Fortunatov–de Saussure law

The Fortunatov–de Saussure law, or de Saussure's law, is an accentological law discovered independently by the Russian linguist Filipp Fortunatov (1895) and the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure (1896).

Overview

According to Fortunatov's 1895 theory, the verbosity in the "Proto-Lithuanian-Slavic" language shifts the stress from the preceding syllable if the articulation did not have an extension. Thus, in the word for "beard" in Russian and Lithuanian, the accent shifted from the root to the ending since the root had an intermittent length, and the ending is the extended length. However, in the word воро́на "crow" in Russian and Lithuanian the accent was preserved in the root since it is elongated. In Russian and Lithuanian the word bar̃zdą "beard" had no accent shift since the ending of the accusative case has an intermittent length.

According to de Saussure's formulation of 1896, the accent in Lithuanian was regularly shifted to the next syllable when it fell on a syllable with a circumflex intonation, only if there was another with an acute intonation after this syllable.[1]

Valence theory

According to the formulation of the Moscow Accentological School, in the Early Proto-Slavic (most likely Balto-Slavic) languages, accent shifted from dominant short and dominant circumflex syllables to syllables with an internal dominant acute, and there was no shift to both recessive aсutе and long syllables that had a circumflex intonation.[2]

For the Lithuanian language, Vladimir Dybo introduced a clarification to this law: "The accent was shifted from the circumflex to the next final acute. Without prohibitions. And the next, not the final acute, only if both syllables have the same accentuation valence".[3] This clarification explains the forms of the type dat.pl. viẽtoms "place".[3]

Willem Vermeer criticizes this clarification of Dybo precisely in connection with the forms dative plural:[4]

Assuming that de Saussure's law as traditionally understood operated regularly in these forms, yielding *vietóms [ʽместам'] etc., analogical restoration of stem stress is a completely natural reaction of the system, given the fact that in all other stem classes accent type (2) has stem stress in these forms. <…> Restoration of stem stress in Dpl <…> is so banal that Stang <…> sees no need to go to the trouble of explaining it.

Criticizing Vermeer, Sergei Bolotov and Mikhail Oslon reject his explanation by means of a analogical restoration and try to derive a certain rule explaining the occurrence of the acute. They also notice that Christian Stang sees a need to go to the trouble of explaining it,[a] contrary to what Vermeer wrote.[4]

Classically in the dat.pl. of ā-stems, acute is usually postulated. The idea of the acuteness of this ending seems to originate, among other things, from the Slavic correspondence, cf. dat.pl. *golva̋mъ, as well as from the segment composition: *-ah₂-mos. At the same time, however, it is obvious that the other two plural endings, namely: inst.pl. galvomìs ~ *golva̋mi and iness.pl. galvosè and dial. galvosù ~ *golva̋xъ do not converge in Lithuanian and Slavic at the place of accent. This discrepancy also undermines the comparison dat.pl. galvóms ~ *golva̋mъ. Thus, probably for the first time, Thomas Olander drew attention to the non-acute of the previous syllable:

[I]t is perhaps more likely that the acute pre-LI *-āˀ- first became circumflex by analogy with the other stems and then was subject to Saussure's Law.

The assumption of a circumflex on this *-ā- explains the forms of the type viẽtoms, viẽtomis, viẽtose, viẽtom, but not *vietóms, *vietómis, *vietóse, *vietóm, thus de Saussure's law should not be expected here, whereas acuteness in mobile paradigms is secondary (for example in dat. pl. žẽmėms (2) "land" ~ žvaigždė́ms (4) "star"). Later it was shown that the appearance of the "secondary" acute is associated with the vowel apocope caused by the Leskien–Otrębski–Smoczyński's rule. The appearance of the circumflex in place of the probable acuteness (from *-ah₂-) is due to Nikolaev's metatony, and not to the Olander's analogy. Presumably, this can be confirmed by Slavic data, where there are variants with circumflex. For example, in Czech (-ám, -ách), Chakavian (-ãh) and Polish (-åch).

Subsequently the Moscow Accentological School, after a thorough analysis of imaginary and marginal exceptions to the de Saussure's law, cancelled Dybo's clarification and introduced a reduction in the endings of primary cases or Leskien–Otrębski–Smoczyński's rule.[5]

Leskien–Otrębski–Smoczyński rule

With the apocope of the stressed final syllable, a circumflex appears after an unstressed short monophthong (VRV́[C]# → VŔ[C]#):

  • acc.sg. tavè → taũ "you";
  • nom.sg. anàs → añs "he";
  • acc.sg. manè → mañ "me";
  • instr.sg. akimì → akim̃ "eye";
  • instr.du. *akimV̀ → akim̃ "eye";
  • iness.sg. sūnujè → sūnuj̃ "son";
  • iness.sg. kamè → kam̃ "where";
  • iness.sg.m. baltamè → baltam̃ "white";
  • instr.pl. akimìs → akim̃s → akim̃ "eye".

With the apocope of the stressed final syllable, a circumflex appears after an unstressed long monophthong (VVRV́[C]# → VV́[R]#):

  • akysè → akỹs;
  • akyjè → akỹj → akỹ;
  • *galvomV̀ → galvõm;
  • žolėjè → žolė̃j → žolė̃;
  • galvojè → galvõj → galvõ;
  • galvomìs → galvõms → galvõm.

With the apocope of the stressed final syllable, a circumflex appears after an unstressed diphthong (VVRV́# → VV́[R]#):

  • sudievù (v → u) → sudiẽu → sudiẽ;
  • dienà → diẽn → diẽ;
  • pirmà → pir̃m.

With the apocope of the unstressed final syllable, an acute appears after a stressed short monophthong (V́RV[C]# → V́R[C]#):

  • jùmus → jùms;
  • *akìmV → akìm;
  • mùmus → mùms;
  • *akìmus → akìms;
  • *žiedàmV → žiedám;
  • *žiedàmus → žiedáms.

With the apocope of the unstressed final syllable, an acute appears after a stressed long monophthong (VV́RVC# → V́VRC#):

  • *jõmus → jóms;
  • *baltõmus → baltóms;
  • *galvõmus → galvóms.

Opposition

Christian Stang, Frederik Kortlandt, Rick Derksen, and many other linguists deny the operation of the Fortunatov–de Saussure's law in Proto-Slavic.[6][7][8] Jerzy Kuryłowicz did not deny the operation of the law, but he rejected the tonological interpretation of the movement of stress on the endings: he believed that the shift of stress from circumflex syllables to the ending of the word is not caused by the acute nature of the endings, but their reduction.[8][9]

See also

  • Dybo's law

References

Notes

  1. ^ See in Stang, Christian S. (1966, 1975), Vergleichende Grammatik der baltischen Sprachen. Oslo: Universitetsforlaget, pages 289‒290
  1. ^ Bolotov & Oslon (2019), p. 55.
  2. ^ Dybo, Zamyatina & Nikolaev (1993), pp. 11, 15.
  3. ^ a b Bolotov & Oslon (2019), p. 59.
  4. ^ a b Bolotov & Oslon (2019), p. 60.
  5. ^ Bolotov & Oslon (2019), pp. 64–75.
  6. ^ Kortlandt, Frederik (2009). Balto-Slavic accentuation revisited. Studies in Germanic, Indo-European, and Indo-Uralic (Leiden Studies in Indo-European 17), Amsterdam & New York: Rodopi, p. 345
  7. ^ Derksen (1991), p. 56.
  8. ^ a b Dybo (2006), p. 6.
  9. ^ Olander (2009), pp. 110–112.

Bibliography

  • Bolotov, S. G.; Oslon, M. V. (2019). "Правило Лескина–Отрембского–Смочиньского" и мнимые исключения из закона де Соссюра (in Russian). Vol. 10 (Institute of Slavic studies of Russian Academy of Sciences ed.). Moscow. pp. 55–91.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Derksen, Rick (1991), Introduction to the History of Lithuanian accentuation, vol. 16 (Studies in Slavic and General Linguistics ed.)
  • Dybo, V. A.; Zamyatina, G. I.; Nikolaev, S. L. [in Russian] (1993). Основы славянской акцентологии. Словарь. Непроизводные основы мужского рода. (in Russian). Vol. 1. Moscow: Nauka. p. 334. ISBN 5-02-011139-2.
  • Dybo, Vladimir (2006), Сравнительно-историческая акцентология, новый взгляд: по поводу книги В. Лефельдта "Введение в морфологическую концепцию славянской акцентологии" (in Russian), vol. 2, Moscow: Вопросы языкознания
  • Olander, Thomas (2009). Balto-Slavic Accentual Mobility. Trends in Linguistics, Studies and Monographs 199. Berlin: Mouton De Gruyter.
  • v
  • t
  • e
HistoryEast SlavicSouth Slavic
Eastern
Transitional
Western [ru]
West Slavic
Czech–Slovak
Lechitic
Sorbian
Microlanguages
and dialects
East Slavic
South Slavic
West Slavic
Mixed languagesConstructed
languagesHistorical
phonology
Italics indicate extinct languages.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Reconstructed
West Baltic
East Baltic
Dnieper Baltic
Italics indicate extinct languages · Languages between parentheses are varieties of the language on their left · Asterisk (*) indicates dialects occasionally classified as languages · Question mark (?) indicates disputed classification.