Title: Internal Reconstruction
1Commentary on Crowley
- Chapter 6
- Internal Reconstruction
2Basic assumption of Internal Reconstruction
- Morphophonemic alternations contain historical
information that can be extracted by assuming
that the original language did not alternate. - Example English s manifests as /s/, /z/ and
/?z/. - Assumption Older English had only ?s the
contemporary language developed by sound change
(loss of ?, voicing of s under statable
conditions).
3More synchronic alternations
- was/were, raise, rear (rhoticism)
- foot/feet (ablaut)
- sing/sang/sung (Ger. singen/sang/gesungen)
(ablaut Laryngeal theory) - knife/knives, wife/wives (voicing/V__V)
-
4Crowleys Samoan Examples, p. 120
- Intransitive Transitive GLOSS
- inu inu-mia drink
- ?au ?au-sia break
- mata?u mata?u-tia fear
- ta?i ta?i-sia cry
- alofa alofa-?ia love
- fua fua-tia weigh
- ole ole-?ia cheat
- sila sila-fia see
5Trust, but verify
- Results obtained by internal reconstruction are
not usually taken seriously as historical fact
unless they can be verified by independent
evidence. (This is consistent with the principle
of separation of synchronic and diachronic
linguistics.) - In the most famous cases (Verners Law,
Saussures sonorant coefficientsLaryngeal
Theory), Internal Reconstruction was used to
solve seemingly intractable problems which the
Comparative Method alone was helpless to solve.
6Two of the greatest discoveries in linguistics
were obtained through Internal Reconstruction.
- Verners Law explained the exceptions to Grimms
Law and opened the field to the possibility of
the Regularity Hypothesis and the theory of the
phoneme. - Saussures theory of the PIE laryngeals, which
broke the uniformitarian mold of the time, was
confirmed 50 years later by the discovery of
Hittite, a language that actually exhibited the
predicted laryngeals.
7Biographical sketch of Ferdinand de Saussure by
Suzanne Kemmer, Spring 2008 (web article)
- Ferdinand de Saussure, 1857-1913, was born in
Geneva into a family of well-known scientists. He
studied Sanskrit and comparative linguistics in
Geneva, Paris, and Leipzig, where he fell in with
the circle of young scholars known as the
Neogrammarians. Brugmann, in particular, was his
mentor, but he was also close to Karl Verner and
others of the circle.
8PIE ablaut sing/sang/sung
- In 1878, at the age of 21, Saussure published a
long and precocious paper called "Note on the
Primitive System of the Indo-European Vowels". He
explained in greater and clearer detail than
others who were coming to similar conclusions how
the PIE ablaut system worked.
9What is a sonorant coefficient?
- One of the most inspired parts of his analysis
is the positing of 'sonorant co-efficients',
consonantal elements that do not appear in any
daughter language but can be hypothesized due to
the systematic way the vowels are affected in the
descendent languages, and due to position and
distribution of such elements in the rest of the
PIE system. Jerzy Kurylowicz later pointed out
that Hittite, the last-discovered ancient
Indo-European language, had consonants in just
the positions predicted by Saussure's analysis.
These consonants are now called laryngeals.
10The next few slides are taken from the Ppt
Melanau Morphology
11Nature of Internal Reconstruction
- Notice that formally speaking, internal
reconstruction differs little from (synchronic)
morphophonemics, whose goal is to posit an
underlying form. In historical phonology, the
same kind of result is interpreted as the older
form, from which the attested data is derived via
grammatical or phonological change.
12Melanau Ablaut Problem
13 GLOSS BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 clear-cut tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 fell (tree) t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 chop,hack n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
PROTO MELANAU BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 t__bas tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 t__ba? t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 t__t?k n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
14 GLOSS BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 clear-cut tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 fell (tree) t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 chop,hack n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
PROTO MELANAU BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 t?bas tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 t?ba? t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 t?t?k n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
15Hypothesis (following Blust 1988)
- Melanau ablaut involves verbal infixes -u-
(active) and -i- (passive). - The ablaut data raises a question about the
nature of the root vowel that is replaced by
ablaut. - Dialect evidence shows a third vowelschwathat
appears in the same position as ablaut vowels.
16 GLOSS BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 clear-cut tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 fell (tree) t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 chop,hack n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
Underlying form (synchronic) BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 t?bas tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 t?ba? t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 t?t?k n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
17Synchrony to diachrony
- Using this schwa as evidence, by Internal
Reconstruction we posit schwa as the underlying
vowel in the root. However, by itself, this move
is little more than a synchronic solution. - Comparative evidence from other languages (and
PMP) demonstrates that Melanaus ablauted roots
reflect etyma containing penult schwa. This
confirms the above an historical explanation.
18 GLOSS BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 clear-cut tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 fell (tree) t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 chop,hack n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
PROTO MELANAU BELAWI MATU-DARO DALAT KANOWIT
238 t?bas tubas tibas tub?s tib?s n.c. n.c.
239 t?ba? t?ba? t?ba? tiba? t?ba? t?ba?
240 t?t?k n.c. tut?k tit?k tut?k t?t?k
19Back to Crowley, Chapter 6
206.2 Limitations on internal reconstruction
- Every scientific procedure leads to trade-offs,
and Internal Reconstruction is no exception. - The point is, use the tools that are appropriate
to the problem at hand.
21Review Uses of irregular data.
- morphophonemic alternations Internal
Reconstruction (Chap 6) - borrowing language contact issues (Chap 12)
- analogy grammatical change vs. phonological
change (Chap 7) - variable data dialect change in progress (Chap
10) - sound symbolism semantic change (Chap 7)
- unexplained residue meaningful employment for
future linguists (Chap 11)
22Internal Reconstruction