Proto-Mongolic | |
---|---|
Reconstruction of | Mongolic languages |
Region | Manchuria -East Mongolia |
Era | Developed intoMiddle Mongol after the thirteenth century, after geographical dispersal of the ancient Mongols under Chinggis Khan and his heirs[1] |
Reconstructed ancestor |
Proto-Mongolic language was spoken by theProto-Mongols and there areBrahmi script remains dating from theRouran Khaganate and its end.The Inscription of Hüis Tolgoi (HT) andBugut Inscription are monolingual inscription in a Proto-Mongolic language, dated to 584 to 620 CE, with a Brahmi Mongolic text. Customs, religion, worship, and rituals of the nomadic ethnic group and tribe, consisting of 11 lines and 100 words written in 215 characters of the Brahmi script. It is the hypothetical ancestor language of the modernMongolic languages. It is very close to theMiddle Mongol language, the language spoken at the time of Genghis Khan and the Mongol Empire. Most features of modern Mongolic languages can thus be shown to descend from Middle Mongol. An exception would be the Common Mongolicpluritative voice suffix-cAgA- 'do together', which can be reconstructed from the modern languages but is not attested in Middle Mongol.
Regarding the time period when Proto-Mongolic was spoken,Juha Janhunen writes: "The absolute dating of Proto-Mongolic depends on when, exactly, the linguistic unity of its speakers ended", that is, when it evolved into separate Mongolic languages; this event took place "only after the geographical dispersal of the ancient Mongols under Chinggis Khan", which was "not earlier than the thirteenth century." As a result, "[t]his means that the present-day differences between the Mongolic languages are likely to be the result of less than 800 years of divergent evolution."[2]
Front | Neutral | Back | |
---|---|---|---|
High | *ü/y/ | *i | *u |
Mid | *ö/ø/ | *o | |
Low | *e | *a |
Labial | Alveolar | Palatal | Velar | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Nasal | *m | *n | *ŋ | |
Fortis | *t | *c/t͡ʃ/ | *k | |
Lenis | *b | *d | *j/d͡ʒ/ | *g |
Fricative | *s | *x/h/ | ||
Lateral | *l | |||
Liquid | *r | |||
Semivowel | *y/j/ |
One way in which Proto-Mongolic formed plurals was by adding -s or -ud to a word. -s would be added to words ending in vowels, for exampleere (man) would becomeeres. -ud would be added to words ending in consonants, for examplenom (book) would becomenomud. However, for words ending with the consonant n, l, or r would lose the final letter, and just add d, for examplekan (prince) would becomekad (princes).[5]
1 | *nike(n) |
2 | *koxar |
3 | *gurba(n) |
4 | *dörbe(n) |
5 | *tabu(n) |
6 | *jirguxa(n) |
7 | *doluxa(n) |
8 | *na(y)ima(n) |
9 | *yersü(n) |
10 | *xarba(n) |
20 | *kori(n) |
30 | *guci(n) |
40 | *döci(n) |
50 | *tabi(n) |
60 | *jira(n) |
70 | *dala(n) |
80 | *naya(n) |
90 | *yere(n) |
100 | *jaxu(n) |
1000 | *minga(n) |