This article belongs to the lore of Sparkalia.

Erucius' Law: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{WIP}} {{Region icon Sparkalia}} '''Erucius' Law'''(also known as the '''Dze-Nywan Aspiration Constant''') is a set of sound laws describing the appearance of aspirated stops...")
 
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{WIP}}
{{WIP}}
{{Region icon Sparkalia}}
{{Region icon Sparkalia}}
'''Erucius' Law'''(also known as the '''Dze-Nywan Aspiration Constant''') is a set of sound laws describing the appearance of aspirated stops and fricatives in the [[Dze-Nywan languages]] as they diverged from [[Proto-Dzenic language|their parent language]]. First put forward by the law's namesake, [[Marcus Erucius]], and later popularized by himself and his colleague, [[Flavius Triccius]]; the law establishes a set of regular correspondances between various Dze-Nywan Languages and their phonological evolution.
'''Erucius' Law''' (also known as the '''Dze-Nywan Aspiration Constant''') is a set of sound laws describing the appearance of aspirated stops and fricatives in the [[Dze-Nywan languages]] as they diverged from [[Proto-Dzenic language|their parent language]]. First put forward by the law's namesake, [[Marcus Erucius]], and later popularized by himself and his colleague, [[Flavius Triccius]]; the law establishes a set of regular correspondances between various Dze-Nywan Languages and their phonological evolution.
__TOC__ {{TOC right}}
__TOC__ {{TOC right}}
==History==
==History==

Revision as of 03:39, 1 April 2023

Erucius' Law (also known as the Dze-Nywan Aspiration Constant) is a set of sound laws describing the appearance of aspirated stops and fricatives in the Dze-Nywan languages as they diverged from their parent language. First put forward by the law's namesake, Marcus Erucius, and later popularized by himself and his colleague, Flavius Triccius; the law establishes a set of regular correspondances between various Dze-Nywan Languages and their phonological evolution.

History

Overview

Further Changes

Examples

Vowel lengthening effects

Correspondances to Proto-Dzenic