- Southwestern Brythonic protolanguage
Southwestern Brythonic is the reconstructed
protolanguage representing one of two dialects into which the Brythonic language split following theBattle of Deorham in A.D.577 , the other being Western Brythonic, which later evolved into Welsh and Cumbric.It is the common ancestor of Cornish and Breton, which in the opinion of some (such as Schrijver) did not become distinct before the
12th century , the terms "Old Cornish" and "Old Breton" being geographical rather than linguistic.Some of the sound changes that distinguish Southwestern Brythonic from Welsh include:
*the raising of IPA|*/(g)wo-/ to IPA|/(g)wu-/ in a pretonic syllable (in Welsh there was no raising)
*the fronting of IPA|*/ɔː/ to IPA|/œː/ (in Welsh it diphthongized to IPA|/aw/)
*the fronting of IPA|*/a/ to *IPA|/e/ before *IPA|/iː/ or IPA|*/j/ in an old final syllable (in Welsh it diphthongized to IPA|/ei/)Other significant differences are found in Welsh innovations that Southwestern Brythonic did not participate in, such as the development of the
voiceless alveolar lateral fricative IPA|/ɬ/.There has been some recent interest in the language, particularly in
Devon , and this has included study of a booklet entitled "A Handbook of West Country Brythonic: The Forgotten Celtic Tongue of South West England C.700 A.D. (Old Devonian)" self published by Joseph Biddulph. Biddulph's work has been subject to criticism for not being sufficiently academic and for being effectively aconstructed language rather than a reconstruction based on thecomparative method .External links
* [http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~marisal/ie/celtic.html Celtic language family tree]
References
*cite book | author=Jackson, Kenneth | title=Language and History in Early Britain | location=
Edinburgh | publisher=Edinburgh University Press | year=1953 | id=
*cite book | author=Schrijver, Peter | title=Studies in British Celtic Historical Phonology | location=Amsterdam | publisher=Rodopi | year=1995 | id=ISBN 90-5183-820-4
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