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Proto-Balto-Slavic language

Proto-Balto-Slavic (PBS or PBSl) is a reconstructed hypothetical proto-language descending from Proto-Indo-European (PIE). From Proto-Balto-Slavic, the later Balto-Slavic languages are thought to have developed, composed of sub-branches Baltic and Slavic, and including modern Lithuanian, Polish, Russian and Serbo-Croatian, among others.

Proto-Balto-Slavic
PBS, PBSl
Reconstruction ofBalto-Slavic languages
Reconstructed
ancestor
Lower-order reconstructions

Like most other proto-languages, it is not attested by any surviving texts but has been reconstructed using the comparative method. There are several isoglosses that Baltic and Slavic languages share in phonology, morphology and accentology, which represent common innovations from Proto-Indo-European times and can be chronologically arranged.

Phonology

Consonants

Proto-Indo-European voiced aspirated stops lost their aspiration in Proto-Balto-Slavic. Stops were no longer distinguished between fortis and aspirated but were voiceless and voiced.[1] However, several new palatal (postalveolar) consonants had developed: *ś and *ź from earlier palatovelar plosives and *š from *s as a result of the Ruki sound law.

Proto-Balto-Slavic consonants[2]
Labial Coronal Palatal Velar
Nasal m n
Plosive p b t d k g
Fricative s (z) ś, š ź
Trill r
Lateral l
Approximant w j
  • [z] surfaced as an allophone of /s/ before a voiced consonant in Proto-Balto-Slavic.

Vowels

Proto-Balto-Slavic preserved much of the late Proto-Indo-European vowel system. Short *o was merged into *a, and former *eu had become *jau.

Proto-Balto-Slavic vowels[3]
Short Long Diphthong
Front Back Front Back Front Back
Close i u ī ū
Mid e ē ō ei
Open a ā ai au

Proto-Balto-Slavic also possessed "sonorant diphthongs", consisting of a short vowel followed by *l, *m, *n or *r. These were inherited from Proto-Indo-European, and formed anew from PIE syllabic sonorants. Although not diphthongs in the traditional sense, they behaved as a single syllable nucleus in Proto-Balto-Slavic, and could bear the acute like long vowels and regular diphthongs.

-l -m -n -r
a- al am an ar
e- el em en er
i- il im in ir
u- ul um un ur

Accent

Most Proto-Balto-Slavic words could be accented on any syllable, as in Proto-Indo-European. The placement of the accent was changed significantly relative to PIE, with much paradigmatic leveling of the mobile PIE accent, along with leftward and rightward shifts conditioned by the surrounding phonemes. There is still some disagreement among linguists on the exact position of the accent in each Proto-Balto-Slavic form, and the rules governing these changes.

Acute

Some syllables in Proto-Balto-Slavic had an additional distinguishing feature, known as acute. It is primarily a reflex of the Proto-Indo-European laryngeals, as well as a result of Winter's law. The exact nature of the acute is not clear, and different linguists have different interpretations.

The modern interpretation, favoured by an increasing number of linguists, is that the acute was realised as glottalisation, an interruption of voicing similar to the stød found in Danish.[4] This glottalisation is still found in modern Samogitian and Latvian, under the term "broken tone". Olander indicates it with a superscript glottalisation symbol ˀ after the nucleus of the syllable,[5] while Jasanoff is more noncommittal and uses underlining.[6] Some linguists go further, and interpret the acute as an actual consonantal segment, which Derksen indicates as a glottal stop ʔ and Kortlandt as a laryngeal consonant H. They reconstruct this consonantal segment not just after vowels, but also before them, as direct reflexes of PIE laryngeals. Such consonantal reflexes of laryngeals are not widely accepted, however. For consistency, Olander's glottalisation symbol ˀ will be used in this article.

In Proto-Balto-Slavic, the acute was independent of accent position, and could appear on any "long" syllable, which included:

  • Syllables with long vowels. They could be original PIE long vowels or vowels that were lengthened by a following laryngeal.
  • Syllables with vocalic diphthongs (*ei, *ai, *au).
  • Syllables with sonorant diphthongs, which consisted of short vowel followed by *l, *m, *n or *r.

Thus, any syllable was either long with acute, long without acute or short. Syllables without acute are sometimes collectively termed "circumflex", although this term is also used specifically for long syllables lacking the acute. Within an inflectional paradigm, a long syllable could become short if the nucleus was immediately followed by an inflectional ending beginning with a vowel. This, in turn, resulted in the loss of the acute, as the acute was not permitted on short syllables. Such alternations were found in consonant stem nouns and in primary verbs.

No modern language retains the original Balto-Slavic distribution of the acute. In Lithuanian and Slavic, the acute distinction was lost on unaccented syllables and converted to an intonation distinction. This happened relatively late and not before some important accentual changes occurred, such as Fortunatov–de Saussure's law and Dybo's law. In Latvian, the acute is reflected as the glottalised "broken tone" in words that originally had mobile accentuation.

Alternations

Proto-Balto-Slavic retained the system of ablaut from its parent language, but it was far less productive and had been significantly reworked. Vowel alternations were often leveled, but it is not always easy to determine how far this leveling had progressed by the time the Balto-Slavic dialects began to diverge, as the leveling progressed along the same lines in all of them to some degree.

The lengthened grade remained productive in word derivation and was used in many innovative formations that were not present in Proto-Indo-European. After the merger of *o and *a, the resulting phoneme *a could lengthen to both and .

Pre-Proto-Slavic retained many such uses of lengthened grades in morphology. The length distinctions are reflected as vowel quality distinctions in Late Common Slavic (LCS) and the later Slavic languages:

  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *ślāˀwāˀ > Early Proto-Slavic *slāwā "fame, glory" > Late Proto-Slavic *slava vs. Proto-Balto-Slavic *ślawas > Early Proto-Slavic *slawa "word" > Late Proto-Slavic *slovo
  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *twāris > Early Proto-Slavic *twāri "substance" > Late Proto-Slavic *tvarь vs. Proto-Balto-Slavic *twárīˀtei > Early Proto-Slavic *twarītei "to form, create" > Late Proto-Slavic *tvoriti)

These are similar examples in Lithuanian:

  • Lithuanian prõtas "intellect, mind" (< *prātas) vs. pràsti "to understand"
  • Lithuanian gė̃ris "goodness" (< *gēris) vs. gẽras "good"

On the basis of the existing length alternations inherited from Proto-Indo-European, new alternations arose between the long , and the short *i, *u. This latter type of apophony was not productive in PIE. Compare:

  • Lithuanian mū̃šis "battle" versus mùšti "to kill, hit"
  • Lithuanian lỹkis "remainder" versus lìkti "to stay, keep"

The new type of apophonic length was especially used in Pre-Proto-Slavic in the formation of durative, iterative and imperfective verbs. Compare:

  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *dírāˀtei > Early Proto-Slavic *dirātei "to tear (perfective)" > Late Proto-Slavic *dьrati) vs. Early Proto-Slavic *arz-dīrātei ("to tear (imperfective)") > Late Proto-Slavic *orzdirati > OCS razdirati
  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *bírāˀtei > Early Proto-Slavic *birātei "to pick" > Late Proto-Slavic *bьrati) vs. Early Proto-Slavic *bīrātei "to choose" > Late Proto-Slavic *birati

Certain pairs of words show a change of older initial *a- (from PIE *(H)a-, *(H)o-, *h₂e-, *h₃e-) to *e-, which is sometimes called "Rozwadowski's rule". The exact conditioning of this change is currently not well understood, but led to alternations between *e- and *a- in related words or even as alternative forms of the same word. The alternations often gave rise to different initial vowels in different languages. Several words retained the alternation into Proto-Slavic times as well, which became an alternation between *(j)e- and *o-:

  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *elawa/*alawa "lead" > Bulgarian (dial.) élavo, Polish ołów, Russian ólovo "tin", Old Prussian elwas ~ alwis.
  • Proto-Balto-Slavic *éźera/*áźera "lake" > Bulgarian ézero, ézer (dial.), Polish jezioro, Latvian ezers, Lithuanian ẽžeras; Russian ózero, Old Prussian assaran, Latgalian azars.

Development from Proto-Indo-European

Austrian Balto-Slavist Georg Holzer has reconstructed a relative chronology of 50 Balto-Slavic sound changes, referring only to phonology, not to accentuation, from Proto-Balto-Slavic down to the modern daughter languages.[7] However, only the first 12 are Common Balto-Slavic and so relevant for this article (only Winter's law is a unique common change):

  1. Ruki law: *s > after *r, *u, *k or *i.
  2. Laryngeals are lost between consonants in non-initial syllables.
  3. Winter's law: short vowels are lengthened when followed by a nonaspirated voiced stop (in some accounts, only in a closed syllable).
  4. *o > *a.
  5. Aspirated voiced stops lose their aspiration and merge with the plain voiced stops.
  6. Labiovelar stops lose their labialization and merge with the plain velars.
  7. Satemization: *ḱ, > , .
  8. *ewV > *awV.
  9. *i (sometimes *u) is inserted before syllabic sonorants, creating new liquid diphthongs.
  10. *wl, *wr > *l, *r word-initially.

Satemization

Proto-Balto-Slavic generally shows Satem reflexes of the three velar series: labiovelars merge into the plain velars while palatovelars develop into sibilants ( and ).

There are a number of words in Balto-Slavic that show Centum reflexes instead, with palatovelars appearing as plain velars. A number can be explained by regular sound laws, but some laws have been obscured by numerous analogical developments. Others are argued to be borrowings from Centum languages.

For example, Proto-Balto-Slavic *kárˀwāˀ 'cow' (Lithuanian kárvė, OCS krava, Russian koróva) is likely a feminine derivation of a lost masculine noun that was likely borrowed from Proto-Celtic *karwos "deer" (Middle Welsh carw, Middle Breton karo, Middle Cornish carow), which in turn is a regular reflex of PIE *ḱr̥h₂wos.[8]

PIE palatovelars could also depalatalize in Balto-Slavic. Several depalatalization rules for Balto-Slavic have been proposed.[9] According to Matasović,[10] the depalatalization of palatovelars occurred before sonorant followed by a back vowel: Ḱ > K/_RVback. That would explain Centum reflexes such as these ones:

  • Lithuanian akmuõ, Latvian akmens and Late Proto-Slavic *kamy would have regular /k/ from Proto-Balto-Slavic *akmō as opposed to Sanskrit áśmā < PIE *h₂éḱmō "stone".
  • Late Proto-Slavic *svekry < Proto-Balto-Slavic *swekrūˀ < PIE *sweḱrúh₂ "mother-in-law".
  • Old Prussian balgnan < Proto-Balto-Slavic *balgna < PIE *bʰolǵʰnom "saddle".

Another view is that satemization occurred in Baltic and Slavic independently after Slavic had split off.[citation needed]

Ruki law

PIE *s was preserved in Balto-Slavic in most positions. According to the Ruki law, it became when it was preceded by *r, *u, *k or *i. It also included diphthongs ending in *u or *i, the long vowels and (whether original or from a following laryngeal), and the voiced velar *g.

Among the Balto-Slavic languages, the evidence of Ruki law is recognizable only in Lithuanian and Slavic because in the other languages , and *s all merge into plain *s. In Lithuanian, and are merged to instead, remaining distinct from *s. In Slavic, merges with s but remains distinct (and becomes *x before back vowels).

Most handbooks, on the basis of Lithuanian material, state that in Baltic Ruki law has been applied only partially. The most common claim is that the law applied unconditionally in Lithuanian only after *r, while after *u, *k and *i, both *s and occur. Compare:

  • Lithuanian aušrà "dawn" < Proto-Balto-Slavic *aušrāˀ < PIE *h₂éwsreh₂ (compare Latin aurōra, Sanskrit uṣás), with RUKI applied.
  • Lithuanian ausìs "ear" < Pre-Lithuanian *ausis < PIE *h₂éwsis (compare Latin auris) reflects *s while Slavic *uxo < Pre-Slavic *auš- reflects instead.
  • Lithuanian maĩšas "sack" < Proto-Balto-Slavic *maišás < PIE *moysós (compare Sanskrit meṣá) reflects , matching Slavic *měxъ.
  • Lithuanian teisùs < Pre-Lithuanian *teisus reflects *s while Slavic *tixъ < Pre-Slavic *teišus reflects .

There is no simple solution to such double reflexes of the Ruki law in Lithuanian and thus no simple answer to the question of whether Ruki law is a common Balto-Slavic isogloss or not. The most probable answer seems to be the assumption that PIE *s was changed to after *r, *u, *k, *i completely regularly within Balto-Slavic proper, but the traces of the effect of RUKI law were erased by subsequent changes in Lithuanian such as the change of word-final *-š to *-s.

Generally, it can be ascertained that Lithuanian shows the effect of Ruki law only in old words inherited from Balto-Slavic period so Lithuanian š appears in words that have a complete formational and morphological correspondence in Slavic (ruling out the possibility of accidental, parallel formations).

It appears that palatovelars yielded fricatives in Proto-Balto-Slavic before the effect of RUKI law, so that *ḱs appears simply as . Compare:

  • Late Proto-Slavic *desnъ "right (i.e. opposite to left)" (OCS desnъ, Russian désnyj, Serbo-Croatian dèsnī), Lithuanian dẽšinas < Proto-Balto-Slavic *deśinas < PIE *déḱsinos (Latin dexter, Sanskrit dákṣiṇa)
  • Late Proto-Slavic *osь "axle, axis" (OCS osь, Russ. os’, SCr. ȏs), Lithuanian ašis < Proto-Balto-Slavic *aśís < PIE *h₂éḱsis (Latin axis, Sanskrit ákṣas)

Accentual mobility

Both Proto-Indo-European and Proto-Balto-Slavic had systems of accentual mobility, in which the accent would be placed on different syllables in different inflections of the same word. The systems of the two languages are vastly different in detail, however. PIE mobility and Balto-Slavic mobility are unconnected; Balto-Slavic mobility is not inherited from Proto-Indo-European, but formed entirely anew. PIE mobility was entirely lost in the early stages of Proto-Balto-Slavic,[1] by eliminating the accentual distinction between "strong" and "weak" forms (accented further to the left and right, respectively), usually in favour of the weak forms, i.e. accent on the suffix syllable for proterokinetic stems. Hysterokinetic stems already effectively had fixed accent on the first syllable after the root, and retained this. Amphikinetic stems joined this pattern.

The exact process by which the new Balto-Slavic type of mobility arose is still a hotly debated topic, although some details are clear. As a general rule, nouns that had the accent on the ending ("oxytones") became mobile, while those that had accent on the root ("barytones") retained their fixed accent. Words with mobile accent had accent on the leftmost syllable of the stem in some forms, accent on the rightmost syllable of the ending in others (modified by Hirt's law). A special case is formed, however, by oxytone neuter o-stems, which under some conditions appear as AP b in Slavic instead of the expected AP c.

The following sections lay out the explanations for mobility given by various linguists. The explanations are very different in nature, and sometimes also give different results for different cases. The "incorrect" outcomes are in turn explained by each in their own way.

Jasanoff

J. Jasanoff proposes three rules explaining the rise of mobility:[11]

  1. Saussure-Pedersen's law: The accent was retracted one syllable to the left from a word-internal short open syllable. If the accent came onto an initial syllable, it received a special "left-marginal" accent contour.
  2. Final *-V̆N(C) retraction: The accent was also retracted from a final syllable containing a short vowel and ending in a nasal, optionally with another consonant.
  3. Proto-Vasilev-Dolobko's law (Proto-VDL): In phonological words of four or more syllables headed by a left-marginal accent, the final syllable acquired a lexical accent and the left-marginal accent was lost.

After these changes, analogical changes took place. The mobility pattern of prefixed verbs was extended to unprefixed verbs. The final accent of nouns with two syllables before the ending (resulting from Proto-VDL) was extended to nouns with one syllable before the ending, e.g. regular *su᷅Hnumos → analogical *suHnumo̍s > Proto-Balto-Slavic *sūˀnumás based on regular *golHwinomo̍s.

The nom/acc/voc singular of oxytone neuter o-stems received a left-marginal accent through these changes, which was retained as a falling tone in Slavic AP c neuters. The anomalous AP b neuters can be explained as remnants of suppletive patterns of PIE oxytone singulars and barytone collective plurals.[12] As barytones, these collective plurals would have ended up with a lexical accent on the root, contrasting with a left-marginal accent in the singular forms. Eventually, the lexical accent appears to have "won out", perhaps in part due to the frequent use of the plural in these nouns.

Kortlandt and Derksen

In the proposal of Kortlandt,[13] supported by Derksen,[14] four changes create the new Balto-Slavic mobility:

  1. Pedersen's law: The accent was retracted from medial syllables in stems that remained "mobile", i.e. in hysterokonetic and amphikinetic consonant stems, in which the accent sometimes fell on the suffix and sometimes on the ending. For example, accusative singular *dʰugh₂-tér-m̥ (~ *dʰugh₂-tr-és) > *dʰúgh₂-ter-m̥ > Proto-Balto-Slavic *dúkterin.
  2. Barytonesis: The retraction of the accent spread analogically to vocalic stems in the case forms where Pedersen's law applied. Thus, acc. sg. *suHnúm > *súHnum > Proto-Balto-Slavic *sū́ˀnun.
  3. Oxytonesis: The accent shifted from a medial syllable to the end of the word in paradigms with end-accented forms. This shifted the accent to the last syllable of multisyllabic endings.
  4. Late Balto-Slavic retraction: In two-syllable words, the accent was retracted from a word-final vowel unless the first syllable ended in an obstruent (including laryngeals).

Step 4 caused retraction in the nom/acc/voc singular of oxytone neuter o-stems, where the ending had been replaced with the pronominal *-od, followed by loss of the final *-d which put the vowel in final position. However, because it was blocked by an obstruent-final first syllable, a split occurred in this class of nouns: the retracted stems eventually joined AP c in Slavic, while the unretracted stems joined AP b.

Olander

Olander's “mobility law”[15] presupposes some conditions, namely:

  • Accented short vowels had one mora, which was accented.
  • Accented long vowels (whether inherited or from laryngeals) had two moras, with accent on the first.
  • Accented hiatal long vowels (i.e. V́HV) had two moras, with accent on the second.

The mobility law itself then states that the accent was deleted if it fell on the last mora of a word, and the word became inherently unaccented. Such words appeared with a default accent on the leftmost mora of the word.

Moscow accentological school

The Moscow accentological school considers the Proto-Balto-Slavic mobile accent paradigm to be a direct reflex of recessive Proto-Indo-European platforms:[16]

  • Proto-Indo-European *médʰu r-r → Proto-Balto-Slavic *mȅdu r-r → Proto-Slavic *mȅdъ (AP c), cf. Ancient Greek méthu r-r, Vedic mádhu r-r.
  • Proto-Indo-European *suHnús r-sd → (Hirt's law) Proto-Balto-Slavic *sū́nus sd-sd (alignment of the accent curve) → Old Lithuanian súnus (AP 1) or Proto-Slavic *sy̑nъ (AP c), Lithuanian sūnùs (AP 3); cf. Vedic sūnúṣ r-sd.

Hirt's law

Hirt's law caused the accent to retract to the previous syllable if the vowel in the preceding syllable was immediately followed by a laryngeal. It took place before the addition of epenthetic vowels before syllabic sonorants, so at the time of the change, syllabic sonorants still acted as a vocalic nucleus like the true vowels and could attract the accent as well.

Hirt's law took place after the creation of new accentual mobility, and served to modify it. Where endings of mobile-accented words had multiple syllables, it could shift the accent from the final syllable onto the preceding one, thus creating the non-final accent of Slavic *-ìti (infinitive) and *-àxъ (locative plural). If the accent was shifted from the ending of a mobile-accent word onto the stem, the word was usually converted to a fixed-accent pattern:

  • Pre-Balto-Slavic *duHmós "smoke" > (by Hirt's law, then conversion to fixed accent) *dúHmos > Proto-Balto-Slavic *dū́ˀmas > Lithuanian dū́mas (AP 1), Late Common Slavic *dỳmъ (AP a)
  • Pre-Balto-Slavic *griHwáH "?" > (by Hirt's law, then conversion to fixed accent) *gríHwaH > Proto-Balto-Slavic *grī́ˀwāˀ > Latvian grĩva, Late Common Slavic *grìva (AP a)

However, in some cases, Hirt's law does not appear to have taken place where it would be expected, and the words remain mobile-accented:

  • Pre-Balto-Slavic *suHnús "son" > Proto-Balto-Slavic *sūˀnús > Lithuanian sūnùs (AP 3), Late Common Slavic *sy̑nъ (AP c)
  • Pre-Balto-Slavic *giHwós "alive" > Proto-Balto-Slavic *gīˀwás > Lithuanian gývas (AP 3), Late Common Slavic *žȋvъ (AP c)

Syllabic sonorants

The Proto-Indo-European syllabic sonorants *l̥, *r̥, *m̥ and *n̥ (abbreviated *R̥) developed a prothetic vowel in front of them, converting them into "sonorant diphthongs". This change occurred after Hirt's law, which operated on original syllabic sonorants but not on sonorant diphthongs.

Both *i and *u appear as prothetic vowels, yielding reflexes *im, *in, *ir, *il (*iR) and *um, *un, *ur, *ul (*uR). It has remained an unsolved problem to this day as to the exact phonological conditions that trigger which reflex. Regardless, analysis of their distribution has shown that *i appears much more often, suggesting that it is the default reflex, with *u appearing only in special cases. In a sample of 215 Balto-Slavic lexical items, 36 (17%) are attested only with *uR reflexes, 22 (10%) with both reflexes in the same language or branch or with one in Slavic and the other in Baltic, and the remaining 157 (73%) are attested only with *iR reflex.[17]

Several theories have been proposed, the most notable being the one by André Vaillant from 1950.[18] According to him, *u arose after PIE labiovelars. If true, it would be the only trace of PIE labiovelars in Balto-Slavic.

After surveying Reinhold Trautmann's 1924 Balto-Slavic dictionary, Jerzy Kuryłowicz in 1956 found no phonologically consistent distribution for the dual reflexes except in a single position: after PIE palatovelars Baltic and Slavic have only *iR reflex.[19]

George Shevelov in 1965 inspected Slavic data in much detail, but in the end, he demonstrated only that the distribution of the dual reflexes in Slavic is not reducible to phonological conditioning.[20]

According to an analysis by Christian Stang in 1966 Kuryłowicz's statistics proved only that *iR reflexes are much more frequent than *uR reflexes.[21] Stang made several important observations:

  • Balto-Slavic grammatical morphemes have *iR reflexes, but no *uR reflexes
  • *iR reflexes are productive in ablaut alternations, while *uR are not
  • many words containing *uR diphthongs have an expressive meaning,[22] meaning (i) "fat", "dumb", "lazy", "clumsy", (ii) "crooked, bent", (iii) "crippled, decrepit", (iv) "dark", "dirty", or (v) they are of onomatopoeic origin. Such words could have been innovated at various times during the prehistory and have no relation to the Balto-Slavic reflexes of PIE *R̥. Such u + sonorant combinations reflect a universal semantic category;[23] compare English plump, dumb, bungle, bulky, clumsy, glum, dumpy etc.; German dumm, dumpf, stumm, stumpf, plump etc.

Stang's analysis indicates that *iR was the regular result of the diphthongization of PIE syllabic sonorants. Doublets with expressive meaning are then explained as expressively motivated *uR replacements of the original *iR reflex, or as borrowings from substratum dialects (such as Germanic) that regularly had the *R̥ > *uR reflex, when (pre-)Balto-Slavic no longer had syllabic sonorants and were then used side by side with the original reflex.

According to Jānis Endzelīns and Reinhold Trautmann *uR reflex resulted in zero-grade of morphemes that had PIE *o (> Balto-Slavic *a) in normal grade.[clarification needed]

Matasović, in 2008,[24] proposed the following rules:

  1. At first, syllabic sonorants develop a prothetic schwa: *R̥ > *əR.
  2. > *i in a final syllable.
  3. > *u after velars and before nasals.
  4. > *i otherwise.

Laryngeals and the acute

According to the traditional school, laryngeals disappeared as independent phonemes. Some linguists of the Leiden school, in particular Derksen and Kortlandt, reconstruct a glottal or laryngeal consonant for Proto-Balto-Slavic, as a direct reflex of original laryngeals. The remainder of this section thus only applies if one does not follow that idea.

Like in almost all Indo-European branches, laryngeals in the syllable onset were lost, as were all word-initial laryngeals. Laryngeals between consonants disappeared as well, but in the first syllable, they are reflected as *a. Compare:

  • PIE *h₁rh̥₃déh₂ "heron, stork" (Ancient Greek erōdiós, Latin ardea) > Proto-Balto-Slavic *radāˀ > Slavic *roda (Serbo-Croatian róda).
  • PIE *sh̥₂l- (oblique case stem of *seh₂ls "salt") > Proto-Balto-Slavic *salis > Old Prussian sal, Slavic *solь (OCS solь, Polish sól, Russian solʹ).

Other laryngeals were lost in Proto-Balto-Slavic, but in some cases, the syllable was acuted as a "leftover" of the former laryngeal. The following outcomes can be noted, with H standing for a laryngeal, V for a vowel, R for a sonorant and C for any consonant:[25]

PIE PBS
VH(C) V̄ˀ(C)
VHV V̄, VRV
VR VR
VRH(C) VRˀ(C)
VRHV VRV

In the case of a VHV sequence, the outcome is VRV with a semivowel when the first vowel is close *i or *u, reflected in PIE *kruh₂és "blood" (gen. sg.) > PBS *kruves > Slavic *krъve. In other cases, the outcome is a long non-acute vowel.

The outcome of long vowels inherited directly from Proto-Indo-European, not lengthened by a laryngeal, is disputed. Traditional opinion holds that the acute is an automatic reflex of vowel length, and therefore all long vowels were automatically acuted, whether original or resulting from a following laryngeal.[26] Absolutely word-final long vowels of PIE origin were not acuted, but remained distinct from long vowels resulting from laryngeals, a distinction also found in Proto-Germanic "overlong" vowels. Kortlandt instead takes the position that the acute reflects laryngeals only; thus inherited long vowels do not trigger the acute. Regardless, the acute appears in all cases of vowel lengthening within Balto-Slavic. All long vowels that arose as part of word formations or sound changes within the Balto-Slavic period received the acute. This included the new alternations *u ~ and *i ~ that were innovated within Balto-Slavic.

Aside from acuteness, syllabic sonorants followed by laryngeals show the same outcome as syllabic sonorants in other environments. Balto-Slavic shares that characteristic with Germanic but no other Indo-European languages, which show clearly distinct reflexes in this case. Compare:

  • PIE *pl̥h₁nós > Proto-Balto-Slavic *pílˀnas (Slavic *pьlnъ, Lithuanian pìlnas), and Proto-Germanic *fullaz (< earlier *fulnaz, with regular *l̥ > *ul; English full), but Proto-Celtic *ɸlānos (where *l̥ > al normally).

Winter's law

Winter's law caused lengthening of vowels if a plain voiced stop followed, and the new long vowels received the acute. According to some analyses, the change occurred only if the stop was in syllable coda (the syllable ending with that consonant).

The plain and aspirated stops merged in Balto-Slavic, but Winter's law operated before this merger had taken place. Consequently, the distinction between those two series has been indirectly preserved in Proto-Balto-Slavic by long acuted vowels. Furthermore, Winter's law took place before *o and *a merged, as it lengthened earlier *o to *ōˀ and *a to *āˀ.

On the basis of relative chronology of sound changes, it has been ascertained that Winter's law acted rather late, after some other less prominent Balto-Slavic changes had occurred such as after the disappearance of laryngeals in prevocalic position.[27] Compare:

  • PIE *eǵh₂óm > Pre-Balto-Slavic *eźHom > (Winter's law) *ēˀźHom > Proto-Balto-Slavic *ēˀźun > Common Slavic *(j)azъ́ > OCS azъ, Slovene jaz.

The rules governing the emergence of the acute from voiced stops seem complicated when they are formulated within the framework of "classical" Proto-Indo-European laryngeal theory, as there is no obvious connection between laryngeals and voiced stops, both of which trigger the acute. Frederik Kortlandt has proposed an alternative, more elegant and economic rule for the derivation of Balto-Slavic acute by using the glottalic theory framework of Proto-Indo-European. He proposed that the acute is a reflex of a glottal stop, which has two sources, the merger of PIE laryngeals and the dissolution of PIE pre-glottalized stop ("voiced stops" in traditional reconstruction) to glottal stop and voiced stop, according to the Winter's law.

Though elegant, Kortlandt's theory also has some problems. The glottalic theory, which was proposed in the 1970s, is not generally accepted among linguists, and today only a small minority of linguists would consider it a reliable and self-supportive framework onto which to base modern Indo-European research. Also, there is a number of Balto-Slavic lexemes with the acute that are provably not of PIE laryngeal origin, and some of them were a result of apophonical lengthenings occurring only in Balto-Slavic period.

Nasals

Word-finally, *m became *n in Balto-Slavic. Final nasals are not directly preserved in most Balto-Slavic languages, however, making evidence mostly indirect. Old Prussian uniquely preserves final *-n, and there is indeed a clear attestation of the change in the nominative-accusative of neuters, such as assaran "lake" < Proto-Balto-Slavic *éźeran/*áźeran < PIE *eǵʰerom. In the other Baltic languages, no final nasals are retained. Lithuanian has vowel lengthening that reflects earlier nasal vowels, but they could conceivably come from either final -n or -m and thus do not provide evidence either way. In Slavic, all word-final consonants are lost in one way or another so there is no direct evidence there either.

However, there is indirect evidence in the form of sandhi effects that were preserved in some Slavic pronouns. For example, Old Church Slavonic attests constructions like sъ nimь "with him", which can be traced back to Proto-Balto-Slavic *śun eimiš where the first word reflects the common Proto-Indo-European preposition *ḱom "with" (compare Latin cum), and the second reflects the PIE pronominal stem *ey- (Latin is, German er). In Slavic, in accordance with the "Law of Open Syllables", the final -n of the preposition was reinterpreted as belonging to the pronoun, which acted to preserve the nasal in its Balto-Slavic form, thus corroborating that it was indeed -n: If the change of *-m to *-n had not taken place at an earlier stage, the phrase would have been *śum eimiš, which would have given *sъ mimь in OCS instead.

Vowels

The following changes to vowels in Proto-Balto-Slavic can be noted:

  • Long vowels are shortened before word-final *-n. Thus, the ā-stem accusative singular, originally *-āˀm, was shortened to *-an: Lithuanian , Old Prussian -an, Slavic *-ǫ. If the genitive plural ending was originally *-ōm, it was shortened to *-on by this change.
  • Word-final *-os and *-on are raised to *-us and *-un when stressed, e.g. *eǵh₂óm > Balto-Slavic *ēˀźun > Slavic *ãzъ. This causes a split in the o-stem paradigm, which is levelled in various ways later on. In Baltic, the nominals with original ending stress are transferred to the u-stem inflection. In Slavic, masculines of the two types are conflated and merge almost completely in most modern languages.
  • Word-final *-mi is reduced to *-n after a long vowel. This change occurred after the shortening, so that the vowel remained long and, if applicable, acuted. For example, the ā-stem instrumental singular ending *-āmi was reduced to *-ān > Lithuanian , Slavic *-ǫ (compared to the o-stem ending *-ami > Slavic *-omь).
  • *o > *a
  • *un is lengthened to *ūˀn (with acute) when a stop followed.[clarification needed] In Slavic, it is reflected as *y, with no nasal. For example: PIE *Hunk- "to get used to" > Balto-Slavic *ūˀnktei > Lithuanian jùnkti, Latvian jûkt, OCS vyknǫti, Upper Sorbian wuknyć. *in did not exhibit lengthening in such conditions, as older literature often states.[28]

Morphology

Proto-Balto-Slavic retained many of the grammatical features present in Proto-Indo-European.

Nominals

Grammatical categories

Proto-Balto-Slavic made use of seven cases:

The eighth Proto-Indo-European case, the ablative, had merged with the genitive case. Some of the inflectional endings for the genitive were replaced with those of the former ablative.

Proto-Balto-Slavic also distinguished three numbers:

  • singular (for one item)
  • dual (for two items)
  • plural (for three or more items)

The dual was retained into the early Slavic languages, but most modern Slavic languages have lost it. Slovene, Chakavian (a dialect of Serbo-Croatian), and Sorbian are the only remaining Slavic languages that still make consistent use of the dual number. In most other Slavic languages, the dual number is not retained except for historically-paired nouns (eyes, ears, shoulders), certain fixed expressions, and agreement of nouns when used with numbers; it is synchronically often analyzed as genitive singular because of the resemblance in forms. The Baltic languages also used to have a dual number system, but it has become practically obsolete in modern Latvian and Lithuanian.

Finally, Proto-Balto-Slavic nouns could also have one of three genders: masculine, feminine or neuter. Many originally neuter nouns in PIE had become masculine in Balto-Slavic so the group was somewhat reduced relative to the others. The modern Slavic languages largely continue the use of three grammatical genders, but modern Baltic languages have merged the neuter gender into the masculine. Lithuanian has no neuter-gender nouns, but in pronouns, participles and numerals, the neuter is retained. Latvian has no neuter gender at all.

An innovation within Balto-Slavic was the use of the genitive in place of the accusative for the direct object of a negative verb.[29] That feature is still present in its descendants:

  • "I have read the book": Slovene sèm brál knjígo, Lithuanian knỹgą skaičiau
  • "I have not read the book": Slovene nísem brál knjíge, Lithuanian knỹgos neskaičiau

Nouns

Adjectives

A Balto-Slavic innovation to the inflection of adjectives was the creation of a distinct "definite" inflection of adjectives by affixing forms of the pronoun *ja- to existing adjective forms. The inflection had a function resembling that of the definite article 'the' in English: Lithuanian geràsis, Old Church Slavonic добрꙑи "the good" vs. gẽras, добръ "good". The distinction is no longer productive in most Slavic languages today, and most Slavic languages preserve a mixture of definite forms and indefinite forms in a single paradigm.

Russian, Czech and Polish for example use the original definite nominative singular forms (Russian -ый, -ая, -ое (-yj, -aja, -oje), Polish -y, -a, -e, Czech -ý, -á, -é). Czech and Polish have lost the indefinite forms except in a few limited uses, while Russian preserves the indefinite nominative forms as the so-called "short forms", used in some cases in predicate position. Serbo-Croatian and Slovene still distinguish the two types but only in the masculine nominative singular (definite -i versus indefinite with no ending). Bulgarian and Macedonian have innovated completely new forms, affixing forms of the demonstrative pronoun *t- instead.

Verbs

The distinction between athematic and thematic verbs was preserved, but athematic verbs were gradually reduced in number. The primary first-person singular endings, athematic *-mi and thematic *-oh₂, were kept distinct, giving Balto-Slavic *-mi and *-ōˀ respectively. The thematic ending was occasionally extended by adding the athematic ending to it, apparently in Balto-Slavic times, resulting in a third ending: *-ōˀmi > *-ōˀm > *-ōˀn > *-an, replacing the original ending in Slavic, reflected as *-ǫ (Russian (-u), Polish , Bulgarian -a).

In many Slavic languages, particularly South and West Slavic, the athematic ending was analogically extended to other verbs and even replaced the thematic ending completely in some languages (Slovene, Serbo-Croatian). In the Baltic languages, only the thematic ending was retained, as Lithuanian and Latvian -u (< East Baltic *-uoˀ < Balto-Slavic *-ōˀ). In Latvian, the first-person singular form of būt "to be" is esmu, which preserves the original *-m- of the athematic ending, but it was extended with the thematic ending.

Balto-Slavic replaced the PIE second-person singular ending *-si with *-seHi > *-sei for which the origin is not fully understood. According to Kortlandt, the ending is a combination of the ending *-si with *-eHi, which he considers to be the original thematic ending.[30] The new ending, *-sei, carried over into all three branches of Balto-Slavic and came to be used in all athematic root verbs in Baltic. In Old Church Slavonic, it completely ousted the older ending. In the other Slavic languages, the original ending generally survives except in the athematic verbs.

The aspectual distinction between present and aorist was retained and still productive in Proto-Balto-Slavic. It was preserved into early Slavic but was gradually replaced with an innovated aspectual distinction, with a variety of forms. Modern Bulgarian retained the aorist, however, alongside the innovated system, producing a four-way contrast. The Indo-European perfect/stative was falling out of use in Proto-Balto-Slavic and was likely already reduced to relics by Proto-Balto-Slavic times. It survives in Slavic only in the irregular Old Church Slavonic form vědě "I know" (< Balto-Slavic *waidai < PIE *wóyde, from *weyd- "to see"), which preserves an irregular first-person singular ending, presumed to originate in the perfect.

Proto-Indo-European did not originally have an infinitive, but it did have several constructions that served as action nouns. Two of these, the -tis and -tus nouns, remained in use into Balto-Slavic and acquired verbal noun and infinitive-like functions. They were not fully integrated into the verb system by Balto-Slavic times, however, and the individual Balto-Slavic languages diverge on the details. In Slavic and the Eastern Baltic languages, the infinitive was formed from a case form of the -tis noun: Lithuanian -ti, Latvian -t, Proto-Slavic *-ti. Old Prussian, however, has -t and -twei as infinitive endings, the latter of which comes from the -tus noun instead. The shorter -t could come from either type.

Accentual system

The Proto-Indo-European accent was completely reworked in Balto-Slavic, with far-reaching consequences for accentual systems of the modern daughter languages. The development was conditioned by several delicate factors, such as the syllable length, presence of a laryngeal closing the syllable, and the position of PIE ictus. There is still no consensus among Balto-Slavists on the precise details of the development of Balto-Slavic accentual system. All modern research is based on the seminal study of Stang (1957), which basically instituted the field of comparative Balto-Slavic accentology. However, many laws and correspondences have been discovered and are now held to be true by the majority of researchers even if the exact details sometimes remain in dispute.

Early Balto-Slavic retained a simple accent in which only the placement of the accent was distinctive, but there were no pitch distinctions. The acute register was initially no more than an articulatory feature on certain syllables and could occur independently of accent placement. However, the acute was the trigger for several sound changes that affected the placement of the accent. For example, under Hirt's law, the accent tended to shift leftwards onto a syllable that bore the acute.

On accented syllables, the acute came to be accompanied by a distinct pitch contour in late Proto-Balto-Slavic. Consequently, accented syllables of any type that could carry the acute register in Proto-Balto-Slavic (listed above) now differed in pitch contour as well as articulation; they had rising or falling pitch (whether accented acute syllables had rising or falling pitch differed by dialect). The tonal accents that emerged from this process are called "acute accent" and "circumflex accent" in Balto-Slavic linguistics.

Syllables with a single short vowel could not bear the acute register and so also had no tonal distinctions. When accented, they had the same pitch contour (though nondistinctive) as a circumflex-accented syllable. The syllables are said to have "short accent".

To reconstruct the Balto-Slavic accent, the most important are those languages that have retained tonal oppositions: Lithuanian, Latvian, (probably) Old Prussian and the West South Slavic languages of Slovene and Serbo-Croatian. However, one should keep in mind that the prosodical systems of dialects in the aforementioned languages are sometimes very different from those of standard languages. For example, some Croatian dialects like Čakavian and Posavian dialects of Slavonian Štokavian are especially important for Balto-Slavic accentology, as they retain more archaic and complex tonal accentual system than the Neoštokavian dialect on which modern standard varieties of Serbo-Croatian (Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian) are based. On the other hand, many dialects have completely lost tonal oppositions (such as some Kajkavian varieties, the Zagreb spoken nonstandard idiom).

A minority view, originating from Vladimir Dybo, considers Balto-Slavic accentuation (based on correspondences in the Germanic, Celtic, and Italic languages) more archaic than Greek-Vedic and therefore closer to Proto-Indo-European.[31]

Notation

What follows is a short overview of the commonly used diacritical marks for Balto-Slavic (BSl.) accents and/or prosodic features, all based on the example letter a. In each case, there is a crude characterization of the pronunciation in terms of High, Mid, and Low-tone sequences.

  • Lithuanian: "falling"/HL (acute) á, "rising"/H(L)H (circumflex) ã, "short"/H à
  • Latvian (on all syllables): "falling"/HL à, "rising"/LH (or "lengthened") ã, "broken"/L'H â
  • Slovenian: "falling"/HL ȃ, "rising"/LH á, "short"/H ȁ
  • Serbo-Croatian:[32] "short falling"/HL ȁ, "long falling"/HML ȃ, "short rising"/LH à, "long rising"/LMH á, "posttonic length" ā
  • Common Slavic: "short falling"/HL (short circumflex) ȁ, "long falling"/HML (long circumflex) ȃ, "acute"/LH (old acute, old rising") , "neoacute"/L(M)H (old acute, old rising") á or ã

In Croatian dialects, especially Čakavian and Posavian, the "neoacute" ("new acute", a new rising tone) is usually marked with tilde, as ã. Short neoacute ("short new rising") is marked as à. Neoacutes represent a post–Proto-Slavic development.

Here is a reverse key to help decode the various diacritical marks:

  • acute accent (á): Usually long rising and/or BSl. acute. Neoacute in some Slavic reconstructions. The default accent when a language has only one phonemic prosodic feature (such as stress in Russian, length in Czech). Marks long falling in Lithuanian because this derives from BSl. acute.
  • grave accent (à): Usually short rising or simply short.
  • circumflex accent (â): BSl. circumflex in reconstructions. Broken tone in modern Baltic (Latvian and Žemaitian Lithuanian), a vowel with a glottal stop in the middle (derives from BSl. acute). Long falling in modern Slavic languages.
  • tilde (ã): Alternative notation for BSl. circumflex in reconstructions. Long rising in various modern languages (Lithuanian, Latvian, archaic Serbo-Croatian dialects such as Chakavian). Derives from diverse sources: Lithuanian < BSl. circumflex, Latvian < BSl. acute, Serbo-Croatian dialects < long Common Slavic neoacute (from accentual retraction).
  • double grave accent (ȁ): Usually short falling (mostly in Slavic). Derived from circumflex (= long falling) by converting the "acute" portion of the accent to a grave, much as a simple acute (= long rising) is shortened by conversion to a grave.
  • double acute accent (): Old acute in some Slavic reconstructions. (As opposed to a single acute for Slavic neoacute in reconstructions. Based on the fact that the old acute was shortened in Common Slavic.)
  • macron (ā): Vowel length, particularly in syllables without tone (such as unstressed syllables in Slavic).
  • breve (ă): Vowel shortness.

There are multiple competing systems used for different languages and different periods. The most important are these:

  1. Three-way system of Proto-Slavic, Proto-Balto-Slavic, modern Lithuanian: acute tone (á) vs. circumflex tone (â or ã) vs. short accent (à).
  2. Four-way Serbo-Croatian system, also used in Slovenian and often in Slavic reconstructions: long rising (á), short rising (à), long falling (â), short falling (ȁ).
  3. Two-way length: long (ā) vs. short (ă).
  4. Length only, as in Czech and Slovak: long (á) vs. short (a).
  5. Stress only, as in Russian, Ukrainian and Bulgarian: stressed (á) vs. unstressed (a).

Many nonprosodic marks are also found in various languages in combinations with certain letters. The various combinations of letter and diacritic should normally be viewed as single symbols (i.e. as equivalent to such simple symbols as a, b, c ...).

Examples on vowels:

  • ogonek (ą): With a rightward-curving hook unlike the leftward-curving cedilla (ç): Vowel nasalization. In Standard Lithuanian, the nasalization is historical and the vowels are now simply reflected as long vowels, but some dialects still preserve nasalized vowels. Occasionally used to indicate low-mid quality in e, o.
  • overdot (ė ȯ), underdot (ẹ ọ): High-mid vowel quality [e o], distinguished from plain e o indicating low-mid vowels [ɛ ɔ]. The overdot is normally found in Lithuanian, the underdot in Slovenian.
  • inverted breve below (e̯ i̯ o̯ u̯), indicating nonsyllabic vowels (often, it is the second part of a diphthong).
  • háček (ě): With a pointed v shape, rather than the rounded u shape of the breve: ě, in Slavic reconstructions, is a vowel known as yat, distinct in length and later quality from simple e (originally longer and lower; later, longer and higher in many dialects), but ě, in Czech, sometimes indicates instead a simple e, with palatalization of the preceding consonant ( ).
  • ô, ó, ů originally indicated a high-mid [o] or diphthongized [uo] in various Slavic languages (respectively: Slovak/dialectal Russian; Polish/Upper Sorbian/Lower Sorbian; Czech). It now indicates [u] in Polish and long [uː] in Czech.

Examples in consonants:

  • Most diacritics on consonants indicate various sorts of palatal sounds such as an acute accent (ć ǵ ḱ ĺ ń ŕ ś ź), a comma (ģ ķ ļ ņ), a haček (č ď ľ ň ř š ť ž) or an overbar (đ). They can indicate three:
    • palatoalveolars (č š ž): They have a "hushing" pronunciation [tʃ ʃ ʒ], as in English kitchen, mission, vision and are less palatal than the sounds indicated by ć ś ź;
    • alveolopalatals (ć đ ś ź, as in Polish and Serbo-Croatian);
    • palatal stops (voiceless ḱ/ķ/ť and voiced ǵ/ģ/ď" in Macedonian, Latvian and Czech, respectively);
    • a palatal nasal (ń ņ ň);
    • a palatal lateral (ĺ ļ ľ); or
    • a palatalized trill (ŕ, also ř in Czech specifically for a fricative trill).
  • In Slovak, ĺ and ŕ indicate doubled rather than palatal(ized) consonants (vŕba=willow, hĺbka=depth).
  • In western West Slavic (Polish, Kashubian, Upper Sorbian and Lower Sorbian), ż indicates a voiced retroflex sibilant [ʐ]. (Other such sibilants are indicated by digraphs like cz, sz.)
  • In western West Slavic, ł indicates a sound that was once a dark (velarized) l but is now usually pronounced [w].

Accent paradigms

Proto-Balto-Slavic, just like Proto-Indo-European, had a class of nominals with so called "mobile" accentuation in which accent alternated between the word stem and the ending. The classes of nominals are usually reconstructed on the basis of Vedic Sanskrit and Ancient Greek, which have retained the position of the original PIE accent almost unchanged. However, by comparing the Balto-Slavic evidence, it was discovered that the PIE rules on accent alternations, devised on the basis of Vedic and Greek, do not match those found in Balto-Slavic.

Moreover, nominals that belong to mobile paradigms in Balto-Slavic belong to declension classes that always had fixed accent in PIE paradigms: ā-stems and o-stems. For a long time, the exact relationships between the accentuation of nominals in Balto-Slavic and PIE was one of the most mysterious questions of Indo-European studies, and some parts of the puzzle are still missing.

Research conducted by Christian Stang, Ferdinand de Saussure, Vladislav Illich-Svitych and Vladimir Dybo has led to a conclusion that Balto-Slavic nominals, with regard to accentuation, could be reduced to two paradigms: fixed and mobile. Nominals of the fixed paradigm had accent on one of the stem syllables, and in the nominals of the mobile paradigm, the accent alternated between the stem and the ending. As shown by Illič-Svityč, Balto-Slavic nominals of the fixed paradigm correspond to the PIE nominals with accent on the root (PIE barytones). The only exception were nominals with the accent on the ending (PIE oxytones) when it was shifted onto the root in Balto Slavic in accordance with Hirt's law; such nominals also have fixed accent in Balto-Slavic.

The origin of the Balto-Slavic nominals of the mobile paradigm has not been completely determined, with several proposed theories of origin. According to Illič-Svityč, they originate as an analogical development from fixed-accent PIE oxytones. That theory has been criticized as leaving unclear why PIE nominals with fixed accent on the ending would become mobile, as analogies usually lead to uniformity and regularity. According to Meillet and Stang, Balto-Slavic accentual mobility was inherited from PIE consonant and vowel-stems but not for o-stems, where they represent Balto-Slavic innovation. Vedic and Greek lost the accentual mobility in vowel stems, retaining it only in consonant stems. De Saussure explained it as a result of accent retraction in the medially stressed syllables of consonant-stems exhibiting the hysterokinetic paradigm, with vocalic stems subsequently imitating the new accentual patterns by analogy. According to Dybo the position of Balto-Slavic accent is determined by a formula from PIE tones according to the valence theory developed by the Moscow school, which presupposes lexical tone in PIE. Kortlandt up to 2006 supported the theory of Balto-Slavic losing PIE consonant-stem accentual mobility in nominals, and innovating everywhere else, but after 2006 maintains that the original PIE accentual mobility was preserved in Balto-Slavic in ā-stems (eh₂-stems), i-stems, u-stems and consonant-stems.

The Balto-Slavic accentual system was further reworked during the Proto-Slavic and Common Slavic period (Dybo's law, Meillet's law, Ivšić's law, etc.), resulting in three Common Slavic accentual paradigms (conventionally indicated using the letters A, B, C), corresponding to four Lithuanian accentual paradigms (indicated with the numbers 1, 2, 3, 4) in a simple scheme:

Acute register on the root
yes no
fixed accent yes a.p. 1/a.p. A a.p. 2/a.p. B
no a.p. 3/a.p. C a.p. 4/a.p. C
Fixed paradigm with acuted root

The simplest accentuation is that of nominals which were acuted on the root in Balto-Slavic. They remain accented on the root (root here is understood in the Proto-Balto-Slavic, not the PIE sense) throughout the paradigm in Baltic (Lithuanian first accentual paradigm) and Slavic (accent paradigm a).

Lithuanian Russian Serbo-Croatian Slovene
sg N várna voróna vrȁna vrána
V várna vrȁno
A várną vorónu vrȁnu vráno
G várnos voróny vrȁnē vráne
D várnai voróne vrȁni vráni
L várnoje voróne vrȁni vráni
I várna vorónoj vrȁnōm vráno
du NAV vráni
G vrán
DI vránama
L vránah
pl NV várnos voróny vrȁne vráne
A várnas vorón vrȁne vráne
G várnų vorón vrȃnā vrán
D várnoms vorónam vrȁnama vránam
L várnose vorónax vrȁnama vránah
I várnomis vorónami vrȁnama vránami
  • Russian exhibits "polnoglasie", in which liquid diphthongs receive an epenthetic vowel after them. An acute-accented liquid diphthong yields accent on the epenthetic vowel; a circumflex-accented one results in accent on the first (original) vowel (-árˀ- > -oró-, -ar- > -óro-). Serbo-Croatian and Slovene show metathesis instead.
  • Serbo-Croatian does not reflect the acute as a tonal distinction but shows short falling accent consistently for all words with post-Slavic initial accent regardless of tone. The short falling accent in the genitive plural has been lengthened due to the loss of a yer. The addition of is a later innovation.
  • Slovene has a rising vowel, which reflects the original acute. All short accented vowels in non-final syllables were lengthened, which eliminated the length distinction in the genitive plural.
Fixed paradigm with non-acuted root

In the nouns with non-mobile initial accent, which did not have an acuted root syllable, both Lithuanian and Slavic had an independent accent shift occur, from the root to the ending. In Lithuanian, they are the nouns of the second accent paradigm and in Slavic, the accent paradigm b.

Lithuanian noun rankà "hand" etymologically corresponds to Russian ruká and Serbo-Croatian rúka, but both became mobile in a later Common Slavic development so the reflexes of the Proto-Slavic noun *juxá "soup" are listed instead.

Lithuanian Russian Serbo-Croatian Slovene
sg N rankà uxá júha júha
V rañka jȗho
A rañką uxú júhu júho
G rañkos uxí júhē júho
D rañkai uxé júsi/juhi júhi
L rañkoje uxé júsi/juhi júhi
I rankà uxój júhōm júho
du NAV júhi
GL
DI júhama
pl N rañkos uxí júhe júhe
V rañkos jȗhe júhe
A rankàs uxí júhe júhe
G rañkų úx júhā júh
D rañkoms uxám júhama júham
L rañkose uxáx júhama júhah
I rañkomis uxámi júhama júhami
  • In Lithuanian, the initial accent was preserved in all cases where the ending did not contain an acuted syllable. In the forms that had an acuted ending (nominative and instrumental singular, accusative plural), the accent shifted onto the ending, in accordance with the rule discovered by de Saussure. Later, that acuted syllable was shortened by Leskien's law.
  • In Slavic, the accent shifted from a non-acute root onto the ending in all case forms in accordance with Dybo's law.
  • In the Neoštokavian dialects of Serbo-Croatian, which are used as the basis for standard Bosnian, Croatian and Serbian, the so-called "Neoštokavian retraction" occurred: the accent was retracted from the ending onto the root syllable and became rising. Old Štokavian and Čakavian dialects preserved the original ending-stressed paradigm.
  • Slovene also has retraction of the accent, which results in a long rising tone.
Mobile paradigm

Nominals with mobile accent had in some cases an accented first syllable, in others an accented ending.

Lithuanian distinguishes two accent paradigms of these nominals, depending on whether the root was acuted, as in the fixed paradigm, or not.

  • If the root was acuted, it is said to belong to third accent paradigm.
  • If the root was not acuted, then, by the operation of de Saussure's law, the accent shifted onto all the acuted endings in the paradigm, and these nouns are accounted as belonging to the fourth accent paradigm.

In Proto-Slavic, the operation of Meillet's law converted acute roots to circumflexed in mobile nominals, so that the split found in Lithuanian does not occur. All nominals with mobile accentuation in Balto-Slavic belong to one accent paradigm in Slavic, accent paradigm C.

Lithuanian Russian Neoštokavian
Serbo-Croatian
Čakavian
Serbo-Croatian
Slovene Common Slavic
sg N galvà golová gláva glāvȁ gláva *golvà
V gálva glávo glȃvo ?
A gálvą gólovu glȃvu glȃvu glavọ̑ *gȏlvǫ
G galvõs golový gláve glāvé glavẹ́ *golvỳ
D gálvai golové (OESl. gólově) glȃvi glāvȉ glávi *gȏlvě → *golvě̀
L galvojè golové glȃvi glāvȉ glávi *golvě̀
I gálva golovój glávōm glāvún glavọ́ (*golvojǫ̀)
du NAV glavẹ́ ?
GL ?
DI glaváma ?
pl NV gálvos gólovy glȃve glȃve glavẹ̑ *gȏlvy
A gálvas gólovy glȃve glȃve glavẹ̑ *gȏlvy
G galvų̃ golóv glávā gláv gláv *gólvъ
D galvóms golovám glávama glāván glavȁm *golva̋mъ
L galvosè golováx glávama glāvȁh glavȁh *golva̋xъ
I galvomìs golovámi glávama glāvȁmi glavȃmi *golva̋mi
  • Lithuanian has preserved the best Balto-Slavic mobile paradigm.
  • The Proto-Slavic initial accent is preserved as a circumflex by Meillet's law.
  • In Neoštokavian, the final accent has been retracted and gained rising intonation.
  • In Slovene, several advancings and retractions of the accent have occurred so it no longer reflects the original position as neatly. All non-accented vowels were shortened, and all non-final accented vowels were lengthened.

Later accentual developments

In the later Balto-Slavic languages, the acute articulation itself was often lost, leaving only the pitch distinction on accented syllables as the reflex. There, "acute" is only a type of pitch accent, rather than a specific articulatory feature. The Slavic languages have no trace of the acute articulation and preserve only tonal distinctions although most have since lost even those, in their development from Proto-Slavic. The East Baltic languages preserve some traces of the original acute articulation, in the form of the so-called "broken tone", the is a long vowel with a glottal stop in the middle of it, typically denoted by a circumflex diacritic, not to be confused with the circumflex accent: â [aˀa]. The broken tone is preserved in syllables in certain dialects of Latvian and Lithuanian. The broken tone can occur on unaccented syllables so it is not actually a tone but a register distinction, much like the Danish stød or the ngã tone in Northern Vietnamese.

The short accent was preserved as such in both the Baltic and Slavic languages, but its lengthening could be triggered by certain conditions. For example, in Lithuanian, vowels /a/ and /e/ were lengthened when they initially bore short accent in open syllable, and rising tone emerged, marked with tilde sign ã. Compare:

  • PIE *kʷékʷlo- "circle, wheel" > Balto-Slavic *kákla- > Lithuanian kãklas "neck", Serbo-Croatian kȍlo.
  • PIE *déḱm̥t "ten" > Balto-Slavic *déśimt > Lithuanian dẽšimt, Serbo-Croatian dȅset.

Latvian

The most direct continuation of the acute is in Latvian, particularly in the three-tone central dialects. There, the acute register is directly continued as a broken tone (lauztā) in originally unstressed syllables, marked with a circumflex diacritic: luôgs "window". In originally-stressed syllables, the acute register is continued as a rising or lengthened intonation (stieptā), marked with a tilde: luõks "spring onion". The circumflex register is generally continued as a falling intonation (krītošā), marked with a grave accent: lùoks "arch, bow". It can occur on all syllables: locative plural gal̂vâs "on the heads" (compare: Lithuanian galvosè with stress on a short final vowel, deleted in Latvian), including monosyllables: dêt "to lay eggs" < *dêtì.[33]

Lithuanian

In Lithuanian, the distinction between acute and circumflex is not preserved in unstressed syllables. In Standard Lithuanian, based on the Aukštaitian dialect, the acute becomes a falling tone (so-called "Lithuanian metatony") and is marked with an acute accent, and the circumflex becomes a rising tone, marked with a tilde. In diphthongs, the acute accent is placed on the first letter of the diphthong while the tilde marking rising tone (the original circumflex) is placed on the second letter. In diphthongs with a sonorant as a second part, the same convention is used, but the acute accent is replaced with a grave accent if the vowel is i or u: Lithuanian acute pìlnas 'full' < PIE *plh₁nos) vs. circumflex vil̃kas 'wolf' < PIE wĺ̥kʷos. Word-finally, the acute was regularly shortened: gerà 'good' (indefinite adjective) : geróji 'the good' (definite adjective). That rule is called Leskien's law after the German neogrammarian August Leskien.

The shortening operated according to Leskien's law after the Lithuanian metatony. In monosyllabic words, the acute became circumflexed. Metatonical retraction of the accent from the final syllable to the penultimate syllable also created a circumflex automatically.

In the Žemaitian (Samogitian) dialects of Lithuanian, the usual reflex of Balto-Slavic acute in a stressed syllable is a broken tone like Latvian: Žemaitian (Kretinga) ộmž́iọs "age, century" = standard ámžius.[33]

Old Prussian

In Old Prussian, the acute was reflected probably as a rising tone and circumflex as a falling tone. The marks on long vowels and diphthongs in Abel Will's translation of Martin Luther's Enchiridion point to that conclusion. It is the only accented Old Prussian text preserved. Diphthongs that correspond to a reconstructable Balto-Slavic acute are generally long in the second part of the diphthong, and those corresponding to a Balto–Slavic circumflex are generally long in the first part.

Slavic

In Proto-Slavic, the acute was lost as an articulatory feature and retained only as a tonal distinction on accented syllables. The acute produced a rising tone and the circumflex a falling tone, as in Latvian and Old Prussian.

Several developments in Late Common Slavic affected vowel length. Syllables that were originally short could lengthen, and those originally long could shorten. However, the long vowels also acquired different quality from the short ones so lengthenings and shortenings did not cause them to merge.

Instead, the vowels remained separate, causing the number of distinct vowels to almost double. Thus, differences vowel quality reflected older length distinctions while new vowel length distinctions were conditioned by accent type and placement. Consequently, in the Slavic languages that retain it, vowel length is often a suprasegmental feature tied to the accentual system rather phonemes. In Czech, Slovak and Old Polish, the mobile accent was lost in favour of fixed stress, which rephonemicised the older accentual length distinctions. Thus, the languages have long vowels as distinct phonemes, but they do not reflect the original Proto-Slavic length distinctions.

In all Slavic languages, the acute was shortened when it fell on a long vowel. A new rising accent (the "neoacute"), generally long, developed from retraction of the stress from a weak yer vowel (later usually lost). The short rising accent that developed from the old acute (and in some circumstances, the neoacute) was later lengthened again in a number of Slavic languages (such as Russian, Czech, Slovenian). The circumflex was shortened in some dialects as well (such as Polish, Russian, Czech, Slovak). Direct continuation of the acute vs. circumflex difference as a tonal distinction occurs only in archaic Serbo–Croatian dialects (such as Chakavian) and, to some extent, Slovenian (although the relationship between Slovenian and Proto-Slavic tones and accent position is complex).

In addition, the Proto-Slavic tonal distinction on liquid diphthongs is reflected fairly directly in Russian as a multisyllable accent shape (pleophony): *ôr (falling) > óro, *ór (rising) > oró. In some other languages (most notably Czech and standard Neoshtokavian Serbo-Croatian), the acute vs. circumflex distinction is continued as a length distinction (although in all languages, both long and short vowels have other sources as well). The length-from-tone distinction no longer exists in Russian.

Here is a table of basic accentual correspondences of the first syllable of a word:

Balto-Slavic and
Proto-Slavic
Lithuanian Old Prussian Latvian Serbo-Croatian Slovenian Czech Russian
acute V̆V̄ V̏, V̀ VRV́
circumflex V̄V̆ V̑, V́ V́RV

Proto-Baltic and Proto-Slavic

Scholars raised questions regarding the possible relationship between Slavic and Baltic languages as early as the late 18th century. In 1802 the influential German scholar of Slavic languages and history August Ludwig von Schlözer described how his understanding of this relationship had changed over the years: whereas previously he had argued that the 'Latvian' or 'Old-Prussian' peoples spoke languages that belonged to the Slavic group, he had come to see them as an independent language family.[34]

It was formerly thought that Balto-Slavic split into two branches, Baltic and Slavic, which both developed as a single common language for some time afterwards. More recently, scholarship suggests that Baltic was not a single branch of Balto-Slavic, with Old Prussian ("West Baltic") separate from Lithuanian and Latvian ("East Baltic").[35][36]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Kortlandt (2002), p. 3.
  2. ^ Kim (2018), pp. 1975–1976.
  3. ^ Kim (2018), pp. 1977–1978.
  4. ^ Jasanoff (2017), p. 71.
  5. ^ Olander, Thomas (2009). Balto-Slavic accentual mobility. Walter de Gruyter. p. xi.
  6. ^ Jasanoff (2017), p. 59.
  7. ^ Holzer (2001, 2007)
  8. ^ Eugen, Hill (2012). "Hidden sound laws in the inflectional morphology of Proto-Indo-European". In Nielsen Whitehead, Benedicte; Olander, Thomas; Olsen, Birgit Anette; et al. (eds.). The Sound of Indo-European – Phonetics, Phonemics and Morphophonemics. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press. p. 190. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
  9. ^ For an alternative formulation, see Kortlandt (1978), pp. 12–24
  10. ^ Matasović (2008), pp. 86. For a more precise formulation of the rule, see Matasović (2005)
  11. ^ Jasanoff (2017), pp. 122–130.
  12. ^ Jasanoff (2017), p. 161.
  13. ^ Kortlandt (2002), p. 4.
  14. ^ Derksen, Rick (2015), Etymological Dictionary of the Baltic Inherited Lexicon, p. 16
  15. ^ Olander, Thomas (2009), Balto-Slavic accentual mobility, Walter de Gruyter, pp. 155–156
  16. ^ Dybo (2014), pp. 18–86.
  17. ^ Andersen (2003), p. 60.
  18. ^ Vaillant, André, "Grammaire comparée des langues slaves. Tome I, Phonétique", IAC, Lyon 1950, p. 171
  19. ^ Kuryłowicz, Jerzy (1956). L'apophonie en indo-europeée (in French). Wrocław: Ossolineum. pp. 227–242.
  20. ^ Shevelov, George Y. 1965. A Prehistory of Slavic. The Historical Phonology of Common Slavic. New York: Columbia University Press. Pages 86–91.
  21. ^ Stang (1966), p. 79.
  22. ^ Stang (1966), p. 79-80.
  23. ^ Andersen (2003), p. 62.
  24. ^ Matasović (2008), p. 111.
  25. ^ Kim (2018), p. 1982.
  26. ^ Kim (2018), p. 1981.
  27. ^ Matasović (2008), p. 83.
  28. ^ Matasović (2008), pp. 109.
  29. ^ Matasović (2008), pp. 56–57 "Navedimo najvažnije baltoslavenske izoglose...Upotreba genitiva za izricanje objekta zanijekanog glagola"
  30. ^ Kortlandt (1979), p. 58.
  31. ^ cf. Dybo, Nikolajev & Starostin (1978), Nikolaev (1989), Dybo (2007), pp. 47–50.
  32. ^ All examples given for Serbo-Croatian are based on the standard language, stylised Neoštokavian dialect; they are accented according to the Rječnik hrvatskoga jezika, F. Broz and I. Iveković, Zagreb 1901 and Akademijin Rječnik hrvatskoga ili srpskoga jezika, XXIII volumes, 1880–1976
  33. ^ a b Derksen, Rick (2008). Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon. Leiden: Brill. p. 12.
  34. ^ Schlözer, August Ludwig, [Nestor in Russian] Russische Annalen in ihrer Slavonischen GrundSprache verglichen, übersetzt, und erklärt, vol.2: Rußlands VorGeschichte. Entstehung des russischen Stats. Erste GrosfËURST rurik, bis zu dessen Tod im J.879. Allgemeiner Plan, die russischen Annalen Kritisch zu behandeln. (Göttingen: Dieterich, 1802), pp.xii-xiii
  35. ^ Kortlandt, Frederik (2009), Baltica & Balto-Slavica, p. 5, Though Prussian is undoubtedly closer to the East Baltic languages than to Slavic, the characteristic features of the Baltic languages seem to be either retentions or results of parallel development and cultural interaction. Thus I assume that Balto-Slavic split into three identifiable branches, each of which followed its own course of development.
  36. ^ Derksen, Rick (2008), Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon, p. 20, I am not convinced that it is justified to reconstruct a Proto-Baltic stage. The term Proto-Baltic is used for convenience's sake.

References

  • "Baltic languages." (2014). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic//
  • "Proto-Slavic language." (2014). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved from http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/480213/Proto-Slavic-language
  • Andersen, Henning (2003), "Slavic and the Indo-European Migrations", Language Contacts in Prehistory. Studies in Stratigraphy, Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, Amsterdam–Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 239: 45–76, doi:10.1075/cilt.239.05and, ISBN 978-90-272-4751-3
  • Dybo, Vladimir (2014), Балто-славянская акцентная система и итоги индоевропейской акцентологической реконструкции (in Russian), vol. VIII, Novi Sad: IWoBA VIII. Реферати VIII међународног скупа о балтословенској акцентoлогији (Славистички зборник. Нова серија, књига I.).
  • Jasanoff, Jay (2017). The Prehistory of the Balto-Slavic Accent. Leiden, Boston: Brill.
  • Kim, Ronald (2018). "The phonology of Balto-Slavic". Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Berlin, Boston: de Gruyter.
  • Kortlandt, Frederik (1979), Toward a Reconstruction of the Balto-Slavic Verbal System, vol. 49
  • Kortlandt, Frederik (2002). "From Proto-Indo-European to Slavic" (PDF).
  • Matasović, Ranko (2008), Poredbenopovijesna gramatika hrvatskoga jezika (in Croatian), Matica hrvatska
  • Stang, Christian (1966), Vergleichende Grammatik der baltischen Sprachen (in German), Oslo–Bergen–Tromsö: Universitetsforlaget

Further reading

proto, balto, slavic, language, proto, balto, slavic, pbsl, reconstructed, hypothetical, proto, language, descending, from, proto, indo, european, from, proto, balto, slavic, later, balto, slavic, languages, thought, have, developed, composed, branches, baltic. Proto Balto Slavic PBS or PBSl is a reconstructed hypothetical proto language descending from Proto Indo European PIE From Proto Balto Slavic the later Balto Slavic languages are thought to have developed composed of sub branches Baltic and Slavic and including modern Lithuanian Polish Russian and Serbo Croatian among others Proto Balto SlavicPBS PBSlReconstruction ofBalto Slavic languagesReconstructedancestorProto Indo EuropeanLower order reconstructionsProto Baltic Proto SlavicLike most other proto languages it is not attested by any surviving texts but has been reconstructed using the comparative method There are several isoglosses that Baltic and Slavic languages share in phonology morphology and accentology which represent common innovations from Proto Indo European times and can be chronologically arranged Contents 1 Phonology 1 1 Consonants 1 2 Vowels 1 3 Accent 1 4 Acute 1 5 Alternations 2 Development from Proto Indo European 2 1 Satemization 2 2 Ruki law 2 3 Accentual mobility 2 3 1 Jasanoff 2 3 2 Kortlandt and Derksen 2 3 3 Olander 2 3 4 Moscow accentological school 2 4 Hirt s law 2 5 Syllabic sonorants 2 6 Laryngeals and the acute 2 7 Winter s law 2 8 Nasals 2 9 Vowels 3 Morphology 3 1 Nominals 3 1 1 Grammatical categories 3 1 2 Nouns 3 1 3 Adjectives 3 2 Verbs 3 3 Accentual system 3 3 1 Notation 3 3 2 Accent paradigms 3 3 2 1 Fixed paradigm with acuted root 3 3 2 2 Fixed paradigm with non acuted root 3 3 2 3 Mobile paradigm 4 Later accentual developments 4 1 Latvian 4 2 Lithuanian 4 3 Old Prussian 4 4 Slavic 5 Proto Baltic and Proto Slavic 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingPhonology EditConsonants Edit Proto Indo European voiced aspirated stops lost their aspiration in Proto Balto Slavic Stops were no longer distinguished between fortis and aspirated but were voiceless and voiced 1 However several new palatal postalveolar consonants had developed s and z from earlier palatovelar plosives and s from s as a result of the Ruki sound law Proto Balto Slavic consonants 2 Labial Coronal Palatal VelarNasal m nPlosive p b t d k gFricative s z s s zTrill rLateral lApproximant w j z surfaced as an allophone of s before a voiced consonant in Proto Balto Slavic Vowels Edit Proto Balto Slavic preserved much of the late Proto Indo European vowel system Short o was merged into a and former eu had become jau Proto Balto Slavic vowels 3 Short Long DiphthongFront Back Front Back Front BackClose i u i uMid e e ō eiOpen a a ai auProto Balto Slavic also possessed sonorant diphthongs consisting of a short vowel followed by l m n or r These were inherited from Proto Indo European and formed anew from PIE syllabic sonorants Although not diphthongs in the traditional sense they behaved as a single syllable nucleus in Proto Balto Slavic and could bear the acute like long vowels and regular diphthongs l m n ra al am an are el em en eri il im in iru ul um un urAccent Edit Most Proto Balto Slavic words could be accented on any syllable as in Proto Indo European The placement of the accent was changed significantly relative to PIE with much paradigmatic leveling of the mobile PIE accent along with leftward and rightward shifts conditioned by the surrounding phonemes There is still some disagreement among linguists on the exact position of the accent in each Proto Balto Slavic form and the rules governing these changes Acute Edit Some syllables in Proto Balto Slavic had an additional distinguishing feature known as acute It is primarily a reflex of the Proto Indo European laryngeals as well as a result of Winter s law The exact nature of the acute is not clear and different linguists have different interpretations The modern interpretation favoured by an increasing number of linguists is that the acute was realised as glottalisation an interruption of voicing similar to the stod found in Danish 4 This glottalisation is still found in modern Samogitian and Latvian under the term broken tone Olander indicates it with a superscript glottalisation symbol ˀ after the nucleus of the syllable 5 while Jasanoff is more noncommittal and uses underlining 6 Some linguists go further and interpret the acute as an actual consonantal segment which Derksen indicates as a glottal stop ʔ and Kortlandt as a laryngeal consonant H They reconstruct this consonantal segment not just after vowels but also before them as direct reflexes of PIE laryngeals Such consonantal reflexes of laryngeals are not widely accepted however For consistency Olander s glottalisation symbol ˀ will be used in this article In Proto Balto Slavic the acute was independent of accent position and could appear on any long syllable which included Syllables with long vowels They could be original PIE long vowels or vowels that were lengthened by a following laryngeal Syllables with vocalic diphthongs ei ai au Syllables with sonorant diphthongs which consisted of short vowel followed by l m n or r Thus any syllable was either long with acute long without acute or short Syllables without acute are sometimes collectively termed circumflex although this term is also used specifically for long syllables lacking the acute Within an inflectional paradigm a long syllable could become short if the nucleus was immediately followed by an inflectional ending beginning with a vowel This in turn resulted in the loss of the acute as the acute was not permitted on short syllables Such alternations were found in consonant stem nouns and in primary verbs No modern language retains the original Balto Slavic distribution of the acute In Lithuanian and Slavic the acute distinction was lost on unaccented syllables and converted to an intonation distinction This happened relatively late and not before some important accentual changes occurred such as Fortunatov de Saussure s law and Dybo s law In Latvian the acute is reflected as the glottalised broken tone in words that originally had mobile accentuation Alternations Edit Proto Balto Slavic retained the system of ablaut from its parent language but it was far less productive and had been significantly reworked Vowel alternations were often leveled but it is not always easy to determine how far this leveling had progressed by the time the Balto Slavic dialects began to diverge as the leveling progressed along the same lines in all of them to some degree The lengthened grade remained productive in word derivation and was used in many innovative formations that were not present in Proto Indo European After the merger of o and a the resulting phoneme a could lengthen to both a and ō Pre Proto Slavic retained many such uses of lengthened grades in morphology The length distinctions are reflected as vowel quality distinctions in Late Common Slavic LCS and the later Slavic languages Proto Balto Slavic slaˀwaˀ gt Early Proto Slavic slawa fame glory gt Late Proto Slavic slava vs Proto Balto Slavic slawas gt Early Proto Slavic slawa word gt Late Proto Slavic slovo Proto Balto Slavic twaris gt Early Proto Slavic twari substance gt Late Proto Slavic tvar vs Proto Balto Slavic twariˀtei gt Early Proto Slavic twaritei to form create gt Late Proto Slavic tvoriti These are similar examples in Lithuanian Lithuanian protas intellect mind lt pratas vs prasti to understand Lithuanian ge ris goodness lt geris vs gẽras good On the basis of the existing length alternations inherited from Proto Indo European new alternations arose between the long i u and the short i u This latter type of apophony was not productive in PIE Compare Lithuanian mu sis battle versus musti to kill hit Lithuanian lỹkis remainder versus likti to stay keep The new type of apophonic length was especially used in Pre Proto Slavic in the formation of durative iterative and imperfective verbs Compare Proto Balto Slavic diraˀtei gt Early Proto Slavic diratei to tear perfective gt Late Proto Slavic drati vs Early Proto Slavic arz diratei to tear imperfective gt Late Proto Slavic orzdirati gt OCS razdirati Proto Balto Slavic biraˀtei gt Early Proto Slavic biratei to pick gt Late Proto Slavic brati vs Early Proto Slavic biratei to choose gt Late Proto Slavic biratiCertain pairs of words show a change of older initial a from PIE H a H o h e h e to e which is sometimes called Rozwadowski s rule The exact conditioning of this change is currently not well understood but led to alternations between e and a in related words or even as alternative forms of the same word The alternations often gave rise to different initial vowels in different languages Several words retained the alternation into Proto Slavic times as well which became an alternation between j e and o Proto Balto Slavic elawa alawa lead gt Bulgarian dial elavo Polish olow Russian olovo tin Old Prussian elwas alwis Proto Balto Slavic ezera azera lake gt Bulgarian ezero ezer dial Polish jezioro Latvian ezers Lithuanian ẽzeras Russian ozero Old Prussian assaran Latgalian azars Development from Proto Indo European EditAustrian Balto Slavist Georg Holzer has reconstructed a relative chronology of 50 Balto Slavic sound changes referring only to phonology not to accentuation from Proto Balto Slavic down to the modern daughter languages 7 However only the first 12 are Common Balto Slavic and so relevant for this article only Winter s law is a unique common change Ruki law s gt s after r u k or i Laryngeals are lost between consonants in non initial syllables Winter s law short vowels are lengthened when followed by a nonaspirated voiced stop in some accounts only in a closed syllable o gt a Aspirated voiced stops lose their aspiration and merge with the plain voiced stops Labiovelar stops lose their labialization and merge with the plain velars Satemization ḱ ǵ gt s z ewV gt awV i sometimes u is inserted before syllabic sonorants creating new liquid diphthongs wl wr gt l r word initially Satemization Edit See also Centum and satem languages Proto Balto Slavic generally shows Satem reflexes of the three velar series labiovelars merge into the plain velars while palatovelars develop into sibilants s and z There are a number of words in Balto Slavic that show Centum reflexes instead with palatovelars appearing as plain velars A number can be explained by regular sound laws but some laws have been obscured by numerous analogical developments Others are argued to be borrowings from Centum languages For example Proto Balto Slavic karˀwaˀ cow Lithuanian karve OCS krava Russian korova is likely a feminine derivation of a lost masculine noun that was likely borrowed from Proto Celtic karwos deer Middle Welsh carw Middle Breton karo Middle Cornish carow which in turn is a regular reflex of PIE ḱr h wos 8 PIE palatovelars could also depalatalize in Balto Slavic Several depalatalization rules for Balto Slavic have been proposed 9 According to Matasovic 10 the depalatalization of palatovelars occurred before sonorant followed by a back vowel Ḱ gt K RVback That would explain Centum reflexes such as these ones Lithuanian akmuo Latvian akmens and Late Proto Slavic kamy would have regular k from Proto Balto Slavic akmō as opposed to Sanskrit asma lt PIE h eḱmō stone Late Proto Slavic svekry lt Proto Balto Slavic swekruˀ lt PIE sweḱruh mother in law Old Prussian balgnan lt Proto Balto Slavic balgna lt PIE bʰolǵʰnom saddle Another view is that satemization occurred in Baltic and Slavic independently after Slavic had split off citation needed Ruki law Edit PIE s was preserved in Balto Slavic in most positions According to the Ruki law it became s when it was preceded by r u k or i It also included diphthongs ending in u or i the long vowels u and i whether original or from a following laryngeal and the voiced velar g Among the Balto Slavic languages the evidence of Ruki law is recognizable only in Lithuanian and Slavic because in the other languages s s and s all merge into plain s In Lithuanian s and s are merged to s instead remaining distinct from s In Slavic s merges with s but s remains distinct and becomes x before back vowels Most handbooks on the basis of Lithuanian material state that in Baltic Ruki law has been applied only partially The most common claim is that the law applied unconditionally in Lithuanian only after r while after u k and i both s and s occur Compare Lithuanian ausra dawn lt Proto Balto Slavic ausraˀ lt PIE h ewsreh compare Latin aurōra Sanskrit uṣas with RUKI applied Lithuanian ausis ear lt Pre Lithuanian ausis lt PIE h ewsis compare Latin auris reflects s while Slavic uxo lt Pre Slavic aus reflects s instead Lithuanian maĩsas sack lt Proto Balto Slavic maisas lt PIE moysos compare Sanskrit meṣa reflects s matching Slavic mex Lithuanian teisus lt Pre Lithuanian teisus reflects s while Slavic tix lt Pre Slavic teisus reflects s There is no simple solution to such double reflexes of the Ruki law in Lithuanian and thus no simple answer to the question of whether Ruki law is a common Balto Slavic isogloss or not The most probable answer seems to be the assumption that PIE s was changed to s after r u k i completely regularly within Balto Slavic proper but the traces of the effect of RUKI law were erased by subsequent changes in Lithuanian such as the change of word final s to s Generally it can be ascertained that Lithuanian shows the effect of Ruki law only in old words inherited from Balto Slavic period so Lithuanian s appears in words that have a complete formational and morphological correspondence in Slavic ruling out the possibility of accidental parallel formations It appears that palatovelars yielded fricatives in Proto Balto Slavic before the effect of RUKI law so that ḱs appears simply as s Compare Late Proto Slavic desn right i e opposite to left OCS desn Russian desnyj Serbo Croatian desni Lithuanian dẽsinas lt Proto Balto Slavic desinas lt PIE deḱsinos Latin dexter Sanskrit dakṣiṇa Late Proto Slavic os axle axis OCS os Russ os SCr ȏs Lithuanian asis lt Proto Balto Slavic asis lt PIE h eḱsis Latin axis Sanskrit akṣas Accentual mobility Edit Both Proto Indo European and Proto Balto Slavic had systems of accentual mobility in which the accent would be placed on different syllables in different inflections of the same word The systems of the two languages are vastly different in detail however PIE mobility and Balto Slavic mobility are unconnected Balto Slavic mobility is not inherited from Proto Indo European but formed entirely anew PIE mobility was entirely lost in the early stages of Proto Balto Slavic 1 by eliminating the accentual distinction between strong and weak forms accented further to the left and right respectively usually in favour of the weak forms i e accent on the suffix syllable for proterokinetic stems Hysterokinetic stems already effectively had fixed accent on the first syllable after the root and retained this Amphikinetic stems joined this pattern The exact process by which the new Balto Slavic type of mobility arose is still a hotly debated topic although some details are clear As a general rule nouns that had the accent on the ending oxytones became mobile while those that had accent on the root barytones retained their fixed accent Words with mobile accent had accent on the leftmost syllable of the stem in some forms accent on the rightmost syllable of the ending in others modified by Hirt s law A special case is formed however by oxytone neuter o stems which under some conditions appear as AP b in Slavic instead of the expected AP c The following sections lay out the explanations for mobility given by various linguists The explanations are very different in nature and sometimes also give different results for different cases The incorrect outcomes are in turn explained by each in their own way Jasanoff Edit J Jasanoff proposes three rules explaining the rise of mobility 11 Saussure Pedersen s law The accent was retracted one syllable to the left from a word internal short open syllable If the accent came onto an initial syllable it received a special left marginal accent contour Final V N C retraction The accent was also retracted from a final syllable containing a short vowel and ending in a nasal optionally with another consonant Proto Vasilev Dolobko s law Proto VDL In phonological words of four or more syllables headed by a left marginal accent the final syllable acquired a lexical accent and the left marginal accent was lost After these changes analogical changes took place The mobility pattern of prefixed verbs was extended to unprefixed verbs The final accent of nouns with two syllables before the ending resulting from Proto VDL was extended to nouns with one syllable before the ending e g regular su Hnumos analogical suHnumo s gt Proto Balto Slavic suˀnumas based on regular golHwinomo s The nom acc voc singular of oxytone neuter o stems received a left marginal accent through these changes which was retained as a falling tone in Slavic AP c neuters The anomalous AP b neuters can be explained as remnants of suppletive patterns of PIE oxytone singulars and barytone collective plurals 12 As barytones these collective plurals would have ended up with a lexical accent on the root contrasting with a left marginal accent in the singular forms Eventually the lexical accent appears to have won out perhaps in part due to the frequent use of the plural in these nouns Kortlandt and Derksen Edit In the proposal of Kortlandt 13 supported by Derksen 14 four changes create the new Balto Slavic mobility Pedersen s law The accent was retracted from medial syllables in stems that remained mobile i e in hysterokonetic and amphikinetic consonant stems in which the accent sometimes fell on the suffix and sometimes on the ending For example accusative singular dʰugh ter m dʰugh tr es gt dʰugh ter m gt Proto Balto Slavic dukterin Barytonesis The retraction of the accent spread analogically to vocalic stems in the case forms where Pedersen s law applied Thus acc sg suHnum gt suHnum gt Proto Balto Slavic su ˀnun Oxytonesis The accent shifted from a medial syllable to the end of the word in paradigms with end accented forms This shifted the accent to the last syllable of multisyllabic endings Late Balto Slavic retraction In two syllable words the accent was retracted from a word final vowel unless the first syllable ended in an obstruent including laryngeals Step 4 caused retraction in the nom acc voc singular of oxytone neuter o stems where the ending had been replaced with the pronominal od followed by loss of the final d which put the vowel in final position However because it was blocked by an obstruent final first syllable a split occurred in this class of nouns the retracted stems eventually joined AP c in Slavic while the unretracted stems joined AP b Olander Edit Olander s mobility law 15 presupposes some conditions namely Accented short vowels had one mora which was accented Accented long vowels whether inherited or from laryngeals had two moras with accent on the first Accented hiatal long vowels i e V HV had two moras with accent on the second The mobility law itself then states that the accent was deleted if it fell on the last mora of a word and the word became inherently unaccented Such words appeared with a default accent on the leftmost mora of the word Moscow accentological school Edit See also Proto Indo European accent Valence theory The Moscow accentological school considers the Proto Balto Slavic mobile accent paradigm to be a direct reflex of recessive Proto Indo European platforms 16 Proto Indo European medʰu r r Proto Balto Slavic mȅdu r r Proto Slavic mȅd AP c cf Ancient Greek methu r r Vedic madhu r r Proto Indo European suHnus r sd Hirt s law Proto Balto Slavic su nus sd sd alignment of the accent curve Old Lithuanian sunus AP 1 or Proto Slavic sy n AP c Lithuanian sunus AP 3 cf Vedic sunuṣ r sd Hirt s law Edit Main article Hirt s law Hirt s law caused the accent to retract to the previous syllable if the vowel in the preceding syllable was immediately followed by a laryngeal It took place before the addition of epenthetic vowels before syllabic sonorants so at the time of the change syllabic sonorants still acted as a vocalic nucleus like the true vowels and could attract the accent as well Hirt s law took place after the creation of new accentual mobility and served to modify it Where endings of mobile accented words had multiple syllables it could shift the accent from the final syllable onto the preceding one thus creating the non final accent of Slavic iti infinitive and ax locative plural If the accent was shifted from the ending of a mobile accent word onto the stem the word was usually converted to a fixed accent pattern Pre Balto Slavic duHmos smoke gt by Hirt s law then conversion to fixed accent duHmos gt Proto Balto Slavic du ˀmas gt Lithuanian du mas AP 1 Late Common Slavic dỳm AP a Pre Balto Slavic griHwaH gt by Hirt s law then conversion to fixed accent griHwaH gt Proto Balto Slavic gri ˀwaˀ gt Latvian grĩva Late Common Slavic griva AP a However in some cases Hirt s law does not appear to have taken place where it would be expected and the words remain mobile accented Pre Balto Slavic suHnus son gt Proto Balto Slavic suˀnus gt Lithuanian sunus AP 3 Late Common Slavic sy n AP c Pre Balto Slavic giHwos alive gt Proto Balto Slavic giˀwas gt Lithuanian gyvas AP 3 Late Common Slavic zȋv AP c Syllabic sonorants Edit The Proto Indo European syllabic sonorants l r m and n abbreviated R developed a prothetic vowel in front of them converting them into sonorant diphthongs This change occurred after Hirt s law which operated on original syllabic sonorants but not on sonorant diphthongs Both i and u appear as prothetic vowels yielding reflexes im in ir il iR and um un ur ul uR It has remained an unsolved problem to this day as to the exact phonological conditions that trigger which reflex Regardless analysis of their distribution has shown that i appears much more often suggesting that it is the default reflex with u appearing only in special cases In a sample of 215 Balto Slavic lexical items 36 17 are attested only with uR reflexes 22 10 with both reflexes in the same language or branch or with one in Slavic and the other in Baltic and the remaining 157 73 are attested only with iR reflex 17 Several theories have been proposed the most notable being the one by Andre Vaillant from 1950 18 According to him u arose after PIE labiovelars If true it would be the only trace of PIE labiovelars in Balto Slavic After surveying Reinhold Trautmann s 1924 Balto Slavic dictionary Jerzy Kurylowicz in 1956 found no phonologically consistent distribution for the dual reflexes except in a single position after PIE palatovelars Baltic and Slavic have only iR reflex 19 George Shevelov in 1965 inspected Slavic data in much detail but in the end he demonstrated only that the distribution of the dual reflexes in Slavic is not reducible to phonological conditioning 20 According to an analysis by Christian Stang in 1966 Kurylowicz s statistics proved only that iR reflexes are much more frequent than uR reflexes 21 Stang made several important observations Balto Slavic grammatical morphemes have iR reflexes but no uR reflexes iR reflexes are productive in ablaut alternations while uR are not many words containing uR diphthongs have an expressive meaning 22 meaning i fat dumb lazy clumsy ii crooked bent iii crippled decrepit iv dark dirty or v they are of onomatopoeic origin Such words could have been innovated at various times during the prehistory and have no relation to the Balto Slavic reflexes of PIE R Such u sonorant combinations reflect a universal semantic category 23 compare English plump dumb bungle bulky clumsy glum dumpy etc German dumm dumpf stumm stumpf plump etc Stang s analysis indicates that iR was the regular result of the diphthongization of PIE syllabic sonorants Doublets with expressive meaning are then explained as expressively motivated uR replacements of the original iR reflex or as borrowings from substratum dialects such as Germanic that regularly had the R gt uR reflex when pre Balto Slavic no longer had syllabic sonorants and were then used side by side with the original reflex According to Janis Endzelins and Reinhold Trautmann uR reflex resulted in zero grade of morphemes that had PIE o gt Balto Slavic a in normal grade clarification needed Matasovic in 2008 24 proposed the following rules At first syllabic sonorants develop a prothetic schwa R gt eR e gt i in a final syllable e gt u after velars and before nasals e gt i otherwise Laryngeals and the acute Edit According to the traditional school laryngeals disappeared as independent phonemes Some linguists of the Leiden school in particular Derksen and Kortlandt reconstruct a glottal or laryngeal consonant for Proto Balto Slavic as a direct reflex of original laryngeals The remainder of this section thus only applies if one does not follow that idea Like in almost all Indo European branches laryngeals in the syllable onset were lost as were all word initial laryngeals Laryngeals between consonants disappeared as well but in the first syllable they are reflected as a Compare PIE h rh deh heron stork Ancient Greek erōdios Latin ardea gt Proto Balto Slavic radaˀ gt Slavic roda Serbo Croatian roda PIE sh l oblique case stem of seh ls salt gt Proto Balto Slavic salis gt Old Prussian sal Slavic sol OCS sol Polish sol Russian solʹ Other laryngeals were lost in Proto Balto Slavic but in some cases the syllable was acuted as a leftover of the former laryngeal The following outcomes can be noted with H standing for a laryngeal V for a vowel R for a sonorant and C for any consonant 25 PIE PBSVH C V ˀ C VHV V VRVVR VRVRH C VRˀ C VRHV VRVIn the case of a VHV sequence the outcome is VRV with a semivowel when the first vowel is close i or u reflected in PIE kruh es blood gen sg gt PBS kruves gt Slavic krve In other cases the outcome is a long non acute vowel The outcome of long vowels inherited directly from Proto Indo European not lengthened by a laryngeal is disputed Traditional opinion holds that the acute is an automatic reflex of vowel length and therefore all long vowels were automatically acuted whether original or resulting from a following laryngeal 26 Absolutely word final long vowels of PIE origin were not acuted but remained distinct from long vowels resulting from laryngeals a distinction also found in Proto Germanic overlong vowels Kortlandt instead takes the position that the acute reflects laryngeals only thus inherited long vowels do not trigger the acute Regardless the acute appears in all cases of vowel lengthening within Balto Slavic All long vowels that arose as part of word formations or sound changes within the Balto Slavic period received the acute This included the new alternations u u and i i that were innovated within Balto Slavic Aside from acuteness syllabic sonorants followed by laryngeals show the same outcome as syllabic sonorants in other environments Balto Slavic shares that characteristic with Germanic but no other Indo European languages which show clearly distinct reflexes in this case Compare PIE pl h nos gt Proto Balto Slavic pilˀnas Slavic pln Lithuanian pilnas and Proto Germanic fullaz lt earlier fulnaz with regular l gt ul English full but Proto Celtic ɸlanos where l gt al normally Winter s law Edit Main article Winter s law Winter s law caused lengthening of vowels if a plain voiced stop followed and the new long vowels received the acute According to some analyses the change occurred only if the stop was in syllable coda the syllable ending with that consonant The plain and aspirated stops merged in Balto Slavic but Winter s law operated before this merger had taken place Consequently the distinction between those two series has been indirectly preserved in Proto Balto Slavic by long acuted vowels Furthermore Winter s law took place before o and a merged as it lengthened earlier o to ōˀ and a to aˀ On the basis of relative chronology of sound changes it has been ascertained that Winter s law acted rather late after some other less prominent Balto Slavic changes had occurred such as after the disappearance of laryngeals in prevocalic position 27 Compare PIE eǵh om gt Pre Balto Slavic ezHom gt Winter s law eˀzHom gt Proto Balto Slavic eˀzun gt Common Slavic j az gt OCS az Slovene jaz The rules governing the emergence of the acute from voiced stops seem complicated when they are formulated within the framework of classical Proto Indo European laryngeal theory as there is no obvious connection between laryngeals and voiced stops both of which trigger the acute Frederik Kortlandt has proposed an alternative more elegant and economic rule for the derivation of Balto Slavic acute by using the glottalic theory framework of Proto Indo European He proposed that the acute is a reflex of a glottal stop which has two sources the merger of PIE laryngeals and the dissolution of PIE pre glottalized stop voiced stops in traditional reconstruction to glottal stop and voiced stop according to the Winter s law Though elegant Kortlandt s theory also has some problems The glottalic theory which was proposed in the 1970s is not generally accepted among linguists and today only a small minority of linguists would consider it a reliable and self supportive framework onto which to base modern Indo European research Also there is a number of Balto Slavic lexemes with the acute that are provably not of PIE laryngeal origin and some of them were a result of apophonical lengthenings occurring only in Balto Slavic period Nasals Edit Word finally m became n in Balto Slavic Final nasals are not directly preserved in most Balto Slavic languages however making evidence mostly indirect Old Prussian uniquely preserves final n and there is indeed a clear attestation of the change in the nominative accusative of neuters such as assaran lake lt Proto Balto Slavic ezeran azeran lt PIE eǵʰerom In the other Baltic languages no final nasals are retained Lithuanian has vowel lengthening that reflects earlier nasal vowels but they could conceivably come from either final n or m and thus do not provide evidence either way In Slavic all word final consonants are lost in one way or another so there is no direct evidence there either However there is indirect evidence in the form of sandhi effects that were preserved in some Slavic pronouns For example Old Church Slavonic attests constructions like s nim with him which can be traced back to Proto Balto Slavic sun eimis where the first word reflects the common Proto Indo European preposition ḱom with compare Latin cum and the second reflects the PIE pronominal stem ey Latin is German er In Slavic in accordance with the Law of Open Syllables the final n of the preposition was reinterpreted as belonging to the pronoun which acted to preserve the nasal in its Balto Slavic form thus corroborating that it was indeed n If the change of m to n had not taken place at an earlier stage the phrase would have been sum eimis which would have given s mim in OCS instead Vowels Edit The following changes to vowels in Proto Balto Slavic can be noted Long vowels are shortened before word final n Thus the a stem accusative singular originally aˀm was shortened to an Lithuanian a Old Prussian an Slavic ǫ If the genitive plural ending was originally ōm it was shortened to on by this change Word final os and on are raised to us and un when stressed e g eǵh om gt Balto Slavic eˀzun gt Slavic az This causes a split in the o stem paradigm which is levelled in various ways later on In Baltic the nominals with original ending stress are transferred to the u stem inflection In Slavic masculines of the two types are conflated and merge almost completely in most modern languages Word final mi is reduced to n after a long vowel This change occurred after the shortening so that the vowel remained long and if applicable acuted For example the a stem instrumental singular ending ami was reduced to an gt Lithuanian a Slavic ǫ compared to the o stem ending ami gt Slavic om o gt a un is lengthened to uˀn with acute when a stop followed clarification needed In Slavic it is reflected as y with no nasal For example PIE Hunk to get used to gt Balto Slavic uˀnktei gt Lithuanian junkti Latvian jukt OCS vyknǫti Upper Sorbian wuknyc in did not exhibit lengthening in such conditions as older literature often states 28 Morphology EditProto Balto Slavic retained many of the grammatical features present in Proto Indo European Nominals Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Grammatical categories Edit Proto Balto Slavic made use of seven cases Nominative subject Accusative direct object Genitive possession relation or association direct object of negated verb Locative stationary location Dative indirect object Instrumental tool means by which accompanying Vocative direct addressThe eighth Proto Indo European case the ablative had merged with the genitive case Some of the inflectional endings for the genitive were replaced with those of the former ablative Proto Balto Slavic also distinguished three numbers singular for one item dual for two items plural for three or more items The dual was retained into the early Slavic languages but most modern Slavic languages have lost it Slovene Chakavian a dialect of Serbo Croatian and Sorbian are the only remaining Slavic languages that still make consistent use of the dual number In most other Slavic languages the dual number is not retained except for historically paired nouns eyes ears shoulders certain fixed expressions and agreement of nouns when used with numbers it is synchronically often analyzed as genitive singular because of the resemblance in forms The Baltic languages also used to have a dual number system but it has become practically obsolete in modern Latvian and Lithuanian Finally Proto Balto Slavic nouns could also have one of three genders masculine feminine or neuter Many originally neuter nouns in PIE had become masculine in Balto Slavic so the group was somewhat reduced relative to the others The modern Slavic languages largely continue the use of three grammatical genders but modern Baltic languages have merged the neuter gender into the masculine Lithuanian has no neuter gender nouns but in pronouns participles and numerals the neuter is retained Latvian has no neuter gender at all An innovation within Balto Slavic was the use of the genitive in place of the accusative for the direct object of a negative verb 29 That feature is still present in its descendants I have read the book Slovene sem bral knjigo Lithuanian knỹga skaiciau I have not read the book Slovene nisem bral knjige Lithuanian knỹgos neskaiciauNouns Edit This section is empty You can help by adding to it May 2019 Adjectives Edit A Balto Slavic innovation to the inflection of adjectives was the creation of a distinct definite inflection of adjectives by affixing forms of the pronoun ja to existing adjective forms The inflection had a function resembling that of the definite article the in English Lithuanian gerasis Old Church Slavonic dobrꙑi the good vs gẽras dobr good The distinction is no longer productive in most Slavic languages today and most Slavic languages preserve a mixture of definite forms and indefinite forms in a single paradigm Russian Czech and Polish for example use the original definite nominative singular forms Russian yj aya oe yj aja oje Polish y a e Czech y a e Czech and Polish have lost the indefinite forms except in a few limited uses while Russian preserves the indefinite nominative forms as the so called short forms used in some cases in predicate position Serbo Croatian and Slovene still distinguish the two types but only in the masculine nominative singular definite i versus indefinite with no ending Bulgarian and Macedonian have innovated completely new forms affixing forms of the demonstrative pronoun t instead Verbs Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message The distinction between athematic and thematic verbs was preserved but athematic verbs were gradually reduced in number The primary first person singular endings athematic mi and thematic oh were kept distinct giving Balto Slavic mi and ōˀ respectively The thematic ending was occasionally extended by adding the athematic ending to it apparently in Balto Slavic times resulting in a third ending ōˀmi gt ōˀm gt ōˀn gt an replacing the original ending in Slavic reflected as ǫ Russian u u Polish e Bulgarian a In many Slavic languages particularly South and West Slavic the athematic ending was analogically extended to other verbs and even replaced the thematic ending completely in some languages Slovene Serbo Croatian In the Baltic languages only the thematic ending was retained as Lithuanian u and Latvian u lt East Baltic uoˀ lt Balto Slavic ōˀ In Latvian the first person singular form of but to be is esmu which preserves the original m of the athematic ending but it was extended with the thematic ending Balto Slavic replaced the PIE second person singular ending si with seHi gt sei for which the origin is not fully understood According to Kortlandt the ending is a combination of the ending si with eHi which he considers to be the original thematic ending 30 The new ending sei carried over into all three branches of Balto Slavic and came to be used in all athematic root verbs in Baltic In Old Church Slavonic it completely ousted the older ending In the other Slavic languages the original ending generally survives except in the athematic verbs The aspectual distinction between present and aorist was retained and still productive in Proto Balto Slavic It was preserved into early Slavic but was gradually replaced with an innovated aspectual distinction with a variety of forms Modern Bulgarian retained the aorist however alongside the innovated system producing a four way contrast The Indo European perfect stative was falling out of use in Proto Balto Slavic and was likely already reduced to relics by Proto Balto Slavic times It survives in Slavic only in the irregular Old Church Slavonic form vede I know lt Balto Slavic waidai lt PIE woyde from weyd to see which preserves an irregular first person singular ending presumed to originate in the perfect Proto Indo European did not originally have an infinitive but it did have several constructions that served as action nouns Two of these the tis and tus nouns remained in use into Balto Slavic and acquired verbal noun and infinitive like functions They were not fully integrated into the verb system by Balto Slavic times however and the individual Balto Slavic languages diverge on the details In Slavic and the Eastern Baltic languages the infinitive was formed from a case form of the tis noun Lithuanian ti Latvian t Proto Slavic ti Old Prussian however has t and twei as infinitive endings the latter of which comes from the tus noun instead The shorter t could come from either type Accentual system Edit The Proto Indo European accent was completely reworked in Balto Slavic with far reaching consequences for accentual systems of the modern daughter languages The development was conditioned by several delicate factors such as the syllable length presence of a laryngeal closing the syllable and the position of PIE ictus There is still no consensus among Balto Slavists on the precise details of the development of Balto Slavic accentual system All modern research is based on the seminal study of Stang 1957 which basically instituted the field of comparative Balto Slavic accentology However many laws and correspondences have been discovered and are now held to be true by the majority of researchers even if the exact details sometimes remain in dispute Early Balto Slavic retained a simple accent in which only the placement of the accent was distinctive but there were no pitch distinctions The acute register was initially no more than an articulatory feature on certain syllables and could occur independently of accent placement However the acute was the trigger for several sound changes that affected the placement of the accent For example under Hirt s law the accent tended to shift leftwards onto a syllable that bore the acute On accented syllables the acute came to be accompanied by a distinct pitch contour in late Proto Balto Slavic Consequently accented syllables of any type that could carry the acute register in Proto Balto Slavic listed above now differed in pitch contour as well as articulation they had rising or falling pitch whether accented acute syllables had rising or falling pitch differed by dialect The tonal accents that emerged from this process are called acute accent and circumflex accent in Balto Slavic linguistics Syllables with a single short vowel could not bear the acute register and so also had no tonal distinctions When accented they had the same pitch contour though nondistinctive as a circumflex accented syllable The syllables are said to have short accent To reconstruct the Balto Slavic accent the most important are those languages that have retained tonal oppositions Lithuanian Latvian probably Old Prussian and the West South Slavic languages of Slovene and Serbo Croatian However one should keep in mind that the prosodical systems of dialects in the aforementioned languages are sometimes very different from those of standard languages For example some Croatian dialects like Cakavian and Posavian dialects of Slavonian Stokavian are especially important for Balto Slavic accentology as they retain more archaic and complex tonal accentual system than the Neostokavian dialect on which modern standard varieties of Serbo Croatian Bosnian Croatian and Serbian are based On the other hand many dialects have completely lost tonal oppositions such as some Kajkavian varieties the Zagreb spoken nonstandard idiom A minority view originating from Vladimir Dybo considers Balto Slavic accentuation based on correspondences in the Germanic Celtic and Italic languages more archaic than Greek Vedic and therefore closer to Proto Indo European 31 Notation Edit What follows is a short overview of the commonly used diacritical marks for Balto Slavic BSl accents and or prosodic features all based on the example letter a In each case there is a crude characterization of the pronunciation in terms of High Mid and Low tone sequences Lithuanian falling HL acute a rising H L H circumflex a short H a Latvian on all syllables falling HL a rising LH or lengthened a broken L H a Slovenian falling HL ȃ rising LH a short H ȁ Serbo Croatian 32 short falling HL ȁ long falling HML ȃ short rising LH a long rising LMH a posttonic length a Common Slavic short falling HL short circumflex ȁ long falling HML long circumflex ȃ acute LH old acute old rising a neoacute L M H old acute old rising a or aIn Croatian dialects especially Cakavian and Posavian the neoacute new acute a new rising tone is usually marked with tilde as a Short neoacute short new rising is marked as a Neoacutes represent a post Proto Slavic development Here is a reverse key to help decode the various diacritical marks acute accent a Usually long rising and or BSl acute Neoacute in some Slavic reconstructions The default accent when a language has only one phonemic prosodic feature such as stress in Russian length in Czech Marks long falling in Lithuanian because this derives from BSl acute grave accent a Usually short rising or simply short circumflex accent a BSl circumflex in reconstructions Broken tone in modern Baltic Latvian and Zemaitian Lithuanian a vowel with a glottal stop in the middle derives from BSl acute Long falling in modern Slavic languages tilde a Alternative notation for BSl circumflex in reconstructions Long rising in various modern languages Lithuanian Latvian archaic Serbo Croatian dialects such as Chakavian Derives from diverse sources Lithuanian lt BSl circumflex Latvian lt BSl acute Serbo Croatian dialects lt long Common Slavic neoacute from accentual retraction double grave accent ȁ Usually short falling mostly in Slavic Derived from circumflex long falling by converting the acute portion of the accent to a grave much as a simple acute long rising is shortened by conversion to a grave double acute accent a Old acute in some Slavic reconstructions As opposed to a single acute for Slavic neoacute in reconstructions Based on the fact that the old acute was shortened in Common Slavic macron a Vowel length particularly in syllables without tone such as unstressed syllables in Slavic breve ă Vowel shortness There are multiple competing systems used for different languages and different periods The most important are these Three way system of Proto Slavic Proto Balto Slavic modern Lithuanian acute tone a vs circumflex tone a or a vs short accent a Four way Serbo Croatian system also used in Slovenian and often in Slavic reconstructions long rising a short rising a long falling a short falling ȁ Two way length long a vs short ă Length only as in Czech and Slovak long a vs short a Stress only as in Russian Ukrainian and Bulgarian stressed a vs unstressed a Many nonprosodic marks are also found in various languages in combinations with certain letters The various combinations of letter and diacritic should normally be viewed as single symbols i e as equivalent to such simple symbols as a b c Examples on vowels ogonek a With a rightward curving hook unlike the leftward curving cedilla c Vowel nasalization In Standard Lithuanian the nasalization is historical and the vowels are now simply reflected as long vowels but some dialects still preserve nasalized vowels Occasionally used to indicate low mid quality in e o overdot e ȯ underdot ẹ ọ High mid vowel quality e o distinguished from plain e o indicating low mid vowels ɛ ɔ The overdot is normally found in Lithuanian the underdot in Slovenian inverted breve below e i o u indicating nonsyllabic vowels often it is the second part of a diphthong hacek e With a pointed v shape rather than the rounded u shape of the breve e in Slavic reconstructions is a vowel known as yat distinct in length and later quality from simple e originally longer and lower later longer and higher in many dialects but e in Czech sometimes indicates instead a simple e with palatalization of the preceding consonant de te ne o o u originally indicated a high mid o or diphthongized uo in various Slavic languages respectively Slovak dialectal Russian Polish Upper Sorbian Lower Sorbian Czech It now indicates u in Polish and long uː in Czech Examples in consonants Most diacritics on consonants indicate various sorts of palatal sounds such as an acute accent c ǵ ḱ ĺ n ŕ s z a comma g k l n a hacek c d ľ n r s t z or an overbar đ They can indicate three palatoalveolars c s z They have a hushing pronunciation tʃ ʃ ʒ as in English kitchen mission vision and are less palatal than the sounds indicated by c s z alveolopalatals c đ s z as in Polish and Serbo Croatian palatal stops voiceless ḱ k t and voiced ǵ g d in Macedonian Latvian and Czech respectively a palatal nasal n n n a palatal lateral ĺ l ľ or a palatalized trill ŕ also r in Czech specifically for a fricative trill In Slovak ĺ and ŕ indicate doubled rather than palatal ized consonants vŕba willow hĺbka depth In western West Slavic Polish Kashubian Upper Sorbian and Lower Sorbian z indicates a voiced retroflex sibilant ʐ Other such sibilants are indicated by digraphs like cz sz In western West Slavic l indicates a sound that was once a dark velarized l but is now usually pronounced w Accent paradigms Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section is missing information about verb accent paradigms Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page April 2014 Proto Balto Slavic just like Proto Indo European had a class of nominals with so called mobile accentuation in which accent alternated between the word stem and the ending The classes of nominals are usually reconstructed on the basis of Vedic Sanskrit and Ancient Greek which have retained the position of the original PIE accent almost unchanged However by comparing the Balto Slavic evidence it was discovered that the PIE rules on accent alternations devised on the basis of Vedic and Greek do not match those found in Balto Slavic Moreover nominals that belong to mobile paradigms in Balto Slavic belong to declension classes that always had fixed accent in PIE paradigms a stems and o stems For a long time the exact relationships between the accentuation of nominals in Balto Slavic and PIE was one of the most mysterious questions of Indo European studies and some parts of the puzzle are still missing Research conducted by Christian Stang Ferdinand de Saussure Vladislav Illich Svitych and Vladimir Dybo has led to a conclusion that Balto Slavic nominals with regard to accentuation could be reduced to two paradigms fixed and mobile Nominals of the fixed paradigm had accent on one of the stem syllables and in the nominals of the mobile paradigm the accent alternated between the stem and the ending As shown by Illic Svityc Balto Slavic nominals of the fixed paradigm correspond to the PIE nominals with accent on the root PIE barytones The only exception were nominals with the accent on the ending PIE oxytones when it was shifted onto the root in Balto Slavic in accordance with Hirt s law such nominals also have fixed accent in Balto Slavic The origin of the Balto Slavic nominals of the mobile paradigm has not been completely determined with several proposed theories of origin According to Illic Svityc they originate as an analogical development from fixed accent PIE oxytones That theory has been criticized as leaving unclear why PIE nominals with fixed accent on the ending would become mobile as analogies usually lead to uniformity and regularity According to Meillet and Stang Balto Slavic accentual mobility was inherited from PIE consonant and vowel stems but not for o stems where they represent Balto Slavic innovation Vedic and Greek lost the accentual mobility in vowel stems retaining it only in consonant stems De Saussure explained it as a result of accent retraction in the medially stressed syllables of consonant stems exhibiting the hysterokinetic paradigm with vocalic stems subsequently imitating the new accentual patterns by analogy According to Dybo the position of Balto Slavic accent is determined by a formula from PIE tones according to the valence theory developed by the Moscow school which presupposes lexical tone in PIE Kortlandt up to 2006 supported the theory of Balto Slavic losing PIE consonant stem accentual mobility in nominals and innovating everywhere else but after 2006 maintains that the original PIE accentual mobility was preserved in Balto Slavic in a stems eh stems i stems u stems and consonant stems The Balto Slavic accentual system was further reworked during the Proto Slavic and Common Slavic period Dybo s law Meillet s law Ivsic s law etc resulting in three Common Slavic accentual paradigms conventionally indicated using the letters A B C corresponding to four Lithuanian accentual paradigms indicated with the numbers 1 2 3 4 in a simple scheme Acute register on the rootyes nofixed accent yes a p 1 a p A a p 2 a p Bno a p 3 a p C a p 4 a p CFixed paradigm with acuted root Edit The simplest accentuation is that of nominals which were acuted on the root in Balto Slavic They remain accented on the root root here is understood in the Proto Balto Slavic not the PIE sense throughout the paradigm in Baltic Lithuanian first accentual paradigm and Slavic accent paradigm a Lithuanian Russian Serbo Croatian Slovenesg N varna vorona vrȁna vranaV varna vrȁno A varna voronu vrȁnu vranoG varnos vorony vrȁne vraneD varnai vorone vrȁni vraniL varnoje vorone vrȁni vraniI varna voronoj vrȁnōm vranodu NAV vraniG vranDI vranamaL vranahpl NV varnos vorony vrȁne vraneA varnas voron vrȁne vraneG varnu voron vrȃna vranD varnoms voronam vrȁnama vranamL varnose voronax vrȁnama vranahI varnomis voronami vrȁnama vranamiRussian exhibits polnoglasie in which liquid diphthongs receive an epenthetic vowel after them An acute accented liquid diphthong yields accent on the epenthetic vowel a circumflex accented one results in accent on the first original vowel arˀ gt oro ar gt oro Serbo Croatian and Slovene show metathesis instead Serbo Croatian does not reflect the acute as a tonal distinction but shows short falling accent consistently for all words with post Slavic initial accent regardless of tone The short falling accent in the genitive plural has been lengthened due to the loss of a yer The addition of a is a later innovation Slovene has a rising vowel which reflects the original acute All short accented vowels in non final syllables were lengthened which eliminated the length distinction in the genitive plural Fixed paradigm with non acuted root Edit In the nouns with non mobile initial accent which did not have an acuted root syllable both Lithuanian and Slavic had an independent accent shift occur from the root to the ending In Lithuanian they are the nouns of the second accent paradigm and in Slavic the accent paradigm b Lithuanian noun ranka hand etymologically corresponds to Russian ruka and Serbo Croatian ruka but both became mobile in a later Common Slavic development so the reflexes of the Proto Slavic noun juxa soup are listed instead Lithuanian Russian Serbo Croatian Slovenesg N ranka uxa juha juhaV ranka jȗho A ranka uxu juhu juhoG rankos uxi juhe juhoD rankai uxe jusi juhi juhiL rankoje uxe jusi juhi juhiI ranka uxoj juhōm juhodu NAV juhiGL DI juhamapl N rankos uxi juhe juheV rankos jȗhe juheA rankas uxi juhe juheG ranku ux juha juhD rankoms uxam juhama juhamL rankose uxax juhama juhahI rankomis uxami juhama juhamiIn Lithuanian the initial accent was preserved in all cases where the ending did not contain an acuted syllable In the forms that had an acuted ending nominative and instrumental singular accusative plural the accent shifted onto the ending in accordance with the rule discovered by de Saussure Later that acuted syllable was shortened by Leskien s law In Slavic the accent shifted from a non acute root onto the ending in all case forms in accordance with Dybo s law In the Neostokavian dialects of Serbo Croatian which are used as the basis for standard Bosnian Croatian and Serbian the so called Neostokavian retraction occurred the accent was retracted from the ending onto the root syllable and became rising Old Stokavian and Cakavian dialects preserved the original ending stressed paradigm Slovene also has retraction of the accent which results in a long rising tone Mobile paradigm Edit Nominals with mobile accent had in some cases an accented first syllable in others an accented ending Lithuanian distinguishes two accent paradigms of these nominals depending on whether the root was acuted as in the fixed paradigm or not If the root was acuted it is said to belong to third accent paradigm If the root was not acuted then by the operation of de Saussure s law the accent shifted onto all the acuted endings in the paradigm and these nouns are accounted as belonging to the fourth accent paradigm In Proto Slavic the operation of Meillet s law converted acute roots to circumflexed in mobile nominals so that the split found in Lithuanian does not occur All nominals with mobile accentuation in Balto Slavic belong to one accent paradigm in Slavic accent paradigm C Lithuanian Russian NeostokavianSerbo Croatian CakavianSerbo Croatian Slovene Common Slavicsg N galva golova glava glavȁ glava golvaV galva glavo glȃvo A galva golovu glȃvu glȃvu glavọ gȏlvǫG galvos golovy glave glave glavẹ golvỳD galvai golove OESl golove glȃvi glavȉ glavi gȏlve golve L galvoje golove glȃvi glavȉ glavi golve I galva golovoj glavōm glavun glavọ golvojǫ du NAV glavẹ GL DI glavama pl NV galvos golovy glȃve glȃve glavẹ gȏlvyA galvas golovy glȃve glȃve glavẹ gȏlvyG galvu golov glava glav glav golvD galvoms golovam glavama glavan glavȁm golva mL galvose golovax glavama glavȁh glavȁh golva xI galvomis golovami glavama glavȁmi glavȃmi golva miLithuanian has preserved the best Balto Slavic mobile paradigm The Proto Slavic initial accent is preserved as a circumflex by Meillet s law In Neostokavian the final accent has been retracted and gained rising intonation In Slovene several advancings and retractions of the accent have occurred so it no longer reflects the original position as neatly All non accented vowels were shortened and all non final accented vowels were lengthened Later accentual developments EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the later Balto Slavic languages the acute articulation itself was often lost leaving only the pitch distinction on accented syllables as the reflex There acute is only a type of pitch accent rather than a specific articulatory feature The Slavic languages have no trace of the acute articulation and preserve only tonal distinctions although most have since lost even those in their development from Proto Slavic The East Baltic languages preserve some traces of the original acute articulation in the form of the so called broken tone the is a long vowel with a glottal stop in the middle of it typically denoted by a circumflex diacritic not to be confused with the circumflex accent a aˀa The broken tone is preserved in syllables in certain dialects of Latvian and Lithuanian The broken tone can occur on unaccented syllables so it is not actually a tone but a register distinction much like the Danish stod or the nga tone in Northern Vietnamese The short accent was preserved as such in both the Baltic and Slavic languages but its lengthening could be triggered by certain conditions For example in Lithuanian vowels a and e were lengthened when they initially bore short accent in open syllable and rising tone emerged marked with tilde sign a Compare PIE kʷekʷlo circle wheel gt Balto Slavic kakla gt Lithuanian kaklas neck Serbo Croatian kȍlo PIE deḱm t ten gt Balto Slavic desimt gt Lithuanian dẽsimt Serbo Croatian dȅset Latvian Edit The most direct continuation of the acute is in Latvian particularly in the three tone central dialects There the acute register is directly continued as a broken tone lauzta in originally unstressed syllables marked with a circumflex diacritic luogs window In originally stressed syllables the acute register is continued as a rising or lengthened intonation stiepta marked with a tilde luoks spring onion The circumflex register is generally continued as a falling intonation kritosa marked with a grave accent luoks arch bow It can occur on all syllables locative plural gal vas on the heads compare Lithuanian galvose with stress on a short final vowel deleted in Latvian including monosyllables det to lay eggs lt deti 33 Lithuanian Edit In Lithuanian the distinction between acute and circumflex is not preserved in unstressed syllables In Standard Lithuanian based on the Aukstaitian dialect the acute becomes a falling tone so called Lithuanian metatony and is marked with an acute accent and the circumflex becomes a rising tone marked with a tilde In diphthongs the acute accent is placed on the first letter of the diphthong while the tilde marking rising tone the original circumflex is placed on the second letter In diphthongs with a sonorant as a second part the same convention is used but the acute accent is replaced with a grave accent if the vowel is i or u Lithuanian acute pilnas full lt PIE plh nos vs circumflex vil kas wolf lt PIE wĺ kʷos Word finally the acute was regularly shortened gera good indefinite adjective geroji the good definite adjective That rule is called Leskien s law after the German neogrammarian August Leskien The shortening operated according to Leskien s law after the Lithuanian metatony In monosyllabic words the acute became circumflexed Metatonical retraction of the accent from the final syllable to the penultimate syllable also created a circumflex automatically In the Zemaitian Samogitian dialects of Lithuanian the usual reflex of Balto Slavic acute in a stressed syllable is a broken tone like Latvian Zemaitian Kretinga ộmz iọs age century standard amzius 33 Old Prussian Edit In Old Prussian the acute was reflected probably as a rising tone and circumflex as a falling tone The marks on long vowels and diphthongs in Abel Will s translation of Martin Luther s Enchiridion point to that conclusion It is the only accented Old Prussian text preserved Diphthongs that correspond to a reconstructable Balto Slavic acute are generally long in the second part of the diphthong and those corresponding to a Balto Slavic circumflex are generally long in the first part Slavic Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Proto Slavic accent In Proto Slavic the acute was lost as an articulatory feature and retained only as a tonal distinction on accented syllables The acute produced a rising tone and the circumflex a falling tone as in Latvian and Old Prussian Several developments in Late Common Slavic affected vowel length Syllables that were originally short could lengthen and those originally long could shorten However the long vowels also acquired different quality from the short ones so lengthenings and shortenings did not cause them to merge Instead the vowels remained separate causing the number of distinct vowels to almost double Thus differences vowel quality reflected older length distinctions while new vowel length distinctions were conditioned by accent type and placement Consequently in the Slavic languages that retain it vowel length is often a suprasegmental feature tied to the accentual system rather phonemes In Czech Slovak and Old Polish the mobile accent was lost in favour of fixed stress which rephonemicised the older accentual length distinctions Thus the languages have long vowels as distinct phonemes but they do not reflect the original Proto Slavic length distinctions In all Slavic languages the acute was shortened when it fell on a long vowel A new rising accent the neoacute generally long developed from retraction of the stress from a weak yer vowel later usually lost The short rising accent that developed from the old acute and in some circumstances the neoacute was later lengthened again in a number of Slavic languages such as Russian Czech Slovenian The circumflex was shortened in some dialects as well such as Polish Russian Czech Slovak Direct continuation of the acute vs circumflex difference as a tonal distinction occurs only in archaic Serbo Croatian dialects such as Chakavian and to some extent Slovenian although the relationship between Slovenian and Proto Slavic tones and accent position is complex In addition the Proto Slavic tonal distinction on liquid diphthongs is reflected fairly directly in Russian as a multisyllable accent shape pleophony or falling gt oro or rising gt oro In some other languages most notably Czech and standard Neoshtokavian Serbo Croatian the acute vs circumflex distinction is continued as a length distinction although in all languages both long and short vowels have other sources as well The length from tone distinction no longer exists in Russian Here is a table of basic accentual correspondences of the first syllable of a word Balto Slavic and Proto Slavic Lithuanian Old Prussian Latvian Serbo Croatian Slovenian Czech Russianacute V V V V Ṽ V V V V VRV circumflex V Ṽ V V V V V V V V RVProto Baltic and Proto Slavic EditScholars raised questions regarding the possible relationship between Slavic and Baltic languages as early as the late 18th century In 1802 the influential German scholar of Slavic languages and history August Ludwig von Schlozer described how his understanding of this relationship had changed over the years whereas previously he had argued that the Latvian or Old Prussian peoples spoke languages that belonged to the Slavic group he had come to see them as an independent language family 34 It was formerly thought that Balto Slavic split into two branches Baltic and Slavic which both developed as a single common language for some time afterwards More recently scholarship suggests that Baltic was not a single branch of Balto Slavic with Old Prussian West Baltic separate from Lithuanian and Latvian East Baltic 35 36 See also EditBalto Slavic languages Slavic languages Proto Slavic language Baltic languages Proto Baltic languageNotes Edit a b Kortlandt 2002 p 3 Kim 2018 pp 1975 1976 Kim 2018 pp 1977 1978 Jasanoff 2017 p 71 Olander Thomas 2009 Balto Slavic accentual mobility Walter de Gruyter p xi Jasanoff 2017 p 59 Holzer 2001 2007 Eugen Hill 2012 Hidden sound laws in the inflectional morphology of Proto Indo European In Nielsen Whitehead Benedicte Olander Thomas Olsen Birgit Anette et al eds The Sound of Indo European Phonetics Phonemics and Morphophonemics Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press p 190 Retrieved 11 October 2015 For an alternative formulation see Kortlandt 1978 pp 12 24harvp error no target CITEREFKortlandt1978 help Matasovic 2008 pp 86 For a more precise formulation of the rule see Matasovic 2005 harvp error no target CITEREFMatasovic2005 help Jasanoff 2017 pp 122 130 Jasanoff 2017 p 161 Kortlandt 2002 p 4 Derksen Rick 2015 Etymological Dictionary of the Baltic Inherited Lexicon p 16 Olander Thomas 2009 Balto Slavic accentual mobility Walter de Gruyter pp 155 156 Dybo 2014 pp 18 86 Andersen 2003 p 60 Vaillant Andre Grammaire comparee des langues slaves Tome I Phonetique IAC Lyon 1950 p 171 Kurylowicz Jerzy 1956 L apophonie en indo europeee in French Wroclaw Ossolineum pp 227 242 Shevelov George Y 1965 A Prehistory of Slavic The Historical Phonology of Common Slavic New York Columbia University Press Pages 86 91 Stang 1966 p 79 Stang 1966 p 79 80 Andersen 2003 p 62 Matasovic 2008 p 111 Kim 2018 p 1982 Kim 2018 p 1981 Matasovic 2008 p 83 Matasovic 2008 pp 109 Matasovic 2008 pp 56 57 Navedimo najvaznije baltoslavenske izoglose Upotreba genitiva za izricanje objekta zanijekanog glagola Kortlandt 1979 p 58 cf Dybo Nikolajev amp Starostin 1978 harvp error no target CITEREFDyboNikolajevStarostin1978 help Nikolaev 1989 harvp error no target CITEREFNikolaev1989 help Dybo 2007 pp 47 50harvp error no target CITEREFDybo2007 help All examples given for Serbo Croatian are based on the standard language stylised Neostokavian dialect they are accented according to the Rjecnik hrvatskoga jezika F Broz and I Ivekovic Zagreb 1901 and Akademijin Rjecnik hrvatskoga ili srpskoga jezika XXIII volumes 1880 1976 a b Derksen Rick 2008 Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon Leiden Brill p 12 Schlozer August Ludwig Nestor in Russian Russische Annalen in ihrer Slavonischen GrundSprache verglichen ubersetzt und erklart vol 2 Russlands VorGeschichte Entstehung des russischen Stats Erste GrosfEURST rurik bis zu dessen Tod im J 879 Allgemeiner Plan die russischen Annalen Kritisch zu behandeln Gottingen Dieterich 1802 pp xii xiii Kortlandt Frederik 2009 Baltica amp Balto Slavica p 5 Though Prussian is undoubtedly closer to the East Baltic languages than to Slavic the characteristic features of the Baltic languages seem to be either retentions or results of parallel development and cultural interaction Thus I assume that Balto Slavic split into three identifiable branches each of which followed its own course of development Derksen Rick 2008 Etymological Dictionary of the Slavic Inherited Lexicon p 20 I am not convinced that it is justified to reconstruct a Proto Baltic stage The term Proto Baltic is used for convenience s sake References Edit Baltic languages 2014 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from http www britannica com EBchecked topic Proto Slavic language 2014 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from http www britannica com EBchecked topic 480213 Proto Slavic language Andersen Henning 2003 Slavic and the Indo European Migrations Language Contacts in Prehistory Studies in Stratigraphy Current Issues in Linguistic Theory Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins 239 45 76 doi 10 1075 cilt 239 05and ISBN 978 90 272 4751 3 Dybo Vladimir 2014 Balto slavyanskaya akcentnaya sistema i itogi indoevropejskoj akcentologicheskoj rekonstrukcii in Russian vol VIII Novi Sad IWoBA VIII Referati VIII meђunarodnog skupa o baltoslovenskoј akcentologiјi Slavistichki zbornik Nova seriјa kњiga I Jasanoff Jay 2017 The Prehistory of the Balto Slavic Accent Leiden Boston Brill Kim Ronald 2018 The phonology of Balto Slavic Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Berlin Boston de Gruyter Kortlandt Frederik 1979 Toward a Reconstruction of the Balto Slavic Verbal System vol 49 Kortlandt Frederik 2002 From Proto Indo European to Slavic PDF Matasovic Ranko 2008 Poredbenopovijesna gramatika hrvatskoga jezika in Croatian Matica hrvatska Stang Christian 1966 Vergleichende Grammatik der baltischen Sprachen in German Oslo Bergen Tromso UniversitetsforlagetFurther reading EditBUBENIK VIT Some issues in Balto Slavic accentology In Linguistics 18 no 11 12 1980 997 1018 https doi org 10 1515 ling 1980 18 11 12 997 Szemerenyi Oswald 1957 The problem of Balto Slav unity Kratylos 2 97 123 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Proto Balto Slavic language amp oldid 1118880321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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