerged in Late Proto-Albanian.[22] First, all vowels standing before nasal consonants were nasalized. The following nasal consonant was then lost in certain morphological contexts, while the vowel remained nasalized, resulting in the emergence of LPA phonemes denoted , , , and .[22] Except in certain Gheg varieties, merged into .[22] The traditional view presented by Orel[22] and Desnickaja[23] is that distinctive nasalization was lost by Tosk but retained by Gheg and that this is a taxonomical difference between the two.[22] However this has now been challenged,[23] after Sheper and Gjinari discovered Lab dialects (Lab is a subdialect of Tosk) in the Kurvelesh region that still had distinctive nasal vowels,[23] and Totoni likewise found that the Lab speech of Borsh also still has nasal vowel phonemes.[24] This means that, instead of the traditional view, it is possible that denasalization happened in most Tosk dialects only after the split from Gheg.[23]

Slavic *uː appears to still have been back and round when it was loaned into Albanian, but it is after the diphthongization and resulting fronting of the original Early Proto-Albanian *uː to *y was no longer absorbing new *uː segments, as they are, with only three exceptions, reflected as *u. Slavic *o had already become *a in the Slavic languages that contacted Albanian by the time of contact, and was loaned as *a for the most part; as is reflected also in other non-Slavic languages absorbing these words. After /v/, this *a became *o again in two attested cases: kos ("yogurt", from Proto-Slavic *kvasъ) and vorbë ("clay pot").

It was at the end of the LPA period that length became no longer distinctive in Albanian,[25] although many Gheg and some Lab dialects preserved it and/or re-innovated it. Furthermore, by Old Albanian, all diphthongs had been lost: those ending in -i were all leveled, the -u was lost in those ending in -u, and those ending in -e were converted to glide + vowel sequences; further changes including the frequent effacement of the former first element or otherwise its hardening into an occlusive (typically /v/ for former u-, and gj /ɟ/ for former i-) rendering the former presence of a diphthong rather opaque in many reflexes.

Vowels of late LPA transitioning to Old Albanian
Front Central Back
High *i • *y *u
MId *e *o
Low *a

Diachronic development edit

This table differentiates short vowels form long vowels with the IPA symbol <ː> being applied to the long vowels.

Specifically contextualized reflex results are placed in parentheses.

Proto-Indo-European developments before Proto-Albanian Early Proto-Albanian Late Proto-Albanian Tosk Albanian Gheg Albanian Example
Latin short /a/ merges with EPA /a/ /a/[18] /a/ /a/[18] /a/[18] PIE *kap- "to seize" > EPA *kapa > kap "to grasp";

Latin APTUM > Alb aftë "capable";

PIE *n̩bʰ(u)lo- > EPA *abula > Alb avull "steam, vapor";[26]

PIE *septm̩ > EPA *septati > Alb shtatë "seven"[26]

*a Proto-Indo-European * and * merge with result of *a[26]
*a > /e/ under umlaut and subsequent analogy[27] /e/ /e/ EPA *albr̩ > elb "barley";

Latin GALBINUS "yellow" > Alb gjelbër "green";

PIE *u̯īḱm̩tī > EPA *wīdžatī > Alb zet "twenty";[26]

PIE *n̩- > EPA *a- > Alb e- (privative prefix)[26]

>/ɑ̃/ before nasals /ə/ <ë> /ɑ̃/ <â, an> EPA *ksanda > Alb hënë ("moon", Gheg: hanë);

Latin CANTICUM > Alb këngë "song"

/ə/ deleted after a stressed syllable[28] IE *bʰolətom > EPA *baltaː > Alb baltë "swamp"
> /e/ after absorption of following laryngeal H_e /e/ /ie/
(> /e/ before *ts, *dz, *nd, *nt, *mb)
/ie/
/je/
/ja/
/ie/
/je/
/ja/
IE *dheHi "to suck"> dheːi > EPA dela > Alb djalë "boy"
> /o/ elsewhere /a/[29] /a/ /a/ /a/ IE *apo "away", "off" > EPA *apa > Alb pa "without"
>/ɑ̃/ before nasals /ə/ <ë> /ɑ̃/ <â, an> IE *sont-s "being" > EPA *san(s) > Alb gjë "thing" (Gheg: gjâ sen/send "thing" or sene/sende "things")
/o/ /o/
(/e/ under umlaut and subsequent analogy[27]) /e/ /e/ IE *ǵʰorios > EPA *darja > Alb derr "pig";

IE *kʷəp- "smoke"(?) > EPA *kapna > Alb kem "incense"(Gheg: kall "burn")

> /ɑ̃/ before nasal /ə/ /ɑ̃/ IE *sont-s "being" > EPA *san(s) > Alb gjë
/e/ /e/ /e/[30] IE *lent- > EPA *lenta: > Alb lëndë "timber" (Gheg: landë)
/ie/
/ie/ /ie/ IE *bʰer- "to bring, carry" > EPA *berja > Alb bie "to bring"
/je/ /je/ IE *smeḱu > EPA smekraː > Alb mjekër "beard"
je > e after affricates, palatals, and liquids je > e after affricates, palatals, and liquids Alb fle "to sleep"
/ja/ /ja/ IE *esmi > EPA *esmi > Alb jam;


ja > a after affricates, palatals and liquids ja > a after affricates, palatals and liquids IE *seḱs + ti > EPA *seksti > Alb gjashtë "six"
/ie/ > /e/ before *ts, *dz, *nd, *nt, *mb /e/ /e/ IE *en per en tod > EPA *(en) per en ta > Alb brenda
/ie/ + /i/ /i/ /i/ IP *gʷedijos > EPA d͡ʒedija > Alb zi "black"
/e/ before *m followed by sibilant or affricate /i/ /i/ /i/ IE *sem-ǵʰo > EPA *semdza > Alb gjithë "all"
Classical Latin /e/ > EPA /ie/ in "usual" layer > /ie/ in EPA for "usual layer" (not identical to development of inherited /e/ which also went through /ie/) /je/ /je/ Lat VERSUM > Alb vjershë "verse"
>/e/ in various contexts after sh, before ng/nd, etc. /e/ Lat CONVENTUS > Alb kuvend
/ja/ /ja/ Lat HEBDOMAS > Alb javë "week"
/ja/ > /a/ after palatals /a/ Lat SELLA > Alb shalë "saddle"
Unstressed /ei/ in Latin loans /e/ /e/ Lat DEBITU꞉RA > Alb detyrë "duty"
Latin /e/ via an unknown different intermediary /e/ /e/ Lat INFERNUM > Alb ferr "hell"; Lat COMMERCIUM > Alb kumerq "toll, duty"
Latin /e/ loaned into Late Proto-Albanian while it lacked any short /e/ phoneme /i/ /i/ IE *ambʰi > EPA *ambi > Alb mbi "on, upon"; Lat PARENTEM > Alb prind "parent"; PIE t(e)r-m- > Alb trim "brave"
Between *r̥ and C /i/ /i/ /i/
/i/
> /ĩ/ before nasals /i/ /ĩ/ <î> EPA *rinja > Alb rij "to make humid" (Gheg: )
/u/ /u/ /u/ /u/ /u/ /u/ IE *bʰugʰ > EPA *bugta > Alb butë "smooth"
> /ũ/ before nasals /u/ /ũ/ <û> IE *ǵenu "knee" > EPA *ganuna > LPA glûna > Alb gju "knee" (Gheg: gjû)
Latin /o/ raises before nasals[31] Lat MONACHVS > murg "monk", CONTRĀ > kundër "against"[31]
Latin stressed[32] /o/ ultimately merges with PIE *ā elsewhere /o/ /o/ Lat COXA > kofshë "hip",[31] ROTA > rrotë "wheel" [32]
/aː/ /aː/ /aː/ /ɒː/ /o/ /o/ IE maːter "mother > EPA maːter > Alb motër "sister"
/eː/ /e:/ /e:/ everywhere except gliding to /j/ in clusters: /ɒː/ /o/ /o/ IE *meː-kwe > LPA mɒːts > Alb mos "don't"
/o:/ /o:/ /o:/ /we/ /e/ /e/ IE *bʰloːros > EPA bloːra > Alb blertë "green"
/i:/ /i:/ /i:/ /i:/ /i/ /i/ IE *piː- "to drink" > EPA *pi꞉ja > Alb pi "to drink"
/u:/ /u:/ /u:/ /ui/ /y/ /y/, /i/ in certain conditions EPA *suːsa > Alb gjysh "grandfather"
/wi/ > /i:/ at word coda after loss of nominative final s /i/ /i/ IE *suːs "pig" > EPA *tsu꞉s > LPA tθui > Alb thi "pig"
/wi/ > /i:/ after labial /i/ /i/ IE *bʰuː- "to grow" > EPA enbuːnja > Alb mbij "to thrive"
/wi/ > /i/ before labial /i/ /i/ IE *kreup > EPA kruːpaː > LPA krwipa > Alb kripë "salt"
/wi/ > /i/ before j, i, other palatal elements /i/ /i/ IE *dreu "tree" > EPA druːnjaː > drinjë "brushwood"
/ai/ /ai/ /ai/ > /ẽ/ > /ɑ̃/ before nasal /ə/ <ë> /ɑ̃/ <â, an> EPA *laidna > Alb ("to let"; Gheg: )
/e/ /e/ /e/ IE *aidʰos > EPA *aida > Alb ethe "fever"
/oi/ /oi/ IE *ḱloitos > EPA *klaita: > Alb qetë "jagged rock"
/ei/ /ei/ /ei/ /i/ /i/ /i/ IE *ǵʰeimen- "winter" > EPA *deimena > Alb dimër "winter"(Gheg: dimën)
Diphthongs of long vowel + j j elided, long vowel develops regularly
/au/ /au/ /au/ >/ɑ̃/ before nasals /ə/ <ë> /ɑ̃/ <â, an> IE *dreu- "tree" > EPA *draunja: > Alb drënjë
/a/ /a/ /a/ *IE aug- > EPA *auga > Alb ag "dusk"
/a/ > /e/ /e/ /e/ EPA *ausra > Alb err "darkness"
/ou/ /ou/ /a/ /a/ /a/ IE *poujo- > EPA *pauja > Alb pah "scab, dust"
/a/ > /e/ /e/ /e/ EPA *gaura > Alb ger
/eu/ /eu/ /eu/ > /ẽ/ > /ɑ̃/ before nasal /ə/ <ë> /ɑ̃/ <â, an> IE *newn̩ "nine" > EPA *neunti > Alb nëntë ("nine", Gheg: nand)
/e/ /e/ /e/ IE *skeud- "to throw" > EPA *skeuda > Alb hedh

Development of Indo-European sonorants edit

The nasal sonorants *n̩ and *m̩ both rendered Early Proto-Albanian *a, which remains *a in modern Albanian (PIE *g'hn̩taː "goose" > EPA *gataː > modern Albanian gatë "heron"). Like EPA *a elsewhere, in some cases it was raised to *e, as seen in PIE *ln̩gwh- > EPA *laga > Albanian lehtë (suffixed with -të).[33]

Diachronic development of sonorants[34][35]
Proto-Indo-European Intermediate developments Early Proto-Albanian Later Proto-Albanian Old Albanian Tosk Albanian Gheg Albanian Example
*m̩ *a continue regular developments of *a from EPA in vowel chart. shtatë ‘seven’ < PIE *septm ̥-
*n̩ *a (i) gjatë ‘long’ < PIE *dln ̥gʰ-t-
*l̩ *il before consonant clusters, *i or *j il, li
*ul elsewhere ul, lu
*r̩ *ir before consonant clusters, *i or *j ir, ri
*ur elsewhere ur, ru
*l *l *l *l l l SA lagje ‘quarter’ < PIE *logʰ-
*l *λ (ly/-li)? j

l (Cham/Arbresh/

Arvanitika)

j SA gjuhë vs A/A gljuhë, SA mijë vs Cham milë
*ɫ (V_V) ll

/γ/ (some Arbresh)

/ð/ (some Lab)

ll

/ð/ (some dialects)

SA hell ‘spear, spit’ < PIE *skōl-
*r *r *r (V_V) *r r r SA (i) mirë ‘good’ < PIE *miHr-
*r (V_V) *λ (-ri)? j j SA bij 'sons' < PA *bir-i
*r: (#_) *r: rr rr SA rrjedh ‘to flow’ < PIE *h₃reǵ-
*m *m *m m m SA motër ‘sister’ < PIE *meh₂-tr-
*n *n *n n

r (-n-)

n

ng /ŋ/ (from /ng/)

SA natë ‘night’ <PIE *nokʷt-
*n: (*-sn-, *-Cn-, *-nC-) n

n (-n-)

n

ng /ŋ/ (from /ng/)

Dialectal anë < PIE *h₂ewk(ʷ)- ~ *h₂uk(ʷ)-.
*ɲ (*gn-, before front vowels) nj nj

ni~n (northern)

SA njeri ‘man’ <PIE *h₂nḗr

Consonants edit

EPA Consonants[36]
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar
Nasal *m *n
Plosive *p • *b *t • *d *ts • *dz *t͡ʃ • *d͡ʒ *k • *g
Fricative *s • *z *x
Glide *w *j
Lateral *l
Trill *r
LPA Consonants
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar
Nasal *m *n
Plosive *p • *b *t • *d *ts *c *k • *g
Affricate *t͡ʃ
Fricative *f *θ • *ð *s • *z *x
Glide *w *j
Lateral *l
Trill *r
Diachronic development[35]
Proto-Indo-European Pre-Proto-Albanian Early Proto-Albanian Later Proto-Albanian Modern Alb (Tosk/Gheg) Examples
*s *s *z > *j ɟ ~ d͡ʒ <gj> IE *serp- "to crawl" > EPA *serpena > Alb gjarpër "snake"
*s > *ʃ after *iː, *uː or -i, -u diphthongs ʃ <sh> IE *dʰouso- > EPA *dausa > Alb dash ("ram")
*ʃ word-initially (sometimes) ʃ <sh> SA shi ‘rain’ < PIE *suH-
> t͡s (if next consonant was *s) > *θ θ <th> IE *suːs ("pig") > EPA *t͡suːs > Alb thi ("pig")
>*x intervocalically or between EPA sonorant and vowel h IE *golso- ("sound") > EPA *gulxa > SA gjuhë
Ø IE *nosom > EPA *naxa > Alb na ("us")
*sK *sK *sK *x h SA hedh ‘to throw’ < PIE *skewd-
*sp- *sp- *sp- f- f- SA farë < PIE *spor-
*st *st *st ʃt ʃt SA shteg ‘path, road’ < PIE *stoygʰ-
*sd *[zd] *zd *zd ð dh SA pidh ‘female pudenda’ < PIE *peysd(ʰ)-
*s from Greek, Latin loanwords ʃ <sh> Lat summus > Alb shumë "more", "much"
*p *p *p *p p IE *eːp ("to take") > EPA *eːpa > Alb jap ("to give")(Gheg: jep ep)
*b, *bʰ *b *b *b b IE *serbʰ- ("to suck in") > EPA *serba > Alb gjerb ("to gulp")
*w between a vowel and *u v EPA *abula > Alb avull ("vapor")
*t *t *t *t t IE *trejes ("three") > EPA *treje > Alb tre ("three")
*d, *dʰ *d *d *d d IE *dʰegʷʰ- ("to burn") > EPA *dega > Alb djeg ("to burn")
> *ð intervocalically or between r and vowel,

in 5th or 6th centuries[37]

ð <dh> IE *skeudV- ("to throw, shoot") > Alb hedh ("to throw, shoot")
*ḱ (*c?) *ḱ (*c?) >*t͡s > *θ θ <th> IE *ḱi-ḱer- ("pea"? cf Latin: cicer) > EPA *tsera > Alb thjerrë ("lentil")
> *t͡ʃ > *s before i, j, u, or w s IE *ḱupo- ("shoulder") > Alb sup ("shoulder");

IE *ḱiā dīti > EPA tsja(i) diti > Alb sot ("today")

*t͡s retained, conditions unclear t͡s <c> IE *h₂eḱ- ("sharp") > EPA *atsara > Alb acar "cold/ice cold"

(but doublet: > athët ("sour")

> *t͡ʃ, conditions unclear t͡ʃ <ç> IE *ḱentro- ("to stick") > Alb çandër ("prop")
> *k before sonorant *k k IE *smeḱr- ("chin") > Alb mjekër ("chin, beard")
*ǵ, *ǵʰ (*ɟ?) *ǵ (*ɟ?) *dz dh SA dhëmb, Gheg dhãmb ‘tooth’ < PIE *ǵombʰ-
*dz~d? *ð~d? d SA dorë < PIE *ǵʰesr-
*d͡ʒ before w *z z SA zë, Gheg. zã (< zãn) < PIE *ǵʰweno-
*k *k *k *k k SA kam ‘to have’ < PIE *keh₂p-
*c (palatalised) q SA qaj 'to weep, cry' < PIE *kluH-i̯o-
*g, *gʰ *g *g *g g SA gardh ‘fence’ < PIE *gʰordʰ-
*j (palatalised) gj SA gjej 'to find' < PIE *gʰédni̯e/o-
*kʷ *kʷ? *t͡ʃ before front vowels *s s SA sjell ‘to bring’ < PIE *kʷelh₁-
*k elsewhere *k k SA pjek ‘to bake’ < PIE *pekʷ-
*c (palatalised) q SA që 'that, which' < PIE *kʷṓd
*gʷ, *gʷʰ *gʷ? *d͡ʒ(w) before front vowels *z z SA zorrë ‘gut’ < PIE *gʷʰērn-
*g elsewhere *g g SA djeg ‘to burn’ < PIE *dʰegʷʰ-
*j (palatalised) gj SA gjeth 'leaf' < PIE *gʷos(d)- 'wood'
*y *j *z (#_V) *j gj SA gjem ‘bridle’ < PIE *yom-
Ø (V_V) Ø Ø SA tre ‘three’ < PIE *treyes
*w *w *w (#_V) *w v SA vesh ‘to put on (clothes)’ < PIE *wes-
Ø (V_V) Ø Ø SA ve ‘widow’ < PIE *widʰewh₂

Classification & isoglosses with other branches of Indo-European edit

The closest language to Albanian is Messapic, with which it forms a common branch titled Illyric in Hyllested & Joseph (2022).[38] Hyllested & Joseph (2022) in agreement with recent bibliography identify Greco-Phrygian as the IE branch closest to the Albanian-Messapic one. These two branches form an areal grouping – which is often called "Balkan IE" – with Armenian. Shortly after they had diverged from one another, Greek, Armenian, and partly Albanian undoubtedly also underwent a longer period of contact (as can be seen, for example, in the irregular correspondence: Greek σκόρ(ο)δον, Armenian sxtor, xstor, and Albanian hudhër, hurdhë "garlic"). Furthermore, intense Greek–Albanian contacts certainly occurred thereafter,[39] and ongoing connections between them have been in the Balkans from the ancient times, continuing up to the present-days.[40]

Hyllested & Joseph (2022) identify the highest shared number of innovations between (Proto-)Albanian and (Proto-)Greek.[41] A common Balkan Indo-European root *aiğ(i)- ("goat") can be reflected in Albanian edh ("goat, kid") < PAlb *aidza and dhi ("nanny goat) < PAlb *aidzijɑ̄ with Greek αἴξ ("goat", gen. αἰγός) and Armenian ayc ("(nanny) goat"). It has been noted that the Balkan IE root and all the alleged Balto-Slavic and Indo-Iranian roots with a meaning "goat" are likely to be not Proto-Indo-European, as they may all originate as independent and relatively early, post-PIE borrowings, from the substrate languages spoken by the sedentary farmers who were encountered by immigrating Indo-European pastoralists. The view of a substrate borrowing can be corroborated by areal words for "goat" in other IE languages, such as Gothic gaits ("goat") and Latin haedus ("kid"), reflecting *gʰaid̯(-o)-, considered as a substrate word usually linked with Semitic languages (cf. Akkadian gadû, Aramaic gaδiā ̄"kid"). However it was most likely not directly borrowed from Semitic, but from a European substrate language that in turn had loaned the word from a common third source. Hence it can be viewed as an old cultural word, which was slowly transmitted to different European languages, and then adopted by the newcoming Indo-European speakers. Within this scenario it should be remarked the exclusive sharing of a common proto-form between Albanian, Greek, and Armenian, which could have been borrowed at a pre-stage that was common to these languages.[42] Specifically Indo-Iranian/Greek/Albanian and Greek/Armenian/Albanian isoglosses are both relatively rare, examples including ndaj (to divide; Indo-Greek-Albanian) and ëndërr ("dream"; Greek/Armenian/Albanian). Whereas Armenian/Albanian isoglosses are "insignificant", there are a considerable number of Indo-Iranian/Albanian isoglosses, which are notably often connected with horses, horse tending, and milk products.[43]

The deictic element *ḱjā- in PPAlb *ḱjā-dīti > Albanian sot ("today") has the same source as *kjā- in Proto-Greek *kjā-wētes (cf. Mycenean Greek za-we-te, Attic Greek τῆτες, and Ionic Greek σῆτες "this year"). These words are built combining the deictic element and a form of the word for "day" in Albanian (PPAlb *dīti-) and for "year" in Greek (PGk *wētes-). The deictic element resulted from a reanalysis of the word for "today" *kjāmer-, which contains the restricted word for "day" *āmer- (cf. Gk ἡμέρα, Doric Greek ἁμέρα, and Armenian awr). In PPalb only later the word āmer- was replaced by *dīti-, when the latter became the usual word for day in this language.[44] Another remarkable Greek/Albanian isogloss is a very ancient form for "hand": *mər-, cf. the Albanian verb marr ("hold") and the Greek márē ("hand"), and also Greek márptō ("grab").[45]

In older literature, Orel (2000) argues that Albanian has a large number of isoglosses that are common to Albanian, Germanic, Baltic and Slavic, as part of a "North Eastern" lexical grouping, with a large number of these referring to wood or objects made out of wood.[46] Orel (1998) noted 24 isoglosses between Balto-Slavic and Albanian, 48 common words between Baltic and Albanian and 24 between Albanian and Slavic. Hyllested & Joseph (2022) review Orel's common items and argue that a substantial number don't have convincing etymologies or do not constitute isoglosses between Balto-Slavic and Albanian. An example is Albanian murg (dark) and Lithuanian margas (colourful) which Orel considers to be isoglosses but both are equally related to Proto-Germanic *murkaz, ancient Greek ἀμορβός amorbos and Proto-Slavic *mergъ.[47]

Orel identifies only one Albanian/Italic/Celtic isogloss, blertë ("green"), cognate to Latin flōrus ("bright") and Irish blár ("gray").[48] Specifically Celtic/Albanian vocabulary was previously thought to be limited although including at least one core vocabulary item (hënë "moon", cognate to Welsh cann "white" and Breton cann "full moon"),[49] but recent work by Trumper in 2018 has proposed a larger though still not overwhelming set, with the notable addition of dritë ("light").[50]

Although knowledge of Tocharian is fragmentary, the one known Albanian/Tocharian isogloss is "very important" as noted by Orel: kush ("who", cognate to Tocharian A kus, with the same meaning).[51]

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Absent for early part of period
  2. ^ Absent for early part of period

Citations edit

  1. ^ Matzinger 2016, p. 6: "Folgende Lautwandel charakterisieren u.a. das Uralbanische (Protoalbanische) und grenzen es dadurch als eine eigenständige idg. Sprache von anderen idg. Sprachen ab. Diese Phase kann präzisiert als Frühuralbanisch bezeichnet werden. Da das Hethitische (im antiken Kleinasien) und das mykenische Griechische schon im 2. Jahrtausend v.Chr. als voll ausgebildete, d.h. individuelle Sprachen dokumentiert sind, kann auch die Vorstufe des Albanischen (das Frühuralbanische) mindestens ab dem ersten Jahrtausend v.Chr. als eine ebenso schon voll ausgebildete, d.h. individuelle Sprache angesetzt werden"
  2. ^ De Vaan 2018, p. 1732: "Internal comparison between the Tosk and Geg dialects allows us to reconstruct a Proto-Albanian stage (PAlb.; in German Uralbanisch; see Hock 2005; Klingenschmitt 1994: 221; Matzinger 2006: 23; B. Demiraj 1997: 41–67; Hamp 1992: 885–902). Additional external information on the development of the phonology is provided by different layers of loanwords, of which those from Slavic (from ca. 600 CE onward) and from Latin (ca. 167 BCE−400 CE) are the most important. Since the main phonological distinction between Tosk and Geg, viz. rhotacism of n, is found in only a few Slavic loanwords in Tosk (Ylli 1997: 317; Svane 1992: 292 f.), I assume that Proto-Albanian predated the influx of most of the Slavic loanwords.;
    Matzinger 2006, p. 41: "Diese Zeitspanne von der Antike bis ca. 600 n.Chr. wird in der Geschichtsschreibung die uralbanische Zeit genannt."
  3. ^ Matasović 2019, p. 5: "The most probable predecessor of Albanian was Illyrian, since much of the present-day Albania was inhabited by the Illyrians during the Antiquity, but the comparison of the two languages is impossible because almost nothing is known about Illyrian, despite the fact that two handbooks of that language have been published (by Hans Krahe and Anton Mayer)... examination of personal names and toponyms from Illyricum shows that several onomastic areas can be distinguished, and these onomastic areas just might correspond to different languages spoken in ancient Illyricum. If Illyrians actually spoke several different languages, the question arises -from which 'Illyrian' language did Albanian develop, and that question cannot be answered until new data are discovered.The single "Illyrian" gloss preserved in Greek (rhínon 'fog') may have the reflex in Alb. (Gheg) re͂ 'cloud' (Tosk re)< PAlb. *ren-."
  4. ^ Matzinger 2018, p. 1790; Friedman 2020, p. 388
  5. ^ Trumper 2018, p. 385.
  6. ^ a b c d e f De Vaan 2018
  7. ^ Matasović 2019, p. 6
  8. ^ a b Orel 2000, p. XII
  9. ^ a b Matasović 2019, p. 7
  10. ^ a b Demiraj 2006, p. 483
  11. ^ Fortson 2010, p. 392: "The dialectal split into Gheg and Tosk happened sometime after the region become Christianized in the fourth century AD; Christian Latin loanwords show Tosk rhotacism, such as Tosk murgu "monk" (Geg mungu) from Lat. monachus."
  12. ^ Mallory & Adams 1997, p. 9: "The Greek and Latin loans have undergone most of the far-reaching phonological changes which have so altered the shape of inherited words while Slavic and Turkish words do not show those changes. Thus Albanian must have acquired much of its present form by the time Slavs entered into Balkans in the fifth and sixth centuries AD"
  13. ^ Brown & Ogilvie 2008, p. 23: "In Tosk /a/ before a nasal has become a central vowel (shwa), and intervocalic /n/ has become /r/. These two sound changes have affected only the pre-Slav stratum of the Albanian lexicon, that is the native words and loanwords from Greek and Latin"
  14. ^ a b c d Matasović 2019, p. 39
  15. ^ Demiraj 1997, pp. 41–67
  16. ^ Matzinger 2006, p. 23
  17. ^ Klingenschmitt 1994, p. 221
  18. ^ a b c d Orel 2000, p. 1
  19. ^ a b c Orel 2000, pp. 20–21
  20. ^ a b Orel 2000, p. 270
  21. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 8–12
  22. ^ a b c d e Orel 2000, pp. 15–16
  23. ^ a b c d Paçarizi 2008, pp. 101–102
  24. ^ Totoni 1964, p. 136
  25. ^ Orel 2000, p. 15
  26. ^ a b c d e Orel 2000, pp. 42
  27. ^ a b Orel 2000, pp. 143–144
  28. ^ Orel 2000, p. 3
  29. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 2–3
  30. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 3–4
  31. ^ a b c de Vaan, Michiel (2018). "The phonology of Albanian". In Klein, Jared; Joseph, Brian; Fritz, Matthias (eds.). Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Vol. 3. Walter de Gruyter. p. 1735.
  32. ^ a b Orel 2000, p. 27
  33. ^ Orel 2000, p. 42
  34. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 271–272
  35. ^ a b Rusakov 2017, pp. 566–571
  36. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 273–274
  37. ^ Orel 2000, p. 65
  38. ^ Joseph & Hyllested 2022, p. 235.
  39. ^ Thorsø 2019, p. 258.
  40. ^ Joseph 2013, p. 7.
  41. ^ Joseph & Hyllested 2022, p. 226.
  42. ^ Thorsø 2019, p. 255.
  43. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 259–260
  44. ^ Joseph 2013, pp. 15–16.
  45. ^ Bubenik 1997, p. 104.
  46. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 250–251
  47. ^ Joseph & Hyllested 2022, p. 223.
  48. ^ Orel 2000, p. 257
  49. ^ Orel 2000, pp. 256–257
  50. ^ Trumper 2018, p. 379.
  51. ^ Orel 2000, p. 260

Bibliography edit

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proto, albanian, language, proto, albanian, ancestral, reconstructed, language, albanian, before, gheg, tosk, dialectal, split, albanian, evolved, from, ancient, paleo, balkan, language, traditionally, thought, illyrian, otherwise, totally, unattested, balkan,. Proto Albanian is the ancestral reconstructed language of Albanian before the Gheg Tosk dialectal split Albanian evolved from an ancient Paleo Balkan language traditionally thought to be Illyrian 3 or otherwise a totally unattested Balkan Indo European language that was closely related to Illyrian and Messapic 4 The ancestor of Albanian is also labelled Albanoid in reference to a specific ethnolinguistically pertinent and historically compact language group 5 Proto AlbanianAlbanoidReconstruction ofAlbanian Albanian dialects RegionBalkan PeninsulaErac 1000 BCE 1 600 CE 2 ReconstructedancestorProto Indo EuropeanProto Albanian is reconstructed by way of the comparative method between the Tosk and Gheg dialects as well as the treatment of loanwords which can be traced back as early as the first contats with Ancient Greek but the most important of which are those from Latin dated by De Vaan to the period 167 BCE to 400 CE and from Slavic dated from 600 CE onward 6 The evidence from loanwords allows linguists to construct in great detail the shape of native words at the points of major influxes of loans from well attested languages 7 Proto Albanian is broken up into different stages which are usually delimited by the onset of contact with different well attested languages 6 Its earliest stages are dated to the early Roman Empire just before the period of intense Latin Albanian contact while in its late stages it experienced contact with Slavic languages 8 9 10 The Tosk Gheg split is known to predate Slavic contact circa 600 CE as evidenced by the fact that Latin and ancient Greek loanwords are treated like native words with regard to taxonomical differences between Gheg and Tosk but the same is not true of Slavic loans 11 12 13 Contents 1 Nomenclature of periodization of Proto Albanian 2 History of study 3 Phonology 3 1 Stress 3 2 Vowels 3 2 1 Diachronic development 3 3 Development of Indo European sonorants 3 4 Consonants 4 Classification amp isoglosses with other branches of Indo European 5 References 5 1 Notes 5 2 Citations 5 3 BibliographyNomenclature of periodization of Proto Albanian editVladimir Orel distinguishes the following periods of Proto Albanian Early Proto Albanian EPA spoken before the 1st century CE when Albanian had not yet acquired extensive influence via language contact from Latin Proto Romance Late Proto Albanian LPA after extensive Latin contact with the end of the period seeing contacts between ancient Slavic idioms still close to the Proto Slavic language in the 6th and 7th centuries CE During this period the structure of Proto Albanian was shattered by major changes 8 However another periodization paradigm does exist and is used by some scholars in the field such as Ranko Matasovic Pre Proto Albanian essentially equivalent to Vladimir Orel s Early Proto Albanian except that the newer paradigm of Matasovic dates Latin Albanian contact a century earlier and thus it ends for Matasovic in the 1st century BCE rather than the 1st century CE 14 After this period ends Latin contact begins to transform the language Early Proto Albanian corresponds to the earlier phases of what is for Orel Late Proto Albanian For Matasovic the period spans the 1st century BCE to the 6th century CE halting before contact with Slavic idioms begins 14 Late Proto Albanian includes the last two centuries of LPA for Orel plus most of the unattested period of Old Albanian halting before Turkish influence begins 14 In this paradigm Gheg and Tosk split from Early Proto Albanian not Late Proto Albanian consistent with our knowledge that the split preceded Slavic contact Early Albanian corresponds to the late Ottoman phase of Old Albanian in the traditional paradigm ending in 1800 at which point it transitions to Modern Albanian 14 Demiraj like Matasovic and unlike Orel observes the 5th 6th centuries as a boundary between stages but instead places the emergence of Albanian from its parent after this point rather than the 14th 10 In an Albanian chapter penned by Michiel de Vaan within Klein Joseph and Fritz 2018 Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics 6 Demiraj s periods are adhered to Orel s Later Proto Albanian which is for them also definitively placed before Slavic contact is referred to as simply Proto Albanian PAlb or in German Uralbanisch reflecting the terminology of earlier writing in German 15 16 17 What is for Orel Early Proto Albanian EPA dated definitively before the onset of Latin contact is for De Vaan Pre Proto Albanian PPAlb in German this stage is called Voruralbanisch or Fruhuralbanisch 6 De Vaan also discusses the possibility of breaking Pre Proto Albanian into two stages one before the first Greek loanwords and one that is after the first Greek loanwords but before contact with Latin 6 This page at present is using the paradigm of Orel History of study editVladimir Orel is one of the main modern international linguists to have dealt with the passage from Proto Indo European to Proto Albanian to Modern Albanian According to Orel the study of Proto Albanian syntax remains in its infancy so there are some limitations to the work However there have been developments in the understanding of the historical development of phonetics and vocabulary 18 Other major work has been done by Eqrem Cabej and Shaban Demiraj as well as by major scholars in the field of Romanian historical linguistics as it relates to Albanian see Albanian Romanian linguistic relationship as well as other Balkan linguists A large amount of work done on Proto Albanian is published in German rather than English Phonology edit nbsp Albanian in the Paleo Balkanic branch based on the chapter on Albanian by Adam Hyllested and Brian D Joseph in Thomas Olander ed The Indo European Language Family 2022 Extensive recent studies on Proto Albanian phonology have been published by Huld 1984 Beekes 1995 Shaban Demiraj 1996 Bardhyl Demiraj 1997 Orel 2000 Hock 2005 Matzinger 2006 Vermeer 2008 Schumacher 2013 and De Vaan 2018 6 At present this page follows Orel s paradigm for periods of Proto Albanian and presents the relationship between the synchronic phonologies of both EPA and LPA with diachronic relationships to each other and to ancestral Indo European forms as well as descendant Albanian forms Stress edit In Early Proto Albanian stress was paradigmatic and behaved according to morphological class 19 with a base on the first syllable 9 In different paradigms the stress pattern was varyingly barytonic oxytonic and mobile 19 Unstressed vowels lost one mora long vowels were shortened already short vowels were often deleted In Later Proto Albanian however a new system of unstressed vowel reduction emerged where a reduced to e while all others were simply deleted except for post tonic inlaut vowels which became e 19 Orel gives the following examples EPA dausas ram sg gt daus gt gt modern dash EPA dausai rams pl gt dausi gt gt modern desh EPA dwaiga branch sg gt dega gt gt modern dege EPA dwaigai branches pl gt degai gt gt modern degeVowels edit Simple vowels in EPA 20 Front Central BackHigh i iː u uːMid e eː oːLow a aːDiphthongs in EPA 20 Nucleus i u e ei eu a ai auEarly Proto Albanian possessed four distinctive short vowels a e i and u Proto Indo European o had merged into a by the Early Proto Albanian stage A five way distinction was maintained for long vowels aː eː iː oː and uː Early Proto Albanian also had four diphthongs ei ai eu and au Early Proto Albanian s vowel inventory began to change as a result of Latin contact Initially Albanian was resistant to the restoration of short o as a separate phoneme with Latin unstressed o being replaced by a and stressed Latin o being replaced by u However in later loans Latin o is maintained in Albanian as o Additionally some Latin loans with short u saw Latin u replaced by o as well as e specifically in unstressed positions before sonorants In two cases Orel argues that Latin short u was lengthened in Albanian to u ultimately to render y On the other hand whatever effect Ancient Greek loanwords had at their time of absorption is unclear but diachronically the vowels always agree with regular internal Albanian developments LPA simple vowels Front BackHigh i u Mid e Note 1 o Note 2 Low a a 21 Earlier LPA diphthongs u i eu ui uei iee eu eia au aiLate Proto AlbanianLate Proto Albanian exhibited a i and u throughout its development as distinctive short vowels o was restored to the phonemic inventory as a result of loanwords where it was increasingly maintained instead of replaced Although e was eliminated by breaking to ie which would render je and ja it was restored by the leveling of ai to e and other phenomena that replaced a ie and ue with e The only long vowel preserved in its original form was iː o was replaced by ue eː was merged into aː and both were rounded and eventually raised to o while uː merged with the diphthong ui ultimately rendering y By Late Proto Albanian all the original Indo European diphthongs had now leveled but new diphthongs were absorbed in loans and were also innovated by breaking phenomena ie ue and ui ai in Latin words with AE shared the fate of inherited Early Proto Albanian ai becoming e while Latin AU similarly shared the fate of inherited au and became a Phonemically nasal vowels emerged in Late Proto Albanian 22 First all vowels standing before nasal consonants were nasalized The following nasal consonant was then lost in certain morphological contexts while the vowel remained nasalized resulting in the emergence of LPA phonemes denoted a e i and u 22 Except in certain Gheg varieties e merged into a 22 The traditional view presented by Orel 22 and Desnickaja 23 is that distinctive nasalization was lost by Tosk but retained by Gheg and that this is a taxonomical difference between the two 22 However this has now been challenged 23 after Sheper and Gjinari discovered Lab dialects Lab is a subdialect of Tosk in the Kurvelesh region that still had distinctive nasal vowels 23 and Totoni likewise found that the Lab speech of Borsh also still has nasal vowel phonemes 24 This means that instead of the traditional view it is possible that denasalization happened in most Tosk dialects only after the split from Gheg 23 Slavic uː appears to still have been back and round when it was loaned into Albanian but it is after the diphthongization and resulting fronting of the original Early Proto Albanian uː to y was no longer absorbing new uː segments as they are with only three exceptions reflected as u Slavic o had already become a in the Slavic languages that contacted Albanian by the time of contact and was loaned as a for the most part as is reflected also in other non Slavic languages absorbing these words After v this a became o again in two attested cases kos yogurt from Proto Slavic kvas and vorbe clay pot It was at the end of the LPA period that length became no longer distinctive in Albanian 25 although many Gheg and some Lab dialects preserved it and or re innovated it Furthermore by Old Albanian all diphthongs had been lost those ending in i were all leveled the u was lost in those ending in u and those ending in e were converted to glide vowel sequences further changes including the frequent effacement of the former first element or otherwise its hardening into an occlusive typically v for former u and gj ɟ for former i rendering the former presence of a diphthong rather opaque in many reflexes Vowels of late LPA transitioning to Old Albanian Front Central BackHigh i y uMId e e oLow aDiachronic development edit This table differentiates short vowels form long vowels with the IPA symbol lt ː gt being applied to the long vowels Specifically contextualized reflex results are placed in parentheses Proto Indo European developments before Proto Albanian Early Proto Albanian Late Proto Albanian Tosk Albanian Gheg Albanian ExampleLatin short a merges with EPA a a 18 a a 18 a 18 PIE kap to seize gt EPA kapa gt kap to grasp Latin APTUM gt Alb afte capable PIE n bʰ u lo gt EPA abula gt Alb avull steam vapor 26 PIE septm gt EPA septati gt Alb shtate seven 26 a Proto Indo European n and m merge with result of a 26 a gt e under umlaut and subsequent analogy 27 e e EPA albr gt elb barley Latin GALBINUS yellow gt Alb gjelber green PIE u iḱm ti gt EPA widzati gt Alb zet twenty 26 PIE n gt EPA a gt Alb e privative prefix 26 gt ɑ before nasals e lt e gt ɑ lt a an gt EPA ksanda gt Alb hene moon Gheg hane Latin CANTICUM gt Alb kenge song e deleted after a stressed syllable 28 IE bʰoletom gt EPA baltaː gt Alb balte swamp gt e after absorption of following laryngeal H e e ie gt e before ts dz nd nt mb ie je ja ie je ja IE dheHi to suck gt dheːi gt EPA dela gt Alb djale boy gt o elsewhere a 29 a a a IE apo away off gt EPA apa gt Alb pa without gt ɑ before nasals e lt e gt ɑ lt a an gt IE sont s being gt EPA san s gt Alb gje thing Gheg gja sen send thing or sene sende things o o e under umlaut and subsequent analogy 27 e e IE ǵʰorios gt EPA darja gt Alb derr pig IE kʷep smoke gt EPA kapna gt Alb kem incense Gheg kall burn gt ɑ before nasal e ɑ IE sont s being gt EPA san s gt Alb gje e e e 30 IE lent gt EPA lenta gt Alb lende timber Gheg lande ie ie ie IE bʰer to bring carry gt EPA berja gt Alb bie to bring je je IE smeḱu gt EPA smekraː gt Alb mjeker beard je gt e after affricates palatals and liquids je gt e after affricates palatals and liquids Alb fle to sleep ja ja IE esmi gt EPA esmi gt Alb jam ja gt a after affricates palatals and liquids ja gt a after affricates palatals and liquids IE seḱs ti gt EPA seksti gt Alb gjashte six ie gt e before ts dz nd nt mb e e IE en per en tod gt EPA en per en ta gt Alb brenda ie i i i IP gʷedijos gt EPA d ʒedija gt Alb zi black e before m followed by sibilant or affricate i i i IE sem ǵʰo gt EPA semdza gt Alb gjithe all Classical Latin e gt EPA ie in usual layer gt ie in EPA for usual layer not identical to development of inherited e which also went through ie je je Lat VERSUM gt Alb vjershe verse gt e in various contexts after sh before ng nd etc e Lat CONVENTUS gt Alb kuvend ja ja Lat HEBDOMAS gt Alb jave week ja gt a after palatals a Lat SELLA gt Alb shale saddle Unstressed ei in Latin loans e e Lat DEBITU RA gt Alb detyre duty Latin e via an unknown different intermediary e e Lat INFERNUM gt Alb ferr hell Lat COMMERCIUM gt Alb kumerq toll duty Latin e loaned into Late Proto Albanian while it lacked any short e phoneme i i IE ambʰi gt EPA ambi gt Alb mbi on upon Lat PARENTEM gt Alb prind parent PIE t e r m gt Alb trim brave Between r and C i i i i gt ĩ before nasals i ĩ lt i gt EPA rinja gt Alb rij to make humid Gheg ri u u u u u u IE bʰugʰ gt EPA bugta gt Alb bute smooth gt ũ before nasals u ũ lt u gt IE ǵenu knee gt EPA ganuna gt LPA gluna gt Alb gju knee Gheg gju Latin o raises before nasals 31 Lat MONACHVS gt murg monk CONTRA gt kunder against 31 Latin stressed 32 o ultimately merges with PIE a elsewhere o o Lat COXA gt kofshe hip 31 ROTA gt rrote wheel 32 aː aː aː ɒː o o IE maːter mother gt EPA maːter gt Alb moter sister eː e e everywhere except gliding to j in clusters ɒː o o IE meː kwe gt LPA mɒːts gt Alb mos don t o o o we e e IE bʰloːros gt EPA bloːra gt Alb blerte green i i i i i i IE piː to drink gt EPA pi ja gt Alb pi to drink u u u ui y y i in certain conditions EPA suːsa gt Alb gjysh grandfather wi gt i at word coda after loss of nominative final s i i IE suːs pig gt EPA tsu s gt LPA t8ui gt Alb thi pig wi gt i after labial i i IE bʰuː to grow gt EPA enbuːnja gt Alb mbij to thrive wi gt i before labial i i IE kreup gt EPA kruːpaː gt LPA krwipa gt Alb kripe salt wi gt i before j i other palatal elements i i IE dreu tree gt EPA druːnjaː gt drinje brushwood ai ai ai gt ẽ gt ɑ before nasal e lt e gt ɑ lt a an gt EPA laidna gt Alb le to let Gheg la e e e IE aidʰos gt EPA aida gt Alb ethe fever oi oi IE ḱloitos gt EPA klaita gt Alb qete jagged rock ei ei ei i i i IE ǵʰeimen winter gt EPA deimena gt Alb dimer winter Gheg dimen Diphthongs of long vowel j j elided long vowel develops regularly au au au gt ɑ before nasals e lt e gt ɑ lt a an gt IE dreu tree gt EPA draunja gt Alb drenje a a a IE aug gt EPA auga gt Alb ag dusk a gt e e e EPA ausra gt Alb err darkness ou ou a a a IE poujo gt EPA pauja gt Alb pah scab dust a gt e e e EPA gaura gt Alb ger eu eu eu gt ẽ gt ɑ before nasal e lt e gt ɑ lt a an gt IE newn nine gt EPA neunti gt Alb nente nine Gheg nand e e e IE skeud to throw gt EPA skeuda gt Alb hedhDevelopment of Indo European sonorants edit The nasal sonorants n and m both rendered Early Proto Albanian a which remains a in modern Albanian PIE g hn taː goose gt EPA gataː gt modern Albanian gate heron Like EPA a elsewhere in some cases it was raised to e as seen in PIE ln gwh gt EPA laga gt Albanian lehte suffixed with te 33 Diachronic development of sonorants 34 35 Proto Indo European Intermediate developments Early Proto Albanian Later Proto Albanian Old Albanian Tosk Albanian Gheg Albanian Example m a continue regular developments of a from EPA in vowel chart shtate seven lt PIE septm n a i gjate long lt PIE dln gʰ t l il before consonant clusters i or j il li ul elsewhere ul lu r ir before consonant clusters i or j ir ri ur elsewhere ur ru l l l l l l SA lagje quarter lt PIE logʰ l l ly li j l Cham Arbresh Arvanitika j SA gjuhe vs A A gljuhe SA mije vs Cham mile ɫ V V ɫ ll g some Arbresh d some Lab ll d some dialects SA hell spear spit lt PIE skōl r r r V V r r r SA i mire good lt PIE miHr r V V l ri j j SA bij sons lt PA bir i r r rr rr SA rrjedh to flow lt PIE h reǵ m m m m m SA moter sister lt PIE meh tr n n n n r n n ng ŋ from ng SA nate night lt PIE nokʷt n sn Cn nC n n n n ng ŋ from ng Dialectal ane lt PIE h ewk ʷ h uk ʷ ɲ gn before front vowels nj nj ni n northern SA njeri man lt PIE h nḗrConsonants edit EPA Consonants 36 Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal VelarNasal m nPlosive p b t d ts dz t ʃ d ʒ k gFricative s z xGlide w jLateral lTrill rLPA Consonants Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal VelarNasal m nPlosive p b t d ts c k gAffricate t ʃFricative f 8 d s z ʃ xGlide w jLateral lTrill rDiachronic development 35 Proto Indo European Pre Proto Albanian Early Proto Albanian Later Proto Albanian Modern Alb Tosk Gheg Examples s s z gt j ɟ d ʒ lt gj gt IE serp to crawl gt EPA serpena gt Alb gjarper snake s gt ʃ after iː uː or i u diphthongs ʃ lt sh gt IE dʰouso gt EPA dausa gt Alb dash ram ʃ word initially sometimes ʃ lt sh gt SA shi rain lt PIE suH gt t s if next consonant was s gt 8 8 lt th gt IE suːs pig gt EPA t suːs gt Alb thi pig gt x intervocalically or between EPA sonorant and vowel h IE golso sound gt EPA gulxa gt SA gjuheO IE nosom gt EPA naxa gt Alb na us sK sK sK x h SA hedh to throw lt PIE skewd sp sp sp f f SA fare lt PIE spor st st st ʃt ʃt SA shteg path road lt PIE stoygʰ sd zd zd zd d dh SA pidh female pudenda lt PIE peysd ʰ s from Greek Latin loanwords ʃ ʃ lt sh gt Lat summus gt Alb shume more much p p p p p IE eːp to take gt EPA eːpa gt Alb jap to give Gheg jep ep b bʰ b b b b IE serbʰ to suck in gt EPA serba gt Alb gjerb to gulp w between a vowel and u v EPA abula gt Alb avull vapor t t t t t IE trejes three gt EPA treje gt Alb tre three d dʰ d d d d IE dʰegʷʰ to burn gt EPA dega gt Alb djeg to burn gt d intervocalically or between r and vowel in 5th or 6th centuries 37 d lt dh gt IE skeudV to throw shoot gt Alb hedh to throw shoot ḱ c ḱ c gt t s gt 8 8 lt th gt IE ḱi ḱer pea cf Latin cicer gt EPA tsera gt Alb thjerre lentil gt t ʃ gt s before i j u or w s IE ḱupo shoulder gt Alb sup shoulder IE ḱia diti gt EPA tsja i diti gt Alb sot today t s retained conditions unclear t s lt c gt IE h eḱ sharp gt EPA atsara gt Alb acar cold ice cold but doublet gt athet sour gt t ʃ conditions unclear t ʃ lt c gt IE ḱentro to stick gt Alb cander prop gt k before sonorant k k IE smeḱr chin gt Alb mjeker chin beard ǵ ǵʰ ɟ ǵ ɟ dz d dh SA dhemb Gheg dhamb tooth lt PIE ǵombʰ dz d d d d SA dore lt PIE ǵʰesr d ʒ before w z z SA ze Gheg za lt zan lt PIE ǵʰweno k k k k k SA kam to have lt PIE keh p c palatalised q SA qaj to weep cry lt PIE kluH i o g gʰ g g g g SA gardh fence lt PIE gʰordʰ j palatalised gj SA gjej to find lt PIE gʰedni e o kʷ kʷ t ʃ before front vowels s s SA sjell to bring lt PIE kʷelh k elsewhere k k SA pjek to bake lt PIE pekʷ c palatalised q SA qe that which lt PIE kʷṓd gʷ gʷʰ gʷ d ʒ w before front vowels z z SA zorre gut lt PIE gʷʰern g elsewhere g g SA djeg to burn lt PIE dʰegʷʰ j palatalised gj SA gjeth leaf lt PIE gʷos d wood y j z V j gj SA gjem bridle lt PIE yom O V V O O SA tre three lt PIE treyes w w w V w v SA vesh to put on clothes lt PIE wes O V V O O SA ve widow lt PIE widʰewh Classification amp isoglosses with other branches of Indo European editThe closest language to Albanian is Messapic with which it forms a common branch titled Illyric in Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 38 Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 in agreement with recent bibliography identify Greco Phrygian as the IE branch closest to the Albanian Messapic one These two branches form an areal grouping which is often called Balkan IE with Armenian Shortly after they had diverged from one another Greek Armenian and partly Albanian undoubtedly also underwent a longer period of contact as can be seen for example in the irregular correspondence Greek skor o don Armenian sxtor xstor and Albanian hudher hurdhe garlic Furthermore intense Greek Albanian contacts certainly occurred thereafter 39 and ongoing connections between them have been in the Balkans from the ancient times continuing up to the present days 40 Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 identify the highest shared number of innovations between Proto Albanian and Proto Greek 41 A common Balkan Indo European root aig i goat can be reflected in Albanian edh goat kid lt PAlb aidza and dhi nanny goat lt PAlb aidzijɑ with Greek aἴ3 goat gen aἰgos and Armenian ayc nanny goat It has been noted that the Balkan IE root and all the alleged Balto Slavic and Indo Iranian roots with a meaning goat are likely to be not Proto Indo European as they may all originate as independent and relatively early post PIE borrowings from the substrate languages spoken by the sedentary farmers who were encountered by immigrating Indo European pastoralists The view of a substrate borrowing can be corroborated by areal words for goat in other IE languages such as Gothic gaits goat and Latin haedus kid reflecting gʰaid o considered as a substrate word usually linked with Semitic languages cf Akkadian gadu Aramaic gadia kid However it was most likely not directly borrowed from Semitic but from a European substrate language that in turn had loaned the word from a common third source Hence it can be viewed as an old cultural word which was slowly transmitted to different European languages and then adopted by the newcoming Indo European speakers Within this scenario it should be remarked the exclusive sharing of a common proto form between Albanian Greek and Armenian which could have been borrowed at a pre stage that was common to these languages 42 Specifically Indo Iranian Greek Albanian and Greek Armenian Albanian isoglosses are both relatively rare examples including ndaj to divide Indo Greek Albanian and enderr dream Greek Armenian Albanian Whereas Armenian Albanian isoglosses are insignificant there are a considerable number of Indo Iranian Albanian isoglosses which are notably often connected with horses horse tending and milk products 43 The deictic element ḱja in PPAlb ḱja diti gt Albanian sot today has the same source as kja in Proto Greek kja wetes cf Mycenean Greek za we te Attic Greek tῆtes and Ionic Greek sῆtes this year These words are built combining the deictic element and a form of the word for day in Albanian PPAlb diti and for year in Greek PGk wetes The deictic element resulted from a reanalysis of the word for today kjamer which contains the restricted word for day amer cf Gk ἡmera Doric Greek ἁmera and Armenian awr In PPalb only later the word amer was replaced by diti when the latter became the usual word for day in this language 44 Another remarkable Greek Albanian isogloss is a very ancient form for hand mer cf the Albanian verb marr hold and the Greek mare hand and also Greek marptō grab 45 In older literature Orel 2000 argues that Albanian has a large number of isoglosses that are common to Albanian Germanic Baltic and Slavic as part of a North Eastern lexical grouping with a large number of these referring to wood or objects made out of wood 46 Orel 1998 noted 24 isoglosses between Balto Slavic and Albanian 48 common words between Baltic and Albanian and 24 between Albanian and Slavic Hyllested amp Joseph 2022 review Orel s common items and argue that a substantial number don t have convincing etymologies or do not constitute isoglosses between Balto Slavic and Albanian An example is Albanian murg dark and Lithuanian margas colourful which Orel considers to be isoglosses but both are equally related to Proto Germanic murkaz ancient Greek ἀmorbos amorbos and Proto Slavic merg 47 Orel identifies only one Albanian Italic Celtic isogloss blerte green cognate to Latin flōrus bright and Irish blar gray 48 Specifically Celtic Albanian vocabulary was previously thought to be limited although including at least one core vocabulary item hene moon cognate to Welsh cann white and Breton cann full moon 49 but recent work by Trumper in 2018 has proposed a larger though still not overwhelming set with the notable addition of drite light 50 Although knowledge of Tocharian is fragmentary the one known Albanian Tocharian isogloss is very important as noted by Orel kush who cognate to Tocharian A kus with the same meaning 51 References editNotes edit Absent for early part of period Absent for early part of period Citations edit Matzinger 2016 p 6 Folgende Lautwandel charakterisieren u a das Uralbanische Protoalbanische und grenzen es dadurch als eine eigenstandige idg Sprache von anderen idg Sprachen ab Diese Phase kann prazisiert als Fruhuralbanisch bezeichnet werden Da das Hethitische im antiken Kleinasien und das mykenische Griechische schon im 2 Jahrtausend v Chr als voll ausgebildete d h individuelle Sprachen dokumentiert sind kann auch die Vorstufe des Albanischen das Fruhuralbanische mindestens ab dem ersten Jahrtausend v Chr als eine ebenso schon voll ausgebildete d h individuelle Sprache angesetzt werden De Vaan 2018 p 1732 Internal comparison between the Tosk and Geg dialects allows us to reconstruct a Proto Albanian stage PAlb in German Uralbanisch see Hock 2005 Klingenschmitt 1994 221 Matzinger 2006 23 B Demiraj 1997 41 67 Hamp 1992 885 902 Additional external information on the development of the phonology is provided by different layers of loanwords of which those from Slavic from ca 600 CE onward and from Latin ca 167 BCE 400 CE are the most important Since the main phonological distinction between Tosk and Geg viz rhotacism of n is found in only a few Slavic loanwords in Tosk Ylli 1997 317 Svane 1992 292 f I assume that Proto Albanian predated the influx of most of the Slavic loanwords Matzinger 2006 p 41 Diese Zeitspanne von der Antike bis ca 600 n Chr wird in der Geschichtsschreibung die uralbanische Zeit genannt Matasovic 2019 p 5 The most probable predecessor of Albanian was Illyrian since much of the present day Albania was inhabited by the Illyrians during the Antiquity but the comparison of the two languages is impossible because almost nothing is known about Illyrian despite the fact that two handbooks of that language have been published by Hans Krahe and Anton Mayer examination of personal names and toponyms from Illyricum shows that several onomastic areas can be distinguished and these onomastic areas just might correspond to different languages spoken in ancient Illyricum If Illyrians actually spoke several different languages the question arises from which Illyrian language did Albanian develop and that question cannot be answered until new data are discovered The single Illyrian gloss preserved in Greek rhinon fog may have the reflex in Alb Gheg re cloud Tosk re lt PAlb ren Matzinger 2018 p 1790 Friedman 2020 p 388 Trumper 2018 p 385 a b c d e f De Vaan 2018 Matasovic 2019 p 6 a b Orel 2000 p XII a b Matasovic 2019 p 7 a b Demiraj 2006 p 483 Fortson 2010 p 392 The dialectal split into Gheg and Tosk happened sometime after the region become Christianized in the fourth century AD Christian Latin loanwords show Tosk rhotacism such as Tosk murgu monk Geg mungu from Lat monachus Mallory amp Adams 1997 p 9 The Greek and Latin loans have undergone most of the far reaching phonological changes which have so altered the shape of inherited words while Slavic and Turkish words do not show those changes Thus Albanian must have acquired much of its present form by the time Slavs entered into Balkans in the fifth and sixth centuries AD Brown amp Ogilvie 2008 p 23 In Tosk a before a nasal has become a central vowel shwa and intervocalic n has become r These two sound changes have affected only the pre Slav stratum of the Albanian lexicon that is the native words and loanwords from Greek and Latin a b c d Matasovic 2019 p 39 Demiraj 1997 pp 41 67 Matzinger 2006 p 23 Klingenschmitt 1994 p 221 a b c d Orel 2000 p 1 a b c Orel 2000 pp 20 21 a b Orel 2000 p 270 Orel 2000 pp 8 12 a b c d e Orel 2000 pp 15 16 a b c d Pacarizi 2008 pp 101 102 Totoni 1964 p 136 Orel 2000 p 15 a b c d e Orel 2000 pp 42 a b Orel 2000 pp 143 144 Orel 2000 p 3 Orel 2000 pp 2 3 Orel 2000 pp 3 4 a b c de Vaan Michiel 2018 The phonology of Albanian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Vol 3 Walter de Gruyter p 1735 a b Orel 2000 p 27 Orel 2000 p 42 Orel 2000 pp 271 272 a b Rusakov 2017 pp 566 571 Orel 2000 pp 273 274 Orel 2000 p 65 Joseph amp Hyllested 2022 p 235 sfn error no target CITEREFJosephHyllested2022 help Thorso 2019 p 258 Joseph 2013 p 7 Joseph amp Hyllested 2022 p 226 sfn error no target CITEREFJosephHyllested2022 help Thorso 2019 p 255 Orel 2000 pp 259 260 Joseph 2013 pp 15 16 Bubenik 1997 p 104 Orel 2000 pp 250 251 Joseph amp Hyllested 2022 p 223 sfn error no target CITEREFJosephHyllested2022 help Orel 2000 p 257 Orel 2000 pp 256 257 Trumper 2018 p 379 Orel 2000 p 260 Bibliography edit Brown Keith Ogilvie Sarah eds 2008 Concise Encyclopedia of Languages of the World Elsevier Science ISBN 978 0 08 087774 7 Bubenik Vit 1997 The Verbal System of Albanian In Hewson John Bubenik Vit eds Tense and Aspect in Indo European Languages Theory Typology Diachrony Amsterdam John Benjamins Publishing pp 103 124 ISBN 9789027236494 De Vaan Michiel 2018 The phonology of Albanian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG pp 1732 1749 ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Demiraj Shaban 2006 Albanian In Anna Giacalone Ramat Paolo Ramat eds The Indo European languages Routledge language family descriptions Routledge ISBN 9780415412636 Demiraj Bardhyl 1997 Albanische Etymologien Untersuchungen zum albanischen Erbwortschatz Leiden Studies in Indo European in German Vol 7 Amsterdam Atlanta Rodopi ISBN 9789042001619 Fortson Benjamin W 2010 Indo European Language and Culture An Introduction 2nd ed Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4443 5968 8 Friedman Victor A 2020 The Balkans In Evangelia Adamou Yaron Matras ed The Routledge Handbook of Language Contact Routledge Handbooks in Linguistics Routledge pp 385 403 ISBN 9781351109147 Hyllested Adam Joseph Brian D 2022 Albanian The Indo European Language Family Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781108499798 Joseph Brian D 2013 Spiro Aristotel ed On Old and New Connections between Greek and Albanian Some Grammatical Evidence Albanohellenica Albanian Greek Philological Association 5 9 22 Klingenschmitt Gert 1994 Das Albanische als Glied der indogermanischen Sprachfamilie In Jens E Rasmussen Benedicte Nielsen eds In honorem Holger Pedersen Kolloquium der Indogermanischen Gesellschaft vom 26 bis 28 Marz 1993 in Kopenhagen L Reichert ISBN 9783882268232 Lazaridis Iosif Alpaslan Roodenberg Songul et al 26 August 2022 The genetic history of the Southern Arc A bridge between West Asia and Europe Science 377 6609 eabm4247 doi 10 1126 science abm4247 PMID 36007055 S2CID 251843620 Mallory James P Adams Douglas Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture London Routledge ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Matasovic Ranko 2019 A Grammatical Sketch of Albanian for Students of Indo European PDF Report Zagreb Matzinger Joachim 2006 Der altalbanische Text Mbsuame e kreshtere Dottrina cristiana des Leke Matrenga von 1592 eine Einfuhrung in die albanische Sprachwissenschaft Jenaer indogermanistische Textbearbeitung in German Vol 3 Dettelbach J H Roll ISBN 9783897541177 Matzinger Joachim 2016 Die albanische Autochthoniehypothese aus der Sicht der Sprachwissenschaft PDF Report in German via www albanologie uni muenchen de Matzinger Joachim 2018 The lexicon of Albanian In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG pp 1788 1800 doi 10 1515 9783110542431 019 ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Orel Vladimir 2000 A Concise Historical Grammar of the Albanian Language Reconstruction of Proto Albanian Brill ISBN 90 04 11647 8 Orel Vladimir 1998 Albanian etymological dictionary Brill ISBN 90 04 11024 0 Pacarizi Rrahman 2008 Albanian Language PDF University of Pristina Archived from the original PDF on 2017 07 17 Retrieved 2020 01 23 Rusakov Alexander 2017 Albanian In Mate Kapovic ed The Indo European Languages 2nd ed Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 67855 9 Thorso Rasmus 2019 Two Balkan Indo European Loanwords In Matilde Serangeli Thomas Olander eds Dispersals and Diversification Linguistic and Archaeological Perspectives on the Early Stages of Indo European Brill s Studies in Indo European Languages amp Linguistics Vol 19 Brill pp 251 262 ISBN 9789004416192 Totoni Menela 1964 E folmja e bregdetit te poshtem Studime Filologjike I in Albanian Tirana Universiteti i Tiranes Trumper John 2018 Some Celto Albanian isoglosses and their implications In Grimaldi Mirko Lai Rosangela Franco Ludovico Baldi Benedetta eds Structuring Variation in Romance Linguistics and Beyond In Honour of Leonardo M Savoia John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 9789027263179 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proto Albanian language amp oldid 1191915387, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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