We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
LIVONIAN AND LEIVU: SHARED INNOVATIONS AND PROBLEMS.
- Authors
VIITSO, TIIT-REIN
- Abstract
Livonian and Leivu South Estonian, both spoken in Latvia, have a common word stem in the name of their language and people, and several phonetic innovations. In this article, the traditional Estonian-based etymology of the Estonian-based name of Livonians and Leivus and their language is refuted. The common stem comes probably from an unattested Old Norse name given for Livonia by the Scandinavians, and was later borrowed into Livonian and Leivu from German. A pilot study of some shared phonetic innovations turns attention to (1) the breaking of long and short mid vowels into long and short diphthongs, (2) triphthongs, (3) the loss of intervocalic *h after a short initial syllable and the rise of the broken tone, (4) the rise of prepalatal sibilants š́ and ž́ and (5) the rise of voiced obstruents. All innovations have some parallels in Baltic dialects, especially in Latgalian. However, the voicing of obstruents in Livonian, Karelian, Lude and Veps cannot be considered as an influence of Latvian and Russian.
- Subjects
ESTONIA; LATVIAN language; LIVONIANS; ESTONIANS; ETYMOLOGY; LIVONIAN language; ESTONIAN language; OLD Norse language
- Publication
Linguistica Uralica, 2009, Vol 45, Issue 4, p269
- ISSN
0868-4731
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3176/lu.2009.4.03