Northian language

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Northian
rāuuodāguš (civil tongue)
Native toNorthern States
Native speakers
17,420,000 (2010)
Official status
Official language in
Northern States
Language codes
ISO 639-3
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Northian or Northian language is an Erani-Eracuran language. It is attested first as Galic Northian, through the corpus of ancient Northian cultic formulae.

Genealogy

The genealogical position of Northian in the Erani-Eracuran family is "a known difficulty" according to some scholars. Many scholars consider Northian to be a primary branch of the Erani-Eracuran languages, while the most popular viable grouping is between the Northian and Nordic languages; the reconstructed ancestor of both language is called Proto-Nordic-Northian (PNN) by its proponents. As a question of methodology, most scholars hold that only common innovations, morphological, phonological, or syntactic, are diagnostic of shared ancestry and such innovations are to form the basis of their reconstructed nearest common ancestor. This is because it is far less likely for the same innovation, which did not exist in the parent language, to appear independently in two unrelated daughter languages. But common retentions are not as useful or salient when arguing for common ancestry, since such features are already present in the parent language and may be plausibly retained independently without difficulty.

Nordic Hypothesis

For arguments in favour of this phylogenetic union, the oldest Galic text shows a striking reflex of what appears to be Cowgill's law, an early sound change in the Nordic family. Though Northian does not undergo Grimm's law or Verner's law and furthermore retains all vowels dropped in Nordic, Northian has "very strong reflexes" of Cowgill's law, e.g. in tisuuō "alive" (with regular changes before *w), compared to Nordic kwikwaz "id.", both < *gʷih₃wós. This correspondence via Cogwill's law is nearly exact, and deviations are almost unknown.

Proponents of the Nordic Hypothesis point to this correspondence as evidence of common innovation, and that argument has considerable currency even for opponents of the hypothesis. It has, however, the possible weakness that the reflex of *h₃ > PNN *k was simply an allophonic variation in the parent language; that is, *h₃ in the sequence of *Vh₃w had already a phonetic value of [k]. In this event, Cowgill's law in this context could, at a stretch, be assessed as a shared retention rather than a shared innovation, provided that one regards *h₃ [k] still as a phoneme in PNN. This is not as absurd as it sounds, since *h₁ and *h₂ must also be phonemes in PNN, in order to account for the operation of Lamp's law in Pre-Galic, transforming the sequence *Vh₂tV but not *Vh₁tV into /V̄hV/.

Furthermore, Galic has some shared vocabulary with Elder Nordic, of substratic (i.e. non-Erani-Eracuran) origin, that have been argued to be of a bronze-age date, though they cannot be deemed conclusive evidence since they could have equally been borrowed independently. A few items have been found to have been modified by processes similar to Cowgill's law, though that is also not conclusive evidence of co-evolution, since the original, phonological shape of those borrowed terms cannot be ascertained; thus, what appears as shared reflexes via Cowgill's law may simply have been unmodified sounds borrowed directly and independently from the unknown source language.

On the other hand, there are strong reasons to think that features putatively connecting Northian and Nordic may be areal phonological changes or chance similarities. The well-noted correspondence via Cowgill's law may be an independent reflex of Erani-Eracuran laryngeals and not a shared sound change. The paucity of shared innovations can but does not necessarily argue against their commonality: since it is hypothesized that the Northians branched off from the Nordics by the Middle Bronze Age, it is admitted that shared innovations should be few. Additionally, the highly-evolved reflexes of PEE *s and *y, contradicting their remainder in situ in Nordic, argue against extensive aerial effects by contact.

The morphology of Northian is perhaps the strongest evidence against a shared ancestry with the Nordic languages. The astonishingly conservative morphology of Galic Northian most starkly contrasts with that of the more innovative Elder Nordic, and the earliest Galic texts are likely to have been composed 2000 – 1500 BCE. If Northian and Nordic languages did share a common ancestor in recent prehistory, it may require Nordic languages to have undergone alarmingly dramatic changes in the time following the Northian split and up to its attestation around 1200 BCE. Alternatively, the split between Nordic and Northian may have occurred earlier than the (mostly archaeologically-motivated) split hypothesized in 1500 BCE. That chronology allows more time for the Nordic morphology to evolve away from the Erani-Eracuran system but also introduces complications in the chronology of its split from other EE languages, such as the Baltic and Slavic languages. Some authorities also think there is a risk of circular reasoning if a linguistically-motivated chronology is used to rationalize a linguistic chronology.

Since the 1950s, the earliest Northians were identified by many archaeologists as the Register Pottery Culture, which is considered a subtype of the Nordic Bronze Age. However, as Pull cautions, the Nordic Bronze Age is an artifactual culture, while Proto-Nordic is a community of language speakers; these two things cannot be treated as the same. In view of preponderating loanwords both to and from it, it is clear that the Nordic Bronze Age must have consisted of multiple linguistic and very probably ethnic groups as well, and it is equally if not more plausible that the Northians were a non-Nordic population also of Erani-Eracuran extraction.

The vocabulary dissimilarity between Nordic and Northian languages are also somewhat difficult to account for, though some of this difficulty may be attributed to the generic and topical constraints in received materials.

Third Branch Hypothesis

In 1972, Kimuti argued that Northian may have been the first language to branch away from the common Erani-Eracuran proto-language some 5,000 years ago. Her arguments are founded on the primitiveness of the aspectual-modal system adduced from Early Galic, which she finds to be only moderately innovative compared to the situation of Tocharian and directly ancestral by internal reconstruction to the situation common to the other daughters. While there is no conclusive refutation of the hypothesis, it is considered by too many to be overly aggressive in arguing the primitiveness of various aspects of Northian grammar. While it is difficult to argue that the aspectual-modal system is a result of secondary simplification, its opponents have provided that many of the putative common innovations that would have defined a subsequent period of Erani-Eracuran unity and evolution are to be considered separate and parallel innovations.

This position has also been championed heterodox position that the Nordic languages may have been one of the earlier branches from Erani-Eracuran as well. Rather than regarding the simplified grammar of Elder Nordic as secondary losses, Matto regards them as evidence that such features never fully developed in Nordic as well. His theory has the advantage of unifying the explanations of certain similarities between Nordic and Northian phonologies, namely the prevalence of fricatives and the notorious correspondence via Cowgill's law. However, his formulation is criticized on the grounds that the attested behaviour of various "primitive" features are actually quite different. Tritter argues that Nordic languages strongly clue such features (the subjunctive for instance) once existed and then were lost, while Northian development is generally in the contrary direction, i.e. the subjunctive experienced elaboration later in the language's evolution.

Balto-Slavic Hypothesis

It was a prevalent position in the mid-19th century that Northian was a Baltic or Slavic language, on the basis of similarity with the Satemized phonology of those languages and the proximity of Silua, which spoke a Baltic language. The sentiment in the Northern States that they were a distinct people from the Nordics, who and whose progeny have been cast in the light of oppressors or brigands, had bolstered this theory. However, Sir Kilby Tapper noted as early as 1877 that, other than a somewhat similar phonetic inventory, shared sound changes between Northian and Siluan cannot be found, and he proposed Northian to be an independent branch of the Erani-Eracura family instead. Additionally, it became clear by 1880 that Northian was a Centum language, and its fricatives were conditioned by phonetic environments rather than genuine reflexes of PEE palatalized consonants. Tapper's theories remain in use and are still defended by researchers who reject a Nordic-Northian grouping.

Retention Hypothesis

The Retention Hypothesis, first advanced by ethnologist historians in 1910, states that the advent of the Iron Age in Nordic-speaking areas was accompanied by rapid cultural changes causing a suitably dramatic alteration of recorded language. In turn, it argues Galic verses consist of even older words and phrases, such that around the time of the hypothetical split at 1500 BCE, Northians and Nordics actually spoke the same language. This argument is founded on some lexical items in Nordic texts claimed to be Northian borrowings that show co-evolutionary traits with Elder Nordic. Galic texts would thus be characterized as a priestly poetic tradition lost by the Nordics with the emergence of an iron-age warrior society and "retained" by the Northians.

In support of the Retention hypothesis, the ethnographers attributed the phonetic development in Northian—described as the opposite of Nordic developments—to the needs of rhythmic chanting, which emphasized vowel quality and quantity over consonants. Long vowels in final position were metrically desirable and accordingly created by deletion of final consonants. The Nordic development from the common ancestor, on the other hand, was supposedly driven by the needs of conquest and therefore obviated the needs of such features.

Nearly all linguists from the outset reject this hypothesis, as for one it relies on unproven and unprovable assumptions and for another it takes a highly selective view of materials. It demands, for instance, that subsequent forms of the Northian language to have secondarily replaced putative innovations shared with Nordic languages in such a way so as to eliminate them completely, leaving no trace whatever of such common innovations posited by the theory.

Erani-Eracuran linguistics

Northian is valued in the reconstruction of Proto-Erani-Eracuran, the hypothesized, unattested ancestral language to many major families of languages. On the one hand, it preserves multiple archaic, unparalleled formations, particularly in nominal declension, which have clarified reconstructions of PEE ablaut and accent.

Its verbal system comparatively provides few distinct clues about the ancestral language, since Syaran and Tennite verbs are equally conservative. The most salient feature in historical terms is perhaps the misalignment of the aspectual and modal formations, with some grammars characterizing them as complimentary. Thus, in roots marked for durative aspect, the subjunctive often fails to display the same markers and is thus indistinguishable from the unmarked aorist root; this behaviour contrasts with the optative, which obligatorily uses the same stem in the present. In the aorist, however, the subjunctive and optative usually have the same unmarked stem.

On the other hand, Northian is phonetically very innovative, resulting in plethorae of allomorphs from the same sources, e.g. the nominative plural ending *-es reflected variously as -ah and oh. Allomorphy has contributed to the language's reputation for caprice amongst both ancient neophytes of the Northian religion and modern scholars, but it has likewise been suggested the same caprice necessitated a system of strict rote memorization that preserved ancient sounds with tremendous fidelity.

Picter notes that the exceptional Galic conservatism preserved archaic features that are lost in virtually all other branches, such as zero-grade suffixes in nominatives of amphikinetic items, e.g. ϑaˀā < *dʰéǵʰ-m̥, xom < *ḱóm-t, and xratuš < *krét-us, and the primitiveness of the feminine grammatical gender, which often failed to trigger agreement. In her view, it is "more economical in purely linguistic terms" to consider Northian as the sister of all Erani-Eracuran languages except Hittite, in view of their shared innovations. Under this view, Northian cannot be a Nordic language, and she admits the "very appealing" correspondence via Cowgill's law would have to be interpreted as a distinct preservation of Erani-Eracuran laryngeals.

Forms and stages of development

Pre-Galic

The term "Proto-Northian" is used only loosely by the academic world as there is little to reconstruct outside of the attested Galic material. Notionally it accounts for some aberrant Epic Northian forms that appear to have diverged before the emergence of Galic forms, but none of these absolutely require an early divergence and can also be explained by later processes. More often it refers to Galic texts interpreted phonologically, removing its phonetic and orthographic peculiarities, which are thought to be the products of chanting practice above the underlying language.

There are a few phonetic changes that govern the changes from Proto-Erani-Eracuran to Galic, but not all can be reckoned within a neat chronology.

  • These Erani-Eracuran phonetic laws firmly apply in Northian:
  • Galic is somewhat similar to Tocharian in that it loses most of the distinction between labiovelar and velar consonants, though labiovelars can still be diagnosed by their escape from fricativization in initial position, instead becoming plain velars, and influence on *e. The distinction between velar and palato-velar consonants was lost earlier and cannot be detected in attested materials.
  • All plosives in initial position become fricatives, and likewise in all sequences of multiple plosives.
  • *e is coloured by several consonants in fashion not dissimilar to the hypothesized (and well-accepted) laryngeals, namely by /h i y/ to /a/. On the other hand, /w/ also colours *o and turns it into a new vowel written /ə/.
  • Laryngeals in intervocalic positions are quite accurately preserved as hiatuses and circumflex accents, though they are not separately written. *h₂ and *h₃ also regularly devoice any bordering voiced fricatives, but *h₁ only does so when it precedes a voiced fricative. When syllabic, laryngeals become /i/ before coronal consonants and /a/ elsewhere.

Evolution of Erani-Eracuran *s

Proto-Erani-Eracuran *s has very divergent outcomes depending on position. *s unconditionally retroflexes to /š/ when following *i *u; if the sound following /š/ was a vowel or a voiceless stop, /š/ remained voiceless, but if a voiced stop the realization was voiced [ž] and was written this way. Non-retroflexed *s following a vowel and preceding a voiced stop, e.g. environment such as *Vsb, disappeared and lengthened the previous vowel without colouring it. *s further merged with *h₂ to become /H/ in the environments of *VsR, *VsV, and word-finally *-Vs. This /H/ has the same properties as *h₂ and colours neighbouring *e to /a/ and was a live phonological process in Galic. /H/ did not make it into the written editions of the Gales but is detectable through long vowels that need to be scanned as two short ones.

Vowel contraction

If two vowels stood next to each other without any intervening consonant, they contracted in Northian.

  • Two short vowels of similar quality, i.e. /ee/ or /oo/, contract to form one long vowel of the same quality.
  • Two vowels of different quality contracted to /ō/.
  • As /i/ and /w/ always behaved as consonants around /e o/, they do not participate in vowel contraction.

A long vowel resulting from contraction is one of the three types of long vowels in Northian philology, where vowels can be long by nature, by contraction, or by compensation.

Compensatory lengthening

In the history the Erani-Eracuran proto-language, there was sweeping compensatory lengthening of a preceding vowel following the dropping of final resonants. These long syllables then generally lost their final consonants in pre-Galic, creating preponderating quantities of open final syllables for which Galic is known. Named Szemerenyi's law, this dropping of final resonants is reflected in one way or another in all Erani-Eracuran languages.

On the one hand, owing to its early attestation, Northian reflects the law's operation with greater regularity and fewer analogical restorations than most other languages; on the other hand, Northian presents idiosyncratic restorations that post-date the split-up of the proto-language and the generalization of some outcomes of Szemerenyi's law as regular forms, in the process probably deleting an *-s restored in the parent language. Thus, the absence of final *-s is not conclusive evidence that Szemerenyi's law operated in that phonetic environment in the parent language or that *-s was not then restored. A second wave of dropping final resonants in Pre-Galic has rendered many forms open to different interpretations and possible analogy.

For example, the genitive huyō from huyuš is usually held to be evidence that the genitive *-s was deleted in the proterokinetic u-stems *-ow-s > *-ōw > Northian -ō. While outwardly this form is similar to the hysterokinetic ending *-os > Northian -ō, the possibility that this ending was transposed to the u-stems can be excluded because huyō never shows final *-s in sandhi, while the -ō ending from *-os does. Thus, the operation of the law is consonant to the deletion of final -i and perhaps part of the same process. Yet all the other daughter languages show final -s or a reflex thereof, so Northian is held to be archaic.

But in the case of zmerū from zmerun "marrow", the final long syllable would reflect *-ūn < *-un-s, which is unexpected in the proterokinetic paradigm (expected is *-wen-s > *wən-h). *-un-s must therefore have arisen from an otherwise-unattested acrostatic form, if it existed in the proto-language. Linguists are therefore ambivalent to ascribe zmerū as an archaicism and instead are wont to think of it as a non-ablauting innovation. The observation that most un-stem terms are Northian derivations buttresses that assessment, even though the root of this word is a sure inheritance from the parent language.

In principle, the following final consonants are dropped at the Proto-Northian level:

  1. *-s
    • always after *w- and *y-
      • gen huyō < *huyōw "child's"; gen mātō < *mātōi or *matēi "mind's"
    • after *un- and *in-, but not after *en- or *on-
      • gen hmerūš < *smerun-s "marrow's"; gen parī < *parin-s "doorway's"
      • gen huwanh < *sh₂wen-s "sun's"
    • not dropped after *m-
      • gen tə̄mps < *dem-s "house's"
  2. *-i
    • after *w- and *y-
      • loc huyō < *huyōw "in a child"; loc mātō < *matēi "in mind"
  3. *-h₂
    • after another laryngeal -h₂ is dropped without a trace
      • nom du fə̄ṇtōi ahō tuš-tə "two paths, [one] of good and [one] of evil"
    • after *n-, *r-, and *s-
      • nom pl nə̄mā̊ < *Hnómonh₂ "names", nom pl rawhā̊ < *lewkesh₂ "lights"

Ota's Law

Ota, writing in 1860, concluded that whenever non-retroflexed *s followed a vowel and was followed by a non-syllabic resonant, the *s disappeared and the preceding vowel was lengthened. This affected, amongst others, the o-stem gen sing ending *-osyo > -ōiio. If it followed a syllabic resonant, it became /z/ instead. Ota's law eliminated all remaining instances of *s except word-finally.

Chiquer's Law

*e and *o generally merge in front *n, *m, *r, and *l as /ə/. The following exceptions are known:

  • This occurred after the kʷetwóres rule turned *o in the second syllable into /ó/ if preceded by *e and if the word had exactly three syllables.
  • *-om word finally does not become -əm, but *-em does, cf. xšəm "on Earth".
  • If *h₂ preceded *e, it would have been coloured to /a/ and so would not turn into /ə/ in these positions.

Cloverdale's Law

Like most Erani-Eracuran languages, Northian vocalized the resonants functioned as vowels in their absence. But in contrast to most other languages, the vocalized resoants (at least as they appear in manuscripts) apparently had no lexical or phonemic length; their length was instead phonologically determined, in a phenomenon called Cloverdale's Law, named for Julia Cloverdale who formulated it in 1881. Whenever a vocalic resonant followed a heavy syllable or merely two consonants in initial position, it was pronounced short; otherwise, it was long. Though the rule seems completely arbitrary, its reality is all but confirmed by grammatical changes that address and remedy its effects, most visibly the athematic nom pl and acc pl endings.

Cloverdale's Law could be seen in light similar to that of Sievers's Law, which made semivowels syllabic in response to a preceding heavy syllable; in this terminology, Cloverdale's Law either added or deleted a mora based on the weight of a preceding combination of sounds.

Cloverdale was one of the main impetus behind grammatical renewal in post-Galic times. For nouns, the animate accusative singular (*-m̥) and plural (*-m̥s) would each have two alloforms based on the structure of the preceding syllable, adding to existing alloforms generated by Stang's law. This complimentary distribution of sounds has been challenging to grasp since the Didaskalic Age of the 8th century BCE, by which time the earliest prose texts used alloforms without distinction in contexts where one did not naturally prevail over the other.

Sievers's Law

Sievers's Law accounts for the Erani-Eracuran phenomenon where a semivowel in any environment became an independent syllable if it followed a heavy syllable. It operated to different extents in the daughter languages, and only for [y] did it operate without exception. For [w], the law was limited to initial syllables where it followed two consonants (which did not form a syllable). At one time forms like huweni "we are" were considered exceptions to the law, since this form was thought to reflect *sweni, where [w] preceded only a single consonant. Yet the Laryngeal Theory requires that the pre-form be *h₁sweni, so huweni is no longer in violation of the law, as [w] would thus follow two consonants.

Kent's Law

This law states that the sequence -VdʰH in auslaut became -Vha. This is responsible for 1 pl mid ending -máhi < *-médʰh₂, which perfectly fulfilled the condition of the law. Though there are few doubts about the law's validity, there is disagreement on the phonetics of Kent's Law. *dʰ is usually seen as a voiced consonant, and its usual outcome before a laryngeal is its voiceless counterpart /ϑ/. It has been suggested that /h/ is actually the reflex of the final laryngeal *H and not of *dʰ, which must therefore have dropped. The final vowel is then deemed epenthetic, since in a few instances it appears as -maho.

Lord Taunton's Law

It has been well known that before nasals and liquids, the Erani-Eracuran short vowels *e and *o merge as ə, but in some cases the resulting vowel became long.

Galic

Attested in the eponymous Gales (hymns) themselves in various sources, the False Gales, Sacerdotal Verses, and the Didaskalic Material. These texts were initially studied by the 3rd-century grammarian Himinastainaz in his Words of the Northians, usually in contrast to the Epic language and set apart by the introduction "but in the old language..." This description was modified by Uppapō in his work Āni Himinaštaēnąm "Against Himinastainaz", which pointed out numerous errors Himinastainaz made. Part of Galic grammar is reconstructed by modern linguists, as ancient grammarians did not have a very good understanding of the language that underlay the Gales.

Gales (G) themselves are divided into several "periods" corresponding to the time they were composed, collated, or redacted. The Period I Gales (G1) were canonized (ceased to be actively edited) around 1500 BCE and mostly composed around or before then, though it also contains set phrases, probably worked into the hymns by poets, called Old Material (OM), that may be older. For other considerations, the bulk of G1 cannot predate about 1750 BCE. The G1 and OM together represent some of the oldest extant Erani-Eracuran literature. Period II (G2) and III (G3) Gales were redacted in the 1300s and 1200s BCE, respectively. There is also a probable portion of G1 material reworked into G2 and G3 material as the Gales do quote each other.

The False Gales (FG) appear to be imitative poetry written in the same form but on mundane subjects, later given liturgical functions. Sacerdotal Verse (SV) are small liturgical additions that appears to be instructions for priests, later interpreted as part of the liturgy.

Didaskalic Material (DM) are prose texts written in question-answer forms attributed to the Three Didaskaloi of the 8th to 7th century BCE. This portion accounts for about 80% of extant Galic material. Yet while the DM corpus is grammatically Galic, it is clear that its authors did not use Galic as their first language, and the editors' grasp of the grammar can be questionable at times; thus, for the purpose of linguistic reconstructions of the parent language, the DM is less reliable than the G material. Nevertheless, as G is short and does not attest all grammatical forms, those found in the DM can be referenced to create a more complete, if slightly speculative, Galic grammar.

In all its forms, Galic retains many more characteristics of the Erani-Eracuran parent language than any of the subsequent forms of Northian. Morphologically, this is true of both nouns and verbs, though the simplification in the verb system is much more extensive than in the noun system.

Though it is clear the DM cannot represent anything but an imitation of the Gales, academics seem distant from any conclusion what sort of register the G material synchronically represents. On one extreme, Drs Mittan and Poor argue that the Gales were composed in the common, spoken register, and on the other, the discredited Retention Hypothesis states that the Gales artificially and systematically favours archaic constructions. Though the Hypothesis stands abandoned, a weaker form of its linguistic chronology is still espoused by some academics. The contention rests on the interpretations of relative innovations, which are more or less discernible: if they are contemporary to the poet, then the non-innovated forms are best considered employed archaicisms, and if they represent later emendations, then the non-innovated forms may be contemporary to the poet.

For liturgical usage, the Gales were pronounced with Medieval pronunciation, but this has been known to be anachronistic for some time. Some elements of Galic prosody and orthography require Galic phonology to be different from Medieval phonology.

Epic

The Epic language exists primarily in poetic works that describes the actions of adventurers. Epic poetry is of variable length but often thousands of lines. Epics are always set in the distant past but usually reflect the poet's own time through direct or indirect references to places and events. The identities of individual Epic poets have never been discovered, and it is most likely that Epics were composed by multiple poets, adapted for audiences, and continually evolving as bodies of literature. Nevertheless, scholars consider that some Epics may have been composed by the same poetic schools based on similarities in diction and theme. The Epics are probably an oral tradition prior to their codification around 200 CE, when Acrean scholars interested in Northian legends committed them to writing. The corpus of Epic poetry is large, with over 50 known opera and over 200,000 lines.

Medieval

Writing system

Alphabetic texts

The very earliest records of Northian words occur in writings done by Celtic and Syaran travellers who encountered the Northian tribes in the 8th or 7th centuries BCE, though these are typically no longer than a few words, and then most are personal and place names.

Runes

The corpus of early but complete writings in Northian are done in Old Acrean Runes, which is an Alphabet of 24 letters. The phonetic values of the Northian Runes, however, are at variance with those used in the Acrean language, because the languages' phonologies are different. It is possible that they were subsequently regularized at a later date, since the earliest surviving manuscripts do not predate the 3rd century.

Rune
Transcription F U θ A R K G W H N I Y P Z S T B E M L D O

The Runic orthography of Northian presents several challenges to understanding of the text, as the alphabet was not designed for Northian phonology.  At least as far as the early Northian scribes used Runes, they were completely agnostic to both consonant and vowel quantity. Long vowels were not distinguished from short vowels, and geminate consonants were written as single consonants. Only the first of successive vowels, even of different quality, is written. On the other hand, the Northians paid much attention to distinguishing syllabic vowels from glides, to the point of inserting purely orthographical glides to ensure that a separate syllable is not read as a glide closing the preceding vowel. Masters of Galic texts were evidently at great pains to preserve oral traditions in instances the orthography could not convey.

Several letters also present ambiguities that could only be resolved by etymology. <ᚷ> for example could represent /g/ or its allophone /ɣ/ between vowels, but it could also represent the retracted *s following a final nasal, and this was almost certainly nothing more than a glottal stop by historical times. It also represented a /k/ in final position following /i̯/, as in pai̯ḵ "peace, truce". <ᚺ> represented /h/ as well as /ḫ/ and /ḥ/. The latter two were silent except at the end of sentences; the former was a retracted *-s following *a- and *o- that would resurface before enclitics, and the latter represented a vestige of the laryngeal in coda position, which caused the vowel to become short at the end of sentences or when the next word began with a vowel.

<ᛃ ᚹ> represented consonantal /i̯ u̯/ or an orthographic convention to separate vowels separated by hiatus when they were otherwise liable to be combined into a diphthong. The use of orthographic letters like this may have originated in paedagogical contexts, but it has become common in printed Runic texts. Both <ᚨ ᛖ> were used to write epenthentic vowels that represented vocalized, interconsonantal laryngeals that should have been absorbed into preceding syllables separated by a sonorant; their presence suggests that such syllables existed in the period when some texts were composed and were important for the preservation of metre, though synchronically they were meaningless.

Modern printing conventions

Printers up to the 19th century exclusively used "alphabetized runes" to print the Northian canon. This means assigning a single majuscule Alphabet to represent a Rune, regardless what that Rune represents. Thus, by reading the text, the reader can read the received Runic text exactly. By custom, the canon is written majuscule, and commentary, minuscule. Alternative forms of the same text may be included as marginalia at the discretion of the editor.

Midway through the century, enhanced understanding of linguistics and study of the canon prompted printers of academic editions to insert diacritics in the received text. Common diacritics include the macron for long vowels, the schwa, and <Ā̊> for vowels that are written Runically as <A> but are known to differ in quality from normal instances of /a/. A second printing development by the 1880s included geminate consonants where they must be restored metrically or philologically, for example <ĀMƏƏTĀΘĀ> would now be printed instead of <AMARATATA> for āmr̥tāϑā, accusative plural "immortalities".

As Northian studies further evolved, many quirks of the Galic canon revealed in rhyming or metre were identified as regular reflexes rather than poetic license or errors in transmission. For example, the "O-of-variable-quantity" that is the genitive singular ending of athematic oxytone nouns was identified as the reflex of a final *-s that disappeared in continuous speech but not at the ends of sentences; it also appeared before enclitics. The ancient grammarians failed to connect these facts and instead ascribed them to other causes, and so the phoneme was never written Runically. It is now restored in academic editions, so <HĀTŌḪ>, genitive singular "being", is now printed instead of superficial allomorphs <HATO> and <HATŌ> for the same word.

A similar phenomenon puzzled the ancients where a word-final laryngeal caused vowel lengthening everywhere except at the ends of phrases; however, this did not trigger sandhi before enclitics. This has now been identified too, so <FNAŌMÍÑĪḤ> is printed instead of allomorphs <FNAOMINI> and <FNAOMINĪ> for fnaōmíñīḥ "two lungs".

The philological importance of vowels held in hiatus was confirmed in the 20th century as further evidence of laryngeals in intervocalic positions, which were often reflected as hiatus. However, Runic orthography did not reflect either the hiatus or the vowel after the hiatus—a major shortcoming if a phonological text is required—though in liturgies missing syllables from otherwise regular metres were often inserted ad hoc by chanters at agreed positions. For this purpose the interpunct <·> is used to denote a laryngeal and a following vowel. Thus, <YA·ƏƏ> is nowadays printed rather than <YAR>, which was known to be iambic and dysyllabic but often (unetymologically) read as yarā before the nature of the missing vowel was known.

As for non-phonemic letters inserted into the text by the Runic writers, the custom has been to insert a dot under the non-phonemic letter to elucidate its nature. Thus <GAΘRI̯Ā́ỤUŠ> zaϑriyāˀuš genitive dual "of two genetrices" is for <GATRIAUUS> from *ǵn̥h₁tr̥yéh₂h₁us, where the yod is a genuine glide but the dotted u is merely added to suggest the second u is not part of a diphthong with the preceding a. If diacritics were not added, the mistaken impression may (fairly) arise that the word was *gaθriiā-ouš, which would not be correct.

Rectified orthography

Starting from the 1970s, scholastic editions of the Gales began adopting the so-called "rectified orthography" which is a phonological interpretation of the received text. Such an interpretation is a convenience for scholars not familiar with Runic orthography, which presents many graphical variations and non-phonemic inclusions adduced by recorders. So, in place of hāuuərə or haōuuarō, hāwṛ is printed, as it is the most straightforward form required by the metre and most likely provided the etymology. Nevertheless there can be ambiguities in the phonologization of a text, which were extensively copied and edited in writing, without reference to the chanting tone; thus, above the phonology, some graphical conventions owe to the chanting tone, while others were editorial.

Unfortunately, the ancient chanting tone has been lost, and modern chanting tone proceeds directly from the text rather than verbal tradition. Chanting from text began in the 8th century, probably in the Viking settlements, where chanting masters were short but text more widely available, and it became the norm at the expense the verbal tradition by the middle of the 13th century. Even when the University Liturgy was compiled in the 1300s, the authors could not locate anyone who recited the liturgy from tradition, and all the chanting tone in use by the contemporary clergy simply reflects various manuscripts made recently. Whatever quantity of verbal tradition that remained was likely eradicated when the liturgy was canonized in 1606, at which point the national priesthood became monolithic and adopted a single, textual tradition.

Phonology

Consonants

Consonants Bilabial Dental Alveolar Palatal Post-Palatal Velar Glottal
Stop Voiceless p t c k ġ
Voiced b d j g
Nasal m n ñ ŋ
Fricative Voiceless f θ s ś š x h
Voiced v δ z ž γ
Liquid r
Approximant w l y (w)

<s> The sound written as "s" or Runic <ᛊ> has been subject to much disputation. Most authorities until recently interpreted it as a simple /s/, but it is usually associated with an etymological, unwritten /t/ before it. For example, it appears in the standard athematic active participle nominative singular ending -ąs, which continues *-n̥ts; in the genitive singular has < *sest-s, "of the bed"; in the noun-deriving suffix -tās and -tūs, which are for *-teh₂ts and *-tuh₂t-s, respectively; in nepōs < *nepōts "grandson". But it is largely impossible to show directly whether the preceding /t/ had dropped or not. There are also instances of the letter without etymological /t/, e.g. ϑrīs < *trins "three". On the other hand, there also appear to be cases of *-ts that fail to generate the letter, such as nothing more distant than the thematic active participle ending -ō < *-onts; this particular exception is explained away if the pre-form of the ending was actually *-ōnts, which would have regularly resulted in *-ōns > -ō.

Vowels

Front Mid Back
Close i ī u ū
Mid e ē ə ə̄ o ō
Open ā a ā̊

Galic Northian possessed 13 vowels; in the most common interpretation, they were distributed symmetrically and contrasted closedness and backness. All six vowels could be either long or short, the long version being held for twice as long as the short and assumed to be qualitatively identical.

Grammar

Northian inherited a highly synthetic grammar from its parent language Proto-Erani-Eracuran. In the evolution from this reconstructed ancestral language, there have both been processes of inflection and deflexion.

Ablaut

Northian retains a visible system of Indo-European ablaut, or vowel variations depending on grammatical form. Ablaut is connected to accent, but their precise interrelationships are actively debated. In general, an accented syllable tends to exhibit a vowel, called a full grade (of that vowel), while the same syllable when unaccented tends not have a vowel, called its zero grade. Where no vowel is present, a class of sounds known as sonants (*r, *l, *n, *m, and *H in the Indo-European proto-language) functions like vowels. In nouns, the direct cases (nominative, accusative, vocative, and locative) will tend to have full-grade in the root and zero-grade in the ending, and vice versa in the oblique cases. In verbs, the distinction lies between singular and plural numbers.

Zero grade Full grade Lengthened grade
Ø *e > (variable) *ē > (variable)
*o > (variable) *ō > ō

Also characteristic of PIE morphology is the theme vowel, which interposes between stem and ending and requires a special set of endings in some cases. Because stem and ending tend to blur and fuse over time, the theme vowel generates new surface-forms even when it merely separates familiar forms on either side, but words with the theme vowel eschew ablaut completely and are thus more predictable in their surface behaviour.

Nouns

Nouns in Northian are divided into three genders (masculine, feminine, and neuter) and are marked for four numbers (singular, dual, plural, and collective) and eight cases (nominative, vocative, accusative, locative, genitive, ablative, dative, and instrumental). Adjectives agree with the nouns they modify, and pronouns with the nouns they represent, in gender, number, and case. The genders of most nouns are lexical (i.e. arbitrary), but in some cases they reflect biological gender.  Morphological shape is associated with gender but does not exactly predict it.

The singular number denotes a single member of a countable entity, and the dual number, two of them. Plural number denotes three or more of members or instances of a countable entity, and collective number the category of an uncountable entity. In general, nouns formed either plural or collective forms, but a small group of nouns are capable of forming both plural and collective forms, with contrasting meanings. The plural and collective forms of all neuter nouns agree with singular modifiers and verbs.

The nominative case was used for the subject of sentences, while the vocative served for direct address. Where the nominative had a lengthened strong stem, the vocative had the short stem; where the former ended or once ended in *-s, the vocative lacked *-s. The accusative represents the direct object of most verbs or the location towards. These three cases were called the direct cases. The locative case was used to denote location at, the genitive the possessor, the ablative the source from, the dative the indirect object, beneficiary, or location to, and the instrumental the means whereby; these five cases are termed oblique cases.

Most inherited PEE nouns in Northian are of the athematic type, which could be divided primarily into suffixed and unsuffixed (root) types. Suffixed nouns consist of a root and a morphological suffix and takes declensional endings after the suffix; root nouns take endings directly. Some suffixes have identifiable meanings, such as the -tāt- < *-teh₂t- which gives states of being, while others do not present a coherent meaning considering the nouns that employ it, synchronically or diachronically, as some suffixes are demonstrably generalized in Northian derivations.  Under phonetic evolution, many suffixes have altered the endings that follow them, and paedagogically it it more common to treat the suffix and ending as one element.

Nouns may also be divided into classes based on their ablaut pattern. Ablaut is the alteration of vowel quality or quantity in various positions without altering meaning. The old grammarians divide nouns into the oxytone and paroxytone classes, based on the shape of the genitive form, where oxytone nouns have an accented genitive ending, while paroxytone nouns have an accented root or suffix. At the level of the parent language, it is thought that ablaut is conditioned or at least intimately connected to accent: accented syllables had vowels (the full grade) while unaccented syllables had no vowels (zero grade). In the received text, however, vowels and accent correlation is inexact.

The descriptive fact that words can have only one lexical accent (excluding accents lent by enclitics) is held by many to obtain that words must (originally, at a remote level allowed by internal reconstruction) have only one full-grade syllable, co-inciding with the accent. In OX nouns, the accent usually falls on the root syllable in the nominative singular and therefore predicts a sole FG on the root and ZG in the suffix. However, the vast majority of OX nouns in Northian have an o-grade, unaccented suffix instead. The intrusion of the o-grade suffix is attributed by authorities to diverse sources, such as allophony of *o as unaccented variation of *e or the accusative singular where the accent is regularly found on the suffix.

Pronouns

Adjectives

Adverbs

Verbs

The description in this section will be focused on the language of the Didaskalic Material (DM), as the corpus is larger and the language better understood. The language of the Gales is considerably more primitive but more controversial, owing to metrical and other considerations.

The finite Northian verb, in the Didaskalic (or Late Galic) and Epic languages, is highly synthetic and marked for one of two tenses (present or past), three aspects (durative, eventive, and stative), five moods (indicative, injunctive, subjunctive, optative, and imperative), three voices (active, middle, and a defective passive), three persons (first, second, or third), and three numbers (singular, dual, or plural). The verb stem could also form derivatives with special meanings such as inchoatives, intensives, and desideratives. The verb agrees with its subject in person and number.

Structurally, the finite verb is made up of a root, suffix(es), and personal endings. The root gives the basic meaning of the verb and can undergo apophony, reduplication, and suffixation. When a root is combined with a suffix (including the zero suffix), a verbal stem that specifies aspect is formed. To the is further attached the optional modal suffix to specify either the optative or subjunctive, as well as appropriate personal endings, which give the voice, person, and number. The past tense is indicated by the augment e-.

Additionally, verb stems could also form active, middle, and passive participles, infinitives, and gerunds which are closely associated with the verb and can take their own subject and objects.

A verbal root is inherently imperfective or perfective, with the exception of the unique stative verb woida. When this root is used within its inherent aspect, modal and personal desinences may be attached directly without a suffix. When this occurs, the verb is said to be a root verb. To use the verb in the other aspects or to introduce other shades of semantic meaning (such as inchoatives, intensives, and desideratives), the root may undergo modification, and suffixes may be added; these are said to be derived verbs. While it is hypothesized that a strict system of derivational rules existed in the parent language, verbal derivation is prolific in Northian, and consequently many suffixes are used indiscriminately or compounded together, sometimes with overlapping meanings.

Each derivational strategy generally gives rise to an inflectional class in Northian, since the morphology associated with each derivation tended to create through regular phonetic change distinct and non-transparent sets of endings.

Unlike nouns, which often have unaccented syllables in full grade, verbal ablaut is much more in line with accent.

Generally, Northian verbs exhibit a "classical" but unsurprising structure that is confirmed in most aspects by the ancient Tennite and Syaran languages. As with verbs in them, the fininte Northian verb may be marked for aspect, voice, mood, number, and person. Under the canonical structure of verbs, each root had one of three inherent grammatical aspect when used to create a verb, and when the verb is in that inherent aspect, it can accept endings directly and does not need to be suffixed. When used outside of that inherent and implicit aspect, it is obligatorily marked in some wise to denote the altered aspect. Modal suffixes (forming the subjunctive or optative) follow aspectual ones, and personal endings are then attached to form a finite verb, or nominalizing endings for non-finite forms like infinitives, participles, gerunds, and supines.

It is notable that the present tense embraces the more marked primary endings, which are patently the secondary ending plus a hic et nunc particle of some shape. By extension, it is inferred that the secondary endings were unmarked for tense and merely encoded voice, person, and number. This explains the need for the augment e-, of adverbial origin and remaining such in Northian. This particle may not always be included, leaving the form identical to the injunctive (but see below), to be distinguished by context only. Moreover, the augment is only sporadically used outside of the present aspect; aorist and perfect stems are rarely seen with the augment in the earliest literature, though such forms grew in prominence.

The canonical analysis has been regarded as the result of a rationalized system of verbal derivation via suffixes and other markers like reduplication, but the description was much more idiosyncratic than the canonical analysis. There were multiple suffixes that impart the same aspectual value, with or without differing shades of meaning; additionally, same or similar marking strategies were used to obtain different aspects (thus reduplication was found in present, aorist, and perfect stems). This suggests that suffixes formerly with different semantics had fallen together and become indistinguishable markers of grammatical aspect, e.g. reduplication may have connoted iterativity, but by the last stage of the proto-language it merely indicated durative aspect via a fairly straightforward shift in meaning. Once aspect became an obligatory category and roots were assigned an "inherent" aspect, for every other aspect a marker was standardized. Such marked stems became "primary" (i.e. purely aspectual) derivations, from which more specific meanings are then obtained via "secondary" suffixes.  

The resulting situation, present across many Erani-Eracuran languages, was that a root formed a stem for each three aspect (durative/present, eventive/aorist, and stative/perfect), one of which was the bare stem itself, which was morphologically unmarked but then implicitly associated with its inherent aspect.

It is evident that the grammaticalization of aspect as a separate and obligatory category for all finite verbs was incomplete in Galic Northian. Many modal formations, though considered marked for aspect, are built from the root directly rather than a suffixed stem, as though the suffix retained a meaning more than mere aspect that was either not proper or not necessary to a given formation. The "split aorist" occurs with sigmatic aorists not showing the suffixal -s when used in the optative and injunctive moods. The s-suffix evidently conflicted with the optative suffix. Even more revelatory, subjunctives in the G1 period were made exclusively from the e-grade root and not from any suffixed stem, and it could be used where any aspect is implied; only later were subjunctive endings attached to aspect-marked stems.

In very early texts, the nasal-suffixed verbs (e.g. -naō ~ nu-) also eschew the suffix when used in the imperative and injunctive (which did not have a modal suffix). Linguists debate how this behaviour came to be and whether some underlying condition synchronically explains this divergence. The injunctive thus is not merely an unaugmented imperfect and has a contrasting stem, since the imperfect always has the same stem as the present. Considering the fact that many s-stem aorists lose their aspectual markers when used in the subjunctive and optative and suffixed presents of a greater variety lose theirs in the subjunctive and imperative, it has been surmised by some authorities, at a stage earlier than Galic, all non-indicative forms may have been unmarked for aspect. This leaves the optative built to present-marked verbs, which require the present marker, as the exception rather than the norm, and some authorities attribute it to a late emergence of the optative.

Some grammars of the Period I or Early Galic (such as Revised Handbook of Early and Pre-Galic of 1998) have attempted to abolish the distinction between markers for aspect and mood, describing them to be, at least morphologically, in complementary distribution: that is, a verb could either display aspect (and consequently be in the "indicative" mood, which is otherwise unmarked), or display mood and not aspect. The primitive finite verb is thought to surface as the (marginally attested) root injunctive. From this sprouts the aspectual injunctives and the modal forms, and the latest to emerge are the present, imperfect, and aorist tenses, which are built on the present injunctive with the hic et nunc particle and augment, respectively. The root injunctive survives, mainly in prohibitive constructions and secondary sequence, because modal function is respectivelly expressed adverbially and defined by the primary sequence, so synthetic morphology would have been redundant; yet it is also attested in cases where a root did not form a root stem—in the few cases like this, it is possible to argue the root forms were unmarked for aspect.

However, other linguists hold that it is difficult to show that aspectual meaning is absent in modal formations not explicitly marked for aspect, and proximal adverbs often elucidate "aspectual value" when it was not synthetically marked on the finite verbs. In their views, it would be more prudent to default to the later material where aspectual meanings were definitely present even in the unmarked bare root, and thus in any modal formations built upon them. They assert these "non-aspectual" forms are a small minority even in Period I Galic material, and metre prohibits the addition of suffixes to an hypothetical original with unmarked stems, so the "aspectual and modal forms" must have been original to the text. Furthermore, this behaviour of dropping affixes is often observed in only some affixes, leaving (notably) reduplicatives to keep their markers regardless of any modal function.

Furthermore, not only did this aspect-mood system develop and mature in Northian, it was a general tendency in all Erani-Eracuran languages to grammaticize aspects and moods in basically the same way. They assert that the a full-fledged verbal system, like the ones found in Tennite and Syaran, was inherited in Northian and not developed independently. Thus, a few forms that elude the developed grammar are to be treated as relics of genuinely great antiquity preserved by happenstance, but should not prevent the provision of a stereotyped paradigm of the "conjugational possibilities" from a single verbal root (which largely recapitulates what is known from the Tennite and Syranan languages).

Transmission

The Gales were part of an oral, liturgical tradition that dates to their initial composition. No doubt it was taught by priests to training-priests under their tutelage, and much care was taken to ensure the corpus was transmitted accurately. As far as modern scholars are aware, none of the Gales were actively edited in the historical period, but a large number of them must have been lost owing to the replacement of the rites of which they were part. In the Epics, there are quotations certain Galic material that are not transmitted in any manuscript.

During the long period of Acrean dominion, the Gales became known as afterblotan, that is material used after the completion of the main sacrifice. The Nordics understood the elemental consecration, dispersal, and intermixture as the main part of the sacrifice, though the liturgy suggests that, in this period, the Gales, being hymns, were the principal and direct offering to the divinities and formed an integral part of the liturgy. In the 8th century, the advent of Viking settlers in the north of what would become the Northern States saw the Galic hymns further adapted to the Nordic rites, also placed at the very end of the sacrifices.

Syntax

Number agreement

In the Galic corpus, only plural animate nouns (masculine or feminine) are capable of agreeing with plural adjectives and verbs. As a rule, neuter nouns of any number can always agree with singular adjectives and verbs and, if dual, with dual adjectives and verbs. This is attributed to the low animacy typical of neuter nouns, wherein the attribute of number is less salient and fails to trigger agreement. Additionally, many neuter nouns are not capable of forming genuine plurals, instead forming a "collective" stem. This is distinguished in the nominative by the long o-grade in the suffix, and in the oblique cases by zero-grade suffix and plural endings. For example:

  • wədā̊ "body of water, waters" from wodār "water"
  • oštō "bones, esp. skeleton" from ošti "bone"
  • θenō "firs" from θonū "fir".

Adjectives in Galic do not have collective forms, since adjectives are not entities that can aggregate into a semantically distinct set or collection. As Donny said, "a collection of good things are just a plural number of good things, while a collection of bones can mean a skeleton—contrasted with a number of arbitrarily selected bones." Instead, adjectives modifying neuter collectives follow the fairly strict rule that in attributive position, the neuter plural form is used and, in predicative position, the neuter singular is used. However, in the Didaskalic text, collective forms are innovated for i-, u-, n-, and s- stem adjectives and co-exist with neuter plural forms; in predicative position, the neuter singular is still used. Into the Epic age, the adjective agreement rule effectively breaks down.

Gender agreement

In Northian, adjectives agree in gender with the nouns they modify, as a additional strategy to clarify semantic connection between them. In this way, if multiple nouns can agree with an adjective via the same case and number, a specific referent can be identified though gender. Gender agreement between adjectives and the nouns they modify is obligatory in all forms of Northian.

Of a group of a single grammatical gender, the adjective agrees with their common gender. But Northian stands in contrast with the Nordic languages and in agreement with most other Erani-Eracuran languages that a group of mixed-gendered entities are referred to in the masculine. The propotion of the referents' genders does not matter; that is, in the statement mikroHā nəwā ɣnaHā-tə hā̊-kə nō "nine women and one man are tall", the adjective "tall" is grammatically masculine. Early grammarians comparing Northian to Nordic languages have coined the term "Nine Women Rule" to describe this habit, and the name may have originated in jest.

This rule holds even if there are no masculine referents at all, i.e. if the two genders present are feminine and neuter, the adjective would stand in the grammatical masculine. This observation is called the "Ten Drinks Converse" for the phrase tegā piHoHā̊ aywo βā̊ "a woman and ten drinks".

Culture

Other than being the civil tongue of the southern Northian states, various forms of Northian are used for religious and cultural proceedings. These forms of Northian are often petrified in the sense that their vocabulary and grammar are prescribed since the time of the Acrean Empire and can thus present challenges to native and secondary speakers of Northian trying to become familiar with the more sublimated Northian culture.

Galic pedagogy

Possibly dating to the creation of the Galic tradition itself, the training of Galic priests was centred on the memorization of the liturgical canon, which included the Gales. Ascribing great importance to the accurate reproduction of the Gales, trainee priests were given exceedingly rigorous drills to prevent wrong words or inaccurate enunciation from encumbering their delivery. Indeed, prior to learning the Gales themselves, the trainees were given preparatory courses.

In the first stage, trainees were required to undergo two years of vocal lessons, which consisted exclusively of the Galic vowels /a ā e ē i ī u ū o ō ā̊ ə/. During this stage, the trainees would sing long sequences of pure vowels or vowels interspersed with every consonant, such as /eəuiōiū/ or /nomokaraludubā̊wā̊/. The object of this lesson was to inculcate the ability to create the exact vowel timbre and duration required at quarter, half, full, double, and triple chanting pace, and whatever the phonetic enviornment, as it was a cardinal error for allow the quality and quantity of vowels to fluctuate.

There is some dispute when this phonetic tradition arose, since it is not attested until the 7th century, but it was widely adopted, perhaps in defence against the changing vowel system of the spoken language, which by that time had lost the distinction between /o/ and /ā̊/. The comparison with chanting traditions in Tennite culture, however, has attracted the most academic interest. The Gales are not connected at the literary level with the Tennite canons, but the training methods to master canons in the two cultures are strikingly similar. As the Northians and Tennites ultimately speak languages derived from the same ancestor, it has been suggested these traditions may have arisen from a common prototype.

Alphaism

The term "language of alpha" was coined by the 12th century scholar Vatingas of Puro to describe the proliferation of a and its varieties in the endings of nouns. a often arise when Northian regularly deletes final resonants and sibilants following long vowels and changes the preceding vowel to -ā, alters -um- and -un- internally and initially to -ā-, and changes -e following -i- to -a. Additionally, the thematic feminine, genitive singular and accusative plural of paroxytone and proparoxytone nouns, and the plurals of neuter nouns also frequently ended in -ā or its varieties. After the final consonant is deleted, the nominative (and frequently genitive) form does not disclose the actual stem of the word and can lead unsuspecting speakers to make grammatical errors where the full stem (such as the nominative plural) is required.

Alphaism was reportedly very troublesome amongst the Viking settlers who colonized the northern reaches of DNS in the 8th to 12th centuries. Texts produced by these speakers often transfer nouns ending in -r, -n, and -m to the thematic -ā declension and others with genitive ending -ō to the thematic -ō declension; the number of athematic nouns were thus sharply reduced, and only athematic nouns in the Nordic languages with identifiable cognates were preserved. Citizens of the southern cities joked at the expense of speakers employing innovated forms. Vatingas of Puro, who originated in the north, stressed to his countrymen that the language should be learned "carefully and without assumptions".

It should be remembered that letters like <ḥ> and <ḫ> which can be very helpful to distinguish different grammatical endings did not appear until the 19th century. Additionally, vowel length and nasalization were not indicated, so endings like -a, -ą̄, -ā, -ā̊, -āḥ and -āḫ were all written and printed as <a>.

There is some literature that examines the experience of Late Old Nordic speakers attempting to acquire a working knowledge of Northian in the 7th through 9th centuries. On the one hand, some nominatives would have been recognizable to the Late Old Nordic speakers, such as kinship terms mātar "mother" and things like faụuərə "fire", but their oblique forms would have been more distant, e.g. genitives mātūš and fivaṇġ. On the other hand, there were some oblique forms that were more recognizable, e.g. doruš "tree's" due to the loss of the strong ablaut forms in Nordic. Thus, there may have been pressure to reshape words according to their more recognizable stems and in a transparent paradigm such as the thematic declensions.

Comparison with Nordic languages

See also