Slavic liquid metathesis and pleophony

The Slavic liquid metathesis refers to the phenomenon of metathesis of liquid consonants in the Common Slavic period in the South Slavic and West Slavic area. The closely related corresponding phenomenon of pleophony (also known as polnoglasie or full vocalization) occurred in parallel, in the East Slavic languages.

The change acted on syllables in which the Proto-Slavic liquid consonants *r and *l occurred in a coda position. The result of the change is dependent upon the phonological environment and accents, and it varies in different Slavic languages.

The change has been dated to the second half of the 8th century, before any Slavic languages were recorded in writing. Therefore, the change itself cannot be observed, but it can be inferred by comparing words in different Slavic languages. Evidence of the earlier state of affairs is also preserved in loanwords into and from Early Slavic as well as in cognates in other Indo-European languages, particularly Baltic languages.

Background

Environments of eliminated liquid codas
Traditional Schenker Holzer
oRT ăRC aRC
TeRT CĕRC CeRC
ToRT CăRC CaRC
TьRT CĭRC CiRC
TъRT CŭRC CuRC

During the Common Slavic period, a tendency, known as the law of open syllables, led to a series of changes that completely eliminated closed syllables. By the Old Church Slavonic period, every syllable, without exception, ended in a vowel. Some of the changes included:

  • Monophthongization of diphthongs,
  • Loss of word-final consonants (OCS nebo < PIE *nébʰos),
  • Simplification of some medial consonant clusters (OCS tonǫti < *topnǫti) and
  • Formation of the nasal vowels *ǫ and *ę, respectively from *am/*an and *em/*en.

The change discussed here is part of this process, and it involved the liquid consonants, grouped under the cover symbol R, *l or *r in a coda position, in environments that are traditionally designated as in the table on the right. The application of the law of open syllables in such environments had different results in different Slavic dialects, and it is some of the earliest evidence for differentiation into the multitude of Slavic languages.

In some, it is the metathesis of a sequence of a liquid consonants followed by a vowel, and in others, it is an insertion of another vowel. In most cases, the effect was to eliminate the syllable-final consonants *l and *r so that the law of open syllables was maintained.

Reflexes in Slavic languages

eRT

oRT

Metathesis then occurred in all Slavic dialects. In South Slavic dialects (Slovene, Serbo-Croatian, Macedonian, Bulgarian) as well in Czech and Slovak, the metathesized vowel was lengthened as well.

In East Slavic and the Lechitic branch of West Slavic, the outcome was dependent upon the Proto-Slavic accent: in acuted syllables, the output was the same as in South Slavic and Czech-Slovak, but on circumflexed syllables, the metathesized vowel did not lengthen.

Area Acuted syllable Circumflexed syllable
Traditional Schenker/Holzer Traditional Schenker/Holzer
South Slavic, Czech and Slovak CS *oRT > CS *raT PSl. *aRC > PSl. *RāC > CS *RaC CS *oRT > CS *raT PSl. *aRC > PSl. *RāC > CS *RaC
North Slavic CS *oRT > CS *roT PSl. *aRC > PSl. *RaC > CS *RoC
PSl. = Proto-Slavic proper, the stage before both the loss of distinctive vowel length and the change *a > *o
CS = Common Slavic, Late Proto-Slavic, the last recontructable ancestor of all Slavic languages

Compare the following reflexes:

Accent Proto-Slavic reconstruction South Slavic, Czech and Slovak North Slavic
OCS Slovene Serbo-Croatian Bulgarian Macedonian Czech Slovak Russian Belarusian Ukrainian Polish Low. Sorbian Upp. Sorbian
Acute PSl. *ardla > CS *őrdlo "plough" ralo rálo rȁlo / ра̏ло ра́ло (rálo) рало (ralo) rádlo radlo ра́ло (rálo) ра́ла (rála) ра́ло (rálo) radło radło radło
Circumflex PSl. *arstu > CS *ȍrstъ "growth" rastŭ rȃst rȃst / ра̑ст ръст (răst) раст (rast) růst rast рост (rost) рост (rost) ріст (rist) wzrost róst

If the syllable was not acuted, the metathesis in West and East Slavic occurred without the lengthening so EPSl. *a retains its short quantity and yields /o/; compare EPSl. *ȃlkъtь ‘elbow’ > Serbo-Croatian lȃkat but Czech loket.

TeRT and ToRT

Word-medially, on the other hand, there were three primary outcomes:

  1. In Czech, Slovak and South Slavic, the metathesis occurred with lengthening: Proto-Slavic (PS) CeRC CaRC > CRēC CRāC > Common Slavic (CS) CRěC CRaC.
  2. In the rest of West Slavic, the metathesis occurred but without lengthening: PS CeRC CaRC > CReC CRaC > CS CReC CRoC.
  3. In East Slavic, a vowel was inserted to break up the RC sequence (pleophony): PS CeRC CaRC > CeReC CaRaC > CS CeReC CoRoC.

As a result of dialect-specific changes occurring before and after the cluster resolution (metathesis/pleophony), the outcomes in various languages are diverse and complex. For example, in North-West Lechitic (northern Kashubian, Slovincian, Pomeranian and Polabian) and East Slavic, *CalC and *CelC merged into *CalC prior to cluster resolution:

  • In Polish and Sorbian, the metathesis occurred without lengthening: Polish brzeg, mleko, groch, młot as opposed to OCS brěgъ, mlěko, Slovene gràh, OCS mlatъ.
  • In North-West Lechitic, *CalC and *CelC yielded ClŭC (Polabian glåvă ‘head’, å < ъ), *CerC > CreC (without lengthening, as in Polish) while in *CarC, ar becomes ŭr, just like word-initially under acute (Polabian råmą ‘arm’ < *rъmę < *armę), but it did not undergo the metathesis. Compare Polabian porsą, Slovene prasè and Pomerian gard (often in toponymics like Białogard) to OCS gradъ (note that unchanged ar in *gardŭ would have yielded or in Pomeranian).
  • In Czech and Slovak, word-medial metathesis occurred with lengthening just like in South Slavic: Czech mlat, hrách, Polish młot, groch with an /o/.
  • The East Slavic languages have pleophonic *CarC > CoroC, *CerC > CereC and *CalC/*CelC > ColoC: Russian górod, béreg, mólot, molokó.

TьRT and TъRT

Complete and incomplete metathesis

If the liquid metathesis is complete only if it occurred with the corresponding vowel lengthening, the metathesis occurred completely in South Slavic and partially in Slovak and in non-word-initial position in the whole Czecho-Slovak area. The complete metathesis has been operational in all Slavic languages for acuted syllables. For word-initial non-acuted syllables, there was no lengthening except in South Slavic and, partially, Slovak.

As mentioned, the complete metathesis occurred in South Slavic, in Czech and Slovak and in Polish and Sorbian, without lengthening. In North-West Lechitic, the metathesis did not occur even for *CarC syllables. In East Slavic, pleophony yielded *CVRC > CVRVC. The reflex of *l in North-West Lechitic and East Slavic is always "hard".

First and second metathesis

Since the reflexes of acuted word-initial *ar- and *al- are the same in all Slavic dialects, they must have changed before the syllables ending with a liquid, which have different reflexes.[1] One can thus distinguish the first and the second metathesis of liquids.

Dating

From Slavic evidence alone, the change cannot be dated precisely because no Slavic languages had yet committed to writing. However, words may have been documented from contemporary non-Slavic languages, and words may also have been borrowed into Slavic from other languages. That makes it possible to narrow down the time that the change occurred.

The liquid metathesis occurred in the Common Slavic era. It took place after or was still productive until the end of the 8th century. The name of Charlemagne, who died in 814, underwent the change:

On the other hand, the change had already been completed in the earliest Old Church Slavonic documents. That implies that the change was completed, at least in the dialects of Bulgaria and of Macedonia, in no later than the 9th century, when the documents were written.

There are also glosses of Slavic words in foreign-language sources. Earlier sources show no effect of liquid metathesis, such as when the late-8th-century Greek chronicler Theophanes the Confessor writes Slavic names as Ἀρδάγαστος (Ardágastos) and Δαργαμηρός (Dargamērós). Old Church Slavonic versions of the names, with the metathesis applied, would be Radogostъ and Dragoměrъ. Liquid metathesis is also seen in various borrowings preserved in toponymics; Latin Arba > Serbo-Croatian Rȃb, Latin Albōna > Serbo-Croatian Làbīn, Latin Scardōna > Serbo-Croatian Skràdīn etc.

Interpretation

It has been suggested[2] that East Slavic preserved the actual state of affairs, that the vowel was inserted in Common Slavic and that it was only subsequently lost in all dialects except in East Slavic, preceding the liquid. The exact development would thus be in Serbo-Croatian as follows:

  • PSl. *bardā 'beard' > *Common Slavic *baradā (*boroda) > *baradā (*boroda) SCr. bráda
gollark: I use my RPi as a desktop Brexit display.
gollark: …
gollark: Yes.
gollark: I'm considering getting one of those x86 2-in-1 things two years after they were actually cool, and then installing Linux on it.
gollark: UWP has no monads.

See also

  • Proto-Slavic language

Notes

  1. Karl is not only a proper noun but also a common noun and then means "adult male". It is a normalised form, based on the Old East Franconian dialect. The common noun is also attested as charal in Old Upper German, with an epenthetic vowel, for example in the Old Alemannic rendering of the Rule of Saint Benedict. That may be the origin of the intrusive vowel in Carolus, the Latinised version of the name, but the Slavic process seems to be unconnected.
  2. The rendering of OHG l as PSl. *l′ is regular; the reason is that PSl. plain *l was dark, while OHG l was a normal [l], which was identified with the PSl. palatalised liquid *l′.

References

  1. Holzer 2007:55-56
  2. Matasović 2008:150

Further reading

  • Kapović, Mate (2008), Uvod u indoeuropsku lingvistiku [Introduction to Indo-European linguistics] (in Croatian), Zagreb: Matica hrvatska, ISBN 978-953-150-847-6
  • Matasović, Ranko (2008), Poredbenopovijesna gramatika hrvatskoga jezika [Comparative-historical grammar of Croatian language] (in Croatian), Zagreb: Matica hrvatska, ISBN 978-953-150-840-7
  • Holzer, Georg (2007), Historische Grammatik des Kroatischen. Einleitung und Lautgeschichte der Standardsprache. [Historical grammar of Croatian language. Introduction and phonological history of the standard language.] (in German), Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, ISBN 978-3-631-56119-5
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