Proto-Turkic language

Reconstructed ancestor of Turkic languages From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Proto-Turkic is the linguistic reconstruction of the common ancestor of the Turkic languages that was spoken by the Proto-Turks before their divergence into the various Turkic peoples. Proto-Turkic separated into Oghur (western) and Common Turkic (eastern) branches. Candidates for the Proto-Turkic homeland range from western Central Asia to Manchuria,[4] with most scholars agreeing that their migrations started from the eastern part of the Central Asian steppe,[5] (see, e.g., Golden 1992, Kljastornyj & Suktanov 2009; Menges 1995:55). Turkologists use various definitions for describing the Proto-Turkic homeland, but most indicate more or less the same region. Janhunen (1996:26, 2015:293) points to the region of Mongolia, which is at odds with forensic anthropology, historic literature or genetic studies of Turkic populations.

ReconstructionofTurkic languages
RegionProbably the western part of Central Asia,[1] possibly including regions of East Asia and Western Siberia[1]
Erac.3000 – c.500 BCE[2][3]
Lower-order reconstructions
Quick facts Reconstruction of, Region ...
Proto-Turkic
Reconstruction ofTurkic languages
RegionProbably the western part of Central Asia,[1] possibly including regions of East Asia and Western Siberia[1]
Erac.3000 – c.500 BCE[2][3]
Lower-order reconstructions
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The oldest records of a Turkic language, the Old Turkic Orkhon inscriptions of the 7th century Göktürk khaganate, already show characteristics of Eastern Common Turkic. For a long time, the reconstruction of Proto-Turkic relied on comparisons of Old Turkic with early sources of the Western Common Turkic branches, such as Oghuz and Kipchak, as well as the Western Oghur proper (Chuvash, Khazar).[citation needed] Because early attestation of these non-easternmost languages is much sparser, reconstruction of Proto-Turkic still rests fundamentally[citation needed] on the easternmost[according to whom?] Old Turkic of the Göktürks, however it now also includes a more comprehensive analysis of all written and spoken forms of the language.[citation needed][6]

The Proto-Turkic language shows evidence of influence from several neighboring language groups, including Eastern Iranian, Tocharian, and others.[7]

Origins

There is no general agreement among linguists and historians that Proto-Turkic was spoken somewhere in Central-East Asia.[8] The ultimate Proto-Turkic homeland may have been located in a more compact area. From circa 1200 BCE, nomadic activity led to the expansion of Proto-Turkic into a wider area, from the Chatyr-Tau mountain range in Eastern Europe, to Eastern Kazakhstan. Proto-Turkic is thought to have split at the end of the first millennium BCE.[citation needed][8]

Phonology

Consonants

The consonant system had a two-way contrast of stop consonants (fortis vs. lenis), k, p, t vs. g, b, d. There was also an affricate consonant, č; at least one sibilant s and sonorants m, n, ń, ŋ, r, l with a full series of nasal consonants. Some scholars additionally reconstruct the palatalized sounds ĺ and ŕ for the correspondence sets Oghuric /l/ ~ Common Turkic *š and Oghuric /r/ ~ Common Turkic *z. Most scholars[who?], however, assume that these are the regular reflexes of Proto-Turkic *l and *r.[9] Oghuric is thus sometimes referred to as Lir-Turkic and Common Turkic as Shaz-Turkic.

A glottochronological reconstruction based on analysis of isoglosses and Sinicisms points to the timing of the r/z split at around 56 BCE–48 CE. As Anna Dybo puts it, that may be associated with

the historical situation that can be seen in the history of the Huns' division onto the Northern and Southern [groups]: the first separation and withdrawal of the Northern Huns to the west has occurred, as was stated above, in 56 BC,... the second split of the (Eastern) Huns into the northern and southern groups happened in 48 AD.[10]

Dybo suggests that during that period, the Northern branch steadily migrated from Western Mongolia through Southern Xinjiang into the north's Dzungaria and then finally into Kazakhstan's Zhetysu until the 5th century.[10]

There was no fortis-lenis contrast in word-initial position: the initial stops were always *b, *t, *k, the affricate was always and the sibilant was always *s. In addition, the nasals and the liquids did not occur in that position either.[11]

More information Type, Bilabial ...
Type Bilabial Dental or
alveolar
Palatal Velar
Nasal *m *n //
Plosive and
affricate
fortis *p *t /t͡ʃ/ *k
lenis *b *d *g
Sibilant *s
Liquid lateral *l (*ĺ //)
rhotic *r (*ŕ //)
Semivowel *j
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Like in many modern Turkic languages, the velars /k/, /g/, and possibly /ŋ/ seem to have had back and front allophones ([k] and [q], [g] and [ɢ], [ŋ] and [ɴ]) according to their environments, with the velar allophones occurring in words with front vowels, and uvular allophones occurring in words with back vowels. The lenis stops /b/, /d/ and /g/~/ɢ/ may have tended towards fricatives intervocalically.[12]

Vowels

Like most of its descendants, Proto-Turkic exhibited vowel harmony, distinguishing vowel qualities a, ï, o, u vs. e, ẹ, i, ö, ü, as well as two vowel quantities. Here, macrons represent long vowels. Some scholars (e.g. Gerhard Doerfer) additionally reconstruct a mid back unrounded based on cognate sets with Chuvash, Tuvan and Yakut ï corresponding to a in all other Turkic languages, although these correspondences can also be explained as deriving from *a which underwent subsequent sound changes in those three languages.[13][14] The phonemicity of the distinction between the two close unrounded vowels, i.e. front *i and back , is also rejected by some.[14]

More information Type, front ...
Type front back
unroundedrounded unroundedrounded
high *i, *ī /i/ *ü, *ǖ /y/ *ï, *ï̄ /ɯ/ *u, *ū /u/
mid *ẹ, *ẹ̄ /e/ *ö, *ȫ /ø/~/œ/ (*ë, *ë̄ /ɤ/) *o, *ō /o/
low *e, *ē /ɛ/ *a, *ā /a/
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Morphology

Nouns

Plurals

While plurality in modern Turkic languages is relatively straightforward, Proto-Turkic seemingly has multiple plural suffixes, with unclear use cases for each.

One plural suffix preserved in both Oghuric and Common Turkic is *-(I)ŕ, in words such as Turkish "biz," or Chuvash "(e)pir."

Other possible plural suffixes are *-(I)t, which was commonly seen in Old Turkic, and is related to Proto-Mongolic *-d and Proto-Tungusic *-tA; and *-(A)n[citation needed], preserved in very few words such as Turkish "oğlan."

It is unknown whether the Proto-Common-Turkic *-lAr, *-(I)t and *-(A)n existed in Proto-Turkic and were lost in the Oghuric branch, or were modern inventions altogether.

Possessive suffixes

Reconstructable possessive suffixes in Proto-Turkic includes 1SG *-m, 2SG *-ŋ, and 3SG *-(s)i, plurals of the possessors are formed by *-z in Common Turkic languages.

Verbs

The reconstructable suffixes for the verbs include:

  • Aorist: *-Vr
  • Past: *-dI
  • Negative suffix: *-mA
  • 1SG: *-m (past tense) & *-mẹn (aorist and future tense) < *bẹn
  • 2SG: *-ŋ (past tense) & *-sẹn (aorist and future tense) < *sẹn
  • 3SG: *-∅ & *ol
  • 1PL: *-m-iŕ (past tense, dual form of singular suffix) & *-biŕ (aorist and future tense) < *biŕ
  • 2PL: *-ŋ-iŕ (past tense, dual form of singular suffix) & *-siŕ (aorist and future tense) < *siŕ

Proto-Turkic also involves derivation with grammatical voice suffixes, as in cooperative *körüĺ, middle *körün, passive *körül, and causative *körtkür.

Vocabulary

Pronouns

More information Turkish, Azeri ...
Proto-Turkic Turkish Azeri Turkmen Kazakh Chuvash Karakhanid Uzbek Uyghur Bashkir Kyrgyz Sakha (Yakut)
I *bẹ,[15][16] *bẹn-[17][18]ben, ban-mənmenmen, ma-epĕ, man-men, man-men menminmenmin
you *sẹ,[15][19] *sẹn-sen, san-sənsensen, sa-, sizesĕ, san-sen, san-sen, siz sen, sizhinsen, sizen
he/she/it *an-, *o-lon-, oon-, oolon-, o-lun-, vălan-, olu uulalkini, ol[20]
we *biŕbizbizbizbizepir, pir-bizbiz bizbeðbizbihigi
you (plural) *siŕsizsizsizsender, sizderesir, sir-sizsizlar senler, siler, sizlerheðsiler, sizderehigi
they *o-lar[21]on-laronlarolarolarvĕsem, vĕsen-olarular ularularalarkiniler, ollor
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Numbers

More information Oghur Turkic, Common Turkic ...
Proto-Turkic Oghur Turkic Common Turkic
Volga Bulgar Chuvash Karakhanid Turkish Azeri Turkmen Kazakh Uzbek Uyghur Bashkir Kyrgyz Sakha (Yakut)
1 *bīr bīrpĕrbīrbirbirbirbirbir birberbirbiir
2 *ẹk(k)i ekiikĕikkīikiikiikiekiikki ikkiikeekiikki
3 *üč večviśĕüčüçüçüçüşuch üçösüčüs
4 *tȫrt tüvettăvatătȫrtdörtdörddörttörttoʻrt törtdürttörttüört
5 *bẹ̄ĺ(k) byelpilĕkbḗšbeşbeşbäşbesbesh beşbişbeşbies
6 *altï altïultăaltï̄altıaltıaltyaltıolti altealtıaltıalta
7 *jẹt(t)i čyetiśičĕyétīyediyeddiýedijetiyetti yettiyetejetisette
8 *sekiŕ sekirsakărsekizsekizsəkkizsekizsegizsakkiz sekkizhigeðsegizаğıs
9 *tokuŕ tuxïrtăhărtokūzdokuzdoqquzdokuztoğıztoʻqqiz toqquztuğıðtoguztoğus
10 *ōn vanvunăōnononononoʻn onunonuon
20 *jẹgirmi čiyirimśirĕmyegirmīyirmiiyirmiýigrimijıyırmayigirma yigrimeyegermejıyırmasüürbe
30 *otuŕ vuturvătărottuzotuzotuzotuzotızoʻttiz ottuzutıðotuzotut
40 *kïrk xïrïxhĕrĕhkïrkkırkqırxkyrkqırıqqirq qiriqqırqkırk-
50 *ellig ellüalăelligelliəlliellieliwellik ellikilleelüü-
60 *altmïĺ -utmălaltmïšaltmışaltmışaltmyşalpısoltmish atmişaltmışaltımış-
70 *jẹtmïĺ -śitmĕlyetmišyetmişyetmişýetmişjetpisyetmish etmişyetmeşjetimiş-
80 *sekiŕ ōn sakăr vunseksȫnseksensəksənsegsenseksensakson seksenhikhänseksenağıs uon
90 *tokuŕ ōn tăhăr vuntoksōndoksandoxsantogsantoqsantoʻqson toqsantuqhantoksontoğus uon
100 *jǖŕ čǖrśĕryǖzyüzyüzýüzjüzyuz yüzyöðjüzsüüs
1000 *bïŋ -pinmiŋbinminmüňmıñming miñmeñmiñmuñ
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References

Sources

Further reading

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