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Monty Says Something in Welsh

  Tags: Welsh
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Josquin
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 Message 57 of 76
16 November 2013 at 2:54pm | IP Logged 
Well, the question why languages evolve in this or that direction is rather philosophical and cannot really be answered. Linguists can only examine how languages change and if there are regularities explaining this process.

But, to make one point clear, I'm not saying "there is lenition because there was lenition", but rather "there is lenition because consonants were weakened between vowels which have later disappeared". This is, as tarvos pointed out, a rather common phonological process.

Anyway, this is as close to why the consonants were weakened as we can get and, in my opinion, a rather satisfactory explanation for the existence of today's consonant mutations in the Celtic languages.
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liammcg
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 Message 58 of 76
18 November 2013 at 5:01pm | IP Logged 
Very interesting information. This makes me want to get back to Welsh, as well as delving
into Old Irish! Thank you both!
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tarvos
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 Message 59 of 76
18 November 2013 at 5:16pm | IP Logged 
eyðimörk wrote:
Josquin wrote:
As tarvos pointed out, the intervocalic consonants
turned from stops into fricatives, so that's the reason why lenition evolved. It was just
a phonological feature of Proto-Celtic. Similarly, a nasal consonant could affect the
following sound and "eclipse" it. When the nasal consonant was lost, only the eclipsed
sound remained.

That's very fascinating. It still deals only with the hows and not the whys. I don't
expect you (or anyone) to know the whys (since we're already tracing the hows to a
theoretical proto-language). I'm just saying that "it's a feature of the language" or
"there is lenition because there was lenition" is a how and not a why.


The lenition process is a how, the why is that lenition makes it easier for people to
pronounce certain words.
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Chung
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 Message 60 of 76
20 November 2013 at 7:08am | IP Logged 
I just saw this comic strip on Scandinavia and the World and immediately thought of your log, Montmorency.



Humon wrote:
Welsh Smash

I recently spent a week in Wales and it was an absolute joy. There's so much to see and the people are great, so I will most likely go back next year.

And one thing you can't help but be impressed by is the Welsh written language. Never before have I seen a language look so random, and I learned that it's a running joke that Welsh is basically just random key smashing. And I don't mean that mockingly, because that is bloody amazing.

19th November 2013


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montmorency
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 Message 61 of 76
20 November 2013 at 3:23pm | IP Logged 
Thanks Chung :-)

English people often think that Welsh has no vowels, which is of course incorrect, but
it does look a bit that way at first.

After some googling I found a sufficient number of academic papers (and I probably had
only scratched the surface) to make me realise that the subject of mutation in Celtic
languages would keep conference rooms full of historical linguists happily occupied for
weeks, so my thoughts about it were obviously rather superficial.

The ideas that Josquin put forward seem consistent with some of the papers I skimmed
through, and seem to make sense.


Changing the subject slightly, although mutations still come into it, I've been
interested to discover that possessive pronouns and object pronouns seem to work in
pretty much the same way, if not identically.

Taking the verb "caru", "to love":
"dw i'n dy garu di" - "I love you". caru has soft-mutated to garu.

"dw i'n ei charu hi" - "I love her" - charu has aspirate-mutated

The noun "gwaith" - "work"

"dy waith di" - "your work". Note the soft mutation (which in this case means losing
the "g"), and the same pronoun(s) as in "I love you".

In the case of nouns, the second pronoun ("di" in the case of "your") is often dropped,
unless it needs to be emphasised.

I'm not sure if this also happens with verbs, but if so, I think it's less common.

I haven't mastered all of the various pronoun forms yet, so there are probably more
subtleties yet to come.


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Josquin
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 Message 62 of 76
21 November 2013 at 8:54pm | IP Logged 
One minor correction to what I said earlier:

The beginning of intial mutations was not in Proto-Celtic, but somewhere between Primitive Irish and Old Irish, or between Primitive Welsh and Old Welsh respectively. That means the time of c. 500 AD. The continental Celtic languages didn't posess mutations, so it's interesting that both the Goidelic and the Brythonic languages developed them, as it seems, more or less independently from each other.

I'm still reading on this topic, so I might come back with some more observations later.

Edited by Josquin on 21 November 2013 at 8:54pm

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Tahl
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 Message 63 of 76
22 November 2013 at 3:05pm | IP Logged 
montmorency wrote:

In the case of nouns, the second pronoun ("di" in the case of "your") is often dropped,
unless it needs to be emphasised.

I'm not sure if this also happens with verbs, but if so, I think it's less common.

Dropping the second pronoun happens both with nouns and verbs ("loving her," "her car,"
etc.), but in general is more common in more-formal Welsh, especially in writing. In
spoken Welsh, having both pronouns in there helps the flow, somehow.
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montmorency
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 Message 64 of 76
24 November 2013 at 2:09am | IP Logged 
Tahl wrote:
montmorency wrote:

In the case of nouns, the second pronoun ("di" in the case of "your") is often dropped,
unless it needs to be emphasised.

I'm not sure if this also happens with verbs, but if so, I think it's less common.

Dropping the second pronoun happens both with nouns and verbs ("loving her," "her car,"
etc.), but in general is more common in more-formal Welsh, especially in writing. In
spoken Welsh, having both pronouns in there helps the flow, somehow.


Diolch, Tahl.

At my level, it helps me if I use them (keep them in) every time.

As you say, helps with the flow, or the rhythm (or both), perhaps.


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