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Proto-Nahuan language
Reconstructed ancestor of the Nahuan languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Proto-Nahuan (also called Proto-Aztecan) is a hypothetical daughter language of the Proto-Uto-Aztecan language. It is the common ancestor from which the modern Nahuan languages have developed.
Homeland
There is some controversy about where and when Proto-Nahuan was spoken. Following Nahuan ethnohistorical sources describing a southward migration of Nahuatl speakers, as well as the fact that all other Uto-Aztecan languages are north of the Nahuan languages, the homeland has traditionally been considered to be located to the north of the current area of extension.
An alternative hypothesis by Jane Hill is that Proto-Nahuatl arose within Mesoamerica, and the Nahuas are the only remainders after a large-scale northward migration.
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Phonology
The following phonological changes are shared by all Nahuan languages:
- Proto-Uto-Aztecan *t becomes Proto-Nahuan lateral affricate *t͡ɬ before Proto-Uto-Aztecan *a[1] (Proto-Uto-Aztecan *taːka 'man' becomes Proto-Nahuan *tlaːka-tla 'man').
- Proto-Uto-Aztecan initial *p is lost in Proto-Nahuan[2][page needed] (Proto-Uto-Aztecan *pahi 'water' becomes Proto-Nahuan *aː-tla 'water').
- Proto-Uto-Aztecan *u merges with *i in Proto-Nahuan *i[3] (Proto-Uto-Aztecan *muki 'to die' becomes Proto-Nahuan *miki 'to die').
- Proto-Uto-Aztecan sibilants *ts and *s split into *ts, *ch and *s *ʃ, respectively.[4]
- Proto-Uto-Aztecan's fifth vowel, reconstructed as *ɨ or *ə, merged with *e in Proto-Nahuan *e[3] (Proto-Uto-Aztecan *nɨmi 'to walk' becomes Proto-Nahuan *nemi 'to live, to walk').
- Many metatheses in which Proto-Uto-Aztecan roots of the shape *CVCV become *VCCV[5] (Proto-Uto-Aztecan *puːli 'to tie' becomes Proto-Nahuan *ilpi 'to tie').
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Morphology
Proto-Nahuan was an agglutinative language, and its words used suffix complexes for a variety of purposes, with several morphemes strung together.
Lexicon
Summarize
Perspective
Some Proto-Aztecan (i.e., Proto-Nahuan) reconstructions by Davletshin (2012):[6]
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References
Sources
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