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Pre-Indo -European Languages of W estern and Southern Europe 18.11.2014. Oliver Simkin. Types of Evidence. 1. Living Language (Basque) 2. Inscriptions in Extinct Languages 3. Substratum loanwords. 4 Pre-Indo-European Languages. Basque Iberian Etruscan Eteocretan. Basque.
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Pre-Indo-European Languagesof Western and Southern Europe18.11.2014 Oliver Simkin
Types of Evidence • 1. Living Language (Basque) • 2. Inscriptions in Extinct Languages • 3. Substratum loanwords
4 Pre-Indo-European Languages • Basque • Iberian • Etruscan • Eteocretan
Basque • Basque names in Roman, Iberian inscriptions: 100 BC – 300 AD • First texts in Basque: 1040
Where does Basque come from? A Problem of Prehistory
Basque Consonant System p t c k b d Ɉ g m n ɲ l ʎ s̪ s̺ ʃ ts̪ ts̺ tʃ f ʝ h ɾ r
Proto-Basque Phonemic Inventory Lenis b d g n l r s ś h Fortis (p) t k N L R ts tś a e i o u
Proto-Basque Phonotactics No initial r- No CR clusters: CVRSC syllabic template No initial d- except in finite verb-forms Restricted distribution of Fortis consonants
(Proto-)Basque Morphology • Agglutinative • Polysynthetic • Ergative • Nouns – cases formed by suffixes • Verbs – prefixes and suffixes ikas̺i learn irakats̺i teach is̪eki burn iras̪eki set fire to
Iberian Morphology • Agglutinative • Polysynthetic • Ergative ??? • Nouns – not much sign of a case system • Verbs – prefixes, suffixes, incorporation biderokededinesesdirgadedin basbiderokedine baserokeiunbaida
Proto-Basque Phonemic Inventory b d g n l r s ś h (p) t k N L R ts tś a e i o u Iberian Phonemic Inventory b d g n l r s ś t k (N) L R a e i o u ã
Basque and Iberian Phonological Similarities No bilabial nasal m No glides w y No fricatives f v θđ No long vowels Two sibilants Two rhotics, probably also two liquids etc.
Basque-Iberian Phonotactic Similarities • No initial r- • Initial d- is grammatically restricted • No CR clusters: CVRSC syllable template • Restricted distribution of fortis consonants • [m] only as a restricted allophone of /b/ • Fortis consonants at compound juncture
The Tyrrhenian family: Etruscan, Rhaetic, Lemnian Tursenoi Etrusci Rasna
Lemnian seems to have an Italic loanword napʰotʰ ‘grandson’. • Lemnian seems close to Etruscan, not so close to Rhaetic. • The ‘Sea People’, who sailed east to attack the Hittites and Egyptians c.1200 BC onwards, included people called Turusha.
Etruscan – Anatolian Connections • Genetic evidence (people, cows) • Linguistic evidence (apparent Anatolian loanwords in Etruscan) • Archaeological evidence (similar tombs) • Folk tradition (Herodotus, etc)
Etruscan PIE Basque Sun usil seHwel- egus̪ki Moon tiwr meHnes- ilargi Earth kel dʰegʰem- lur Water tʰi wod-r ur Father apa pHter- aita Mother ati meHter- ama Brother ruwa bʰreHter- anaia Son klan suHnus s̺eme
Etruscan Phonemic Inventory pʰ tʰ kʰ p t k m n f s ʃ h ts r l y w a e i u
Etruscan Morphology • Inflectional, not polysynthetic • Suffixing • Nominal case-system • Nominative-accusative, not ergative • Verbs not marked for person or number
Etruscan case system Nouns Demonstr.prn. 1sg.prn. Nom. -ø -ø mi Acc. -ø -an mini Gen. -as -as ? ‘2nd.Gen.’ -al -la ? Abl. -is -is ? Loc. -i / -tʰi -i / -tʰi ?