Niemish: Difference between revisions
Tardigrade (talk | contribs) Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
Tardigrade (talk | contribs) Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit |
||
| Line 180: | Line 180: | ||
====Open syllable lengthening==== | ====Open syllable lengthening==== | ||
Although open syllable lengthening occurred in all dialects of Niemish, the result was not the same in all dialects. | Although open syllable lengthening occurred in all dialects of Niemish, the result was not the same in all dialects. | ||
Open-syllable lengthening was simplest in the Panian dialect, where it affected all stressed open syllables. Consequently vowel length is not phonemic in Panian, other than those of the lowland fringe which have regained it by ceasing to distinguish geminate consonants. | |||
In the Great Plains dialect (and by extension the Standard), open syllable lengthening was blocked before voiceless plosives. | In the Great Plains dialect (and by extension the Standard), open syllable lengthening was blocked before voiceless plosives. | ||
The Westlandic dialect underwent the law of open syllables: where possible, consonants in the syllable coda were resyllabified into the onset of the following syllable. Consequently, more syllables became analysed as open in Westlandic than in other dialects, and open syllable lengthening affected a greater number of words. | The Westlandic dialect underwent the law of open syllables: where possible, consonants in the syllable coda were resyllabified into the onset of the following syllable. Consequently, more syllables became analysed as open in Westlandic than in other dialects, and open syllable lengthening affected a greater number of words. It also has lost geminate consonants, although vowels before historic geminate consonants remain short. | ||
The Capitoline dialect is a special case. It developed as aa koiné from numerous dialects in the capital. It is thus broadly similar to the standard, other than shortening historically long vowels before voiceless plosives (this is due to spelling pronunciation and hypercorrection) and loss of geminate consonants. | |||