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The Finnic ‘secondary e-stems’ and Proto-Uralic vocalism
Author(s) -
Ante Aikio
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
suomalais-ugrilaisen seuran aikakauskirja
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1798-2987
pISSN - 0355-0214
DOI - 10.33340/susa.82642
Subject(s) - vowel , linguistics , word (group theory) , history , biology , philosophy
It is well-known that in the Finnic languages there is group of Uralic word-roots which appear to have undergone an unexplained vowel shift in the first and second syllables: e.g., Finnish sarvi : sarve- ‘antler’ (< Proto-Uralic *śorwa) and talvi : talve- ‘winter’ (< Proto-Uralic *tälwä). These words have been referred to as ‘secondary e-stems’, as the shape of their cognates outside Finnic suggests a proto-form with the stem vowel *a or *ä. This paper proposes a solution which provides a regular phonological account of the development of this class of word roots. The solution involves the revision of certain aspects of the theory of historical vocalism in Saami and Mordvin.

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