Jorge_Stolfi > 31-08-2025, 12:50 PM
(31-08-2025, 09:14 AM)Petrasti Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.with regard to (I call it) "mutations" in general. It is noticeable that the ‘basic words’ if we assume that the letters are prefixes (or whatever without belonging to the base word) are subject to a vowel swap from "o" to "a" or vice versa. Not all words, but too many to ignore this phenomenon.
Are there any theories or topics on this? Is there a language or dialect from the Indo-European branch that has such a vowel exchange?
cvetkakocj@rogers.com > 31-08-2025, 05:36 PM
(31-08-2025, 09:14 AM)Petrasti Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I'm not sure whether this topic is known with regard to (I call it) "mutations" in general. It is noticeable that the ‘basic words’ if we assume that the letters are prefixes (or whatever without belonging to the base word) are subject to a vowel swap from "o" to "a" or vice versa. Not all words, but too many to ignore this phenomenon.
Mauro > 31-08-2025, 10:55 PM
(31-08-2025, 12:50 PM)Jorge_Stolfi Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Turkish (and Hungarian too, IIUC) has a feature called "vowel harmony".
, one of the few Romance languages with vowel harmony (with its own rules, ofc). It's triggered by adding suffixes which include a stressed -ì or -ù (which are very common: diminutive and accrescitive suffixes and verbal conjugations) and it raises the quality of all the preceding vowels, except [a]Bluetoes101 > 01-09-2025, 12:48 AM
(31-08-2025, 09:14 AM)Petrasti Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.Do you have an opinion on this?
I'm not sure whether this topic is known with regard to (I call it) "mutations" in general. It is noticeable that the ‘basic words’ if we assume that the letters are prefixes (or whatever without belonging to the base word) are subject to a vowel swap from "o" to "a" or vice versa. Not all words, but too many to ignore this phenomenon.
Are there any theories or topics on this? Is there a language or dialect from the Indo-European branch that has such a vowel exchange?
I'll add a few examples
dor dar
dol dal
kooiin koaiin
chor char
chol chal
kol kal
kor kar
lol lal
dam dom
Petrasti > 01-09-2025, 06:53 PM
Jorge_Stolfi > 02-09-2025, 02:37 AM
(01-09-2025, 06:53 PM)Petrasti Wrote: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login to view.I think we wanted to focus primarily on the Indo-European language family.