User:Elector Dark/Sb/13

s ś > t s (*kunśi > *kunsø; *süli > *tij) ä e > e i (*äjmä > *ejmä) / (only when stressed) / (doesn't apply when _Cä, cf. *emä > *emä, doesn't seem to apply _ŋ) ï  > ë   (*ïptï > *ëptø) _CC, _C# (only when stressed) i  > ø   (*śilmä > *søjmä) _l$, _δ́$ l  > j   (*lome > *jomi) / !#_ï (*lïxï > *lïxï), !V_V (*elä- > *ilä-?) l  > j   / _# (persistent?) a  > ä   (*kaδ́a > *kajä) / Vl_, δ́_ δ́ > j   (*δ́ëme > *jëm) δ  > r   (*śëδe > *sëre) u  > ø   (*supa > *søpa) / _Ka, _Kä [where K henceforth denotes 1+ C] (only when stressed) ü  > i   (*śuδ́ji > *sijø) i ï > ø  (*ïptï > *ëptø) / V́CC_ [where V́ henceforth denotes a stressed vowel] i ï > {} (*weti > *wit) / V́C_(#?) ø  > {}  (*sexji > *seøj) / V́xC_# [where /x/ is the laryngeal] x  > ø   (*käxli > *keøj) / _C [I don't get this one either dw] o  > a   (*koska > *kaska) / ["when the second vowel was preserved" which is an odd condition] / [does that actually mean "_Ka"?] ä a > ø  (*käläw > *kelø) / _w, _j (only when unstressed) w j > {} (*käläw > *kelø) / V̌_$ [where henceforth V̌ denotes an unstressed vowel / - - - - - - - - - - - $ denotes a syllable boundary] / (apparently not after /ø/, cf. *keøj, *seøj) x  > {}  (*suxi > *tu) / _V

CASES SG  //   DU    //   PL  NOM:  -Ø    // -t      // -ń? ACC: -m    // -j      // -jøń?? GEN: -n    // -jk     // -køń DT₁: -ŋ    // -køk    // -køkøń? [DT₁ = spatial dative] DT₂: -kø   // -køk    // -køkøń? [DT₂ = ordinary dative] LC₁: -na   // -køkna  // -køknań? -køńøna? LC₂: -køna // -køkna  // -køknań? -køńøna? AB₁: -tø   // -køktø  // -køktøń? -køńtø? AB₂: -køtø // -køktø  // -køktøń? -køńtø? PR₁: -mna  // -jkmøna // -jkmønań? -ńmøna? PR₂: -møna // -jkmøna // -jkmønań? -ńmøna? NOTE: the morpheme -kø- is apparently interchangeable with -ntø-; Nganasan reflects -ntø(j)- forms in the dative and locative, but its ablative reflects -kø-. Make of it what you will, really. This is apparently a northern Samoyedic sort of           innovated noun declension system. I am currently unusure about what the southern Samoyedic declension forms would really look like, alas. The dual was most certainly marked with -ń- but we are not sure how it further operated.