Old Prussian language: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Extinct Western Baltic language}} |
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{{Incubator|code= prg}} |
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{{Redirect|Old Prussian|the people|Old Prussians}} |
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{{Infobox Language |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}} |
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|name = Prussian |
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{{Use British English|date=October 2017}} |
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|nativename = (''{{lang|bat|Prūsiskai Bilā}}'', ''{{lang|bat|Prūsiskan}}'') |
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{{Infobox language |
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|states = [[Prussia]] |
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| name = Old Prussian |
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|region = [[Europe]] |
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| altname = |
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|extinct = Late 17th/Early 18th century |
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| nativename = {{lang|prg|Prūsiskai}}<ref name=ref1>The adverb {{lang|prg|Prūsiskai}} ('in Prussian') appears on the title page of the Königsberg catechism of 1561.<br>See {{cite book|first=Vytautas|last=Mažiulis|author-link=Vytautas Mažiulis|title=Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas|trans-title=Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian|publisher=Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidykla|volume=3|pages=360–361|url=http://www.prusistika.flf.vu.lt/zodynas/paieska/|year=1996|isbn=978-54-2000-109-7}}</ref><ref name="Klussis">{{cite book|title=Old Prussian Written Monuments: Text and Comments|author-last=Palmaitis|author-first=Mykolas Letas|publisher=Lithuanian's World Center for Advancement of Culture, Science and Education|location=Kaunas|year=2007|url=http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Kat.pdf|isbn=978-9986-418-42-9}}</ref>{{rp|page=387}}<br>{{lang|prg|Prūsiska bilā}} (revived)<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Rantawa.org |last2=suplits |date=2016-05-31 |title=Prūsiska bilā |url=https://awizi.twanksta.org/nawwiniskai/prusiska-bila/ |access-date=2024-07-27 |website=Prūsas Tāutas Prēigara}}</ref> |
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|iso1 = |
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| region = [[Prussia (region)|Prussia]] |
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|iso2 = |
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| ethnicity = [[Old Prussians|Baltic Prussians]] |
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|iso3 = prg |
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| image = Catechismus in preüßnischer sprach, gecorrigiret und dagegen das deüdsche.jpg |
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|familycolor = Indo-European |
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| imagecaption = Catechism in Old Prussian from 1545 |
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|fam1 = [[Indo-European languages|Indo-European]] |
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| extinct = Early 18th century |
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|fam2 = [[Balto-Slavic languages|Balto-Slavic]] |
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| ref = <ref name=Young2008>{{cite book |last=Young |first=Steven |year=2008 |chapter=Baltic |editor-last=Kapović |editor-first=Mate |title=The Indo-European Languages |location=London |publisher=Routledge |pages=486–518|isbn=978-03-6786-902-1}}</ref> |
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|fam3 = [[Baltic languages|Baltic]] |
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| revived = 2 [[First language|L1 speakers]] (2021){{r|Szatkowski|pages=4–7}}<br />50 [[Second language|L2 speakers]] (no date)<ref>{{e22|prg}}</ref> |
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|fam4 = [[Western Baltic languages|Western]] |
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| familycolor = Indo-European |
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| fam2 = [[Balto-Slavic languages|Balto-Slavic]] |
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| fam3 = [[Baltic languages|Baltic]] |
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| fam4 = [[West Baltic languages|West Baltic]] |
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| script = [[Latin alphabet]] |
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| iso3 = prg |
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| linglist = prg.html |
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| glotto = prus1238 |
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| glottorefname = Old Prussian |
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| lingua = 54-AAC-a |
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| notice = IPA |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Old Prussian''' is an extinct [[West Baltic languages|West Baltic language]] belonging to the [[Baltic languages|Baltic branch]] of the [[Indo-European languages]], which was once spoken by the [[Old Prussians]], the [[Baltic peoples]] of the [[Prussia (region)|Prussian region]]. The language is called Old Prussian to avoid confusion with the German dialects of [[Low Prussian dialect|Low Prussian]] and [[High Prussian dialect|High Prussian]] and with the adjective ''Prussian'' as it relates to the later German state. Old Prussian began to be written down in the [[Latin script|Latin alphabet]] in about the 13th century, and a small amount of literature in the language survives. In modern times, there has been a revival movement of Old Prussian, and there are families which use Old Prussian as their first language.{{r|Szatkowski|pages=4–7}} |
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'''Prussian''' is an extinct [[Baltic languages|Baltic]] language, once spoken by [[Old Prussians|the inhabitants]] of [[Prussia (region)|the area]] in an area (see map and article by [[Marija Gimbutas]] below) of what became [[Pomerania]] and [[East Prussia]] (now north-eastern [[Poland]] and the [[Kaliningrad Oblast]] of [[Russia]]) and much further east and south to what became [[Polesia]] and partial [[Podlasia]] with the conquests by Rus and Poles starting in the 10th century and by [[Ostsiedlung|German colonisation]] of the area which began in the 12th century. In Old Prussian itself, the language was called “''Prūsiskan''” (''Prussian'') or “''Prūsiskai Bilā''” (''the Prussian [[language]]''). According to Gimbutas the entire area has thousands of river names that can be traced back to original Baltic language, even thought now Slavitised. A number of Prussian, who can trace their ancesters to the Old Prussians have kept study of the language up, and listening to an ''Ostpreussisch-East Prussian language speaker one can immediately recognize the very distinct pronounciation and speech patters, which were passed on from the Old Prussian speakers to the German speakers of East Prussia. With the expulsion and dispersion of the native people by Communists since 1945 ''Ostpreussisch'' language has been recorded by refuge organizations, but by not beeing able to live in the homeland , the language and people have been greatly reduced. A few native ''Ostpreussen'' however managed to stay in their homeland, which in 1945 had been occupied by Communist [[Soviet Union]] and [[Poland]]. |
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==Classification== |
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A few experimental communities involved in [[language revival|reviving]] a reconstructed form of the language now exist in [[Lithuania]], [[Poland]], and other countries. |
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Old Prussian is an Indo-European language belonging to the Baltic branch. It is considered to be a Western Baltic language. |
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Old Prussian was closely related to the other extinct [[West Baltic languages]], namely [[Sudovian language|Sudovian]], [[Galindian language|West Galindian]]<ref>{{cite journal| url = https://www.academia.edu/37147068| title = The Balts in the migration period|first=Iliya|last=Tarasov|pages=95–124| journal=Istoričeskij Format | script-journal = ru:Исторический Формат|volume=3–4| date = January 2017|language=ru}}</ref> and possibly [[Skalvians#Language|Skalvian]] and [[Curonian language|Old Curonian]].<ref name="Gimbutas">{{cite book|first=Marija|last=Gimbutas|author-link=Marija Gimbutas|date=1963|title=The Balts|series=Ancient peoples and places|place=London|publisher=Thames and Hudson|volume=33}}</ref>{{rp|page=33}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zinkevičius |first=Zigmas |author-link= Zigmas Zinkevičius |title=The History of the Lithuanian Language |date=1996 |publisher=Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidykla |place=Vilnius |isbn=9785420013632 |pages=51 |language=en}}</ref> Other linguists consider Western Galindian and Skalvian to be Prussian dialects.<ref name="Rinkevicius">{{cite book|first=Vytautas|last=Rinkevičius|title=Prūsistikos pagrindai|trans-title=Fundamentals of Prussian linguistics|publisher= Vilniaus universitetas|location=Vilnius|date=2015|language=lt|isbn=978-609-417-101-7}}</ref>{{rp|15}} |
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The [[Aesti|Æsti]], mentioned by [[Tacitus]] in his ''[[Germania (book)|Germania]]'', may have been a people who spoke Old Prussian. However, Tacitus describes them as being just like the [[Suebi]] (a group of [[Germanic tribes|Germanic]] peoples) but with a more Britannic-like ([[Celtic languages|Celtic]]) language. |
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It is related to the [[East Baltic languages]] such as [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]] and [[Latvian language|Latvian]], and more distantly related to [[Slavic languages|Slavic]]. Compare the words for 'land': Old Prussian ''{{lang|prg|semmē}}'' [zemē], {{langx|lv|zeme}}, {{langx|lt|žemė}}, {{langx|ru|link=no|земля́}}, ({{lang|ru-Latn|zemljá}}) and {{langx|pl|ziemia}}.{{citation needed|date=May 2023}} |
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Old Prussian was closely related to the other extinct Western [[Baltic language]]s, [[Curonian language|Curonian]] and [[Sudovian language|Sudovian]]. It is more distantly related to the surviving Eastern [[Baltic language]]s, [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]] and [[Latvian language|Latvian]]. Compare the Prussian word seme (''zemē''<ref name = "Lie">Mikkels Klussis. ''Bāziscas prûsiskai-laîtawiskas wirdeîns per tālaisin laksikis rekreaciônin[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Lie.pdf].</ref>), the Latvian ''zeme'', the Lithuanian ''žemė''. |
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Old Prussian had [[loanword]]s from Slavic languages (e.g., Old Prussian ''{{lang|prg|curtis}}'' [kurtis] 'hound', like Lithuanian ''{{lang|lt|kùrtas}}'' and Latvian ''{{lang|lv|kur̃ts}}'', cognate with Slavic (compare {{langx|uk|хорт}}, {{lang|uk-Latn|khort}}; {{langx|pl|chart}}; {{langx|cs|chrt}})), as well as a few borrowings from [[Germanic languages|Germanic]], including from [[Gothic language|Gothic]] (e.g., Old Prussian ''{{lang|prg|ylo}}'' 'awl' as with Lithuanian ''{{lang|lt|ýla}}'', Latvian ''{{lang|lv|īlens}}'') and from [[Scandinavian languages]].<ref name="britannica.com">{{cite encyclopedia| url = http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/50949/Baltic-languages/74885/Loanwords-in-Baltic|first=Vytautas|last=Mažiulis|author-link=Vytautas Mažiulis| encyclopedia = Encyclopædia Britannica |title=Baltic languages|version=September 2022|access-date=9 November 2022}}</ref> |
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In addition to the [[Ostsiedlung|German colonists]], groups of people from [[Poland]]<ref name="Pl Refuge 1">''A Short History of Austria-Hungary and Poland'' by H. Wickham Steed, et al. [http://historicaltextarchive.com/books.php?op=viewbook&bookid=2&cid=24]<br><blockquote>"For a time, therefore, the Protestants had to be cautious in Poland proper, but they found a sure refuge in Prussia, where Lutheranism was already the established religion, and where the newly erected university of Königsberg became a seminary for Polish ministers and preachers."</blockquote></ref><ref name="Pl Refuge 2">[http://www.ccel.org/s/schaff/encyc/encyc09/htm/iv.iii.vii.htm ccel.org Christianity in Poland]<br><blockquote>"Albert of Brandenburg, Grand Master of the German Order in Prussia, called as preacher to Konigsberg Johann Briesaman (q.v.), Luther's follower (1525); and changed the territory of the order into a hereditary grand duchy under Polish protection. From these borderlands the movement penetrated Little Poland which was the nucleus for the extensive kingdom. [...] In the mean time the movement proceeded likewise among the nobles of Great Poland; here the type was [[Lutheran]], instead of Reformed, as in Little Poland. Before the Reformation the Hussite refugees had found asylum here; now the Bohemian and Moravian brethren, soon to be known as the Unity of the Brethren (q.v.), were expelled from their home countries and, on their way to Prussia (1547), about 400 settled in [[Posen]] under the protection of the [[Gorka]], [[Leszynski]], and [[Ostrorog]] families."</blockquote></ref>, [[Lithuania]], [[France]]{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, [[Scotland]]<ref name = "scots">{{cite web| url=http://www.electricscotland.com/history/prussia/part3-3.htm| title=Scots in Eastern and Western Prussia, Part III – Documents (3)| accessdate=2007-02-18}}</ref>, [[England]]<ref name = "Eastland">{{cite web| url=http://www.elbing.de/Eastland.pdf| title=Elbing| format=PDF| accessdate=2007-02-18}}</ref> and [[Austria]]{{Fact|date=February 2007}} found refuge in Prussia during the [[Protestant Reformation]] and thereafter. Such immigration caused a slow decline in the use of Old Prussian, as the [[Old Prussians|Prussians]] adopted the languages of the others, particularly [[German language|German]], the language of the [[Prussia|German government of Prussia]]. Baltic Old Prussian probably ceased to be spoken around the beginning of the 18th century due to many of its remaining speakers dying in the [[famine]]s and [[bubonic plague]] epidemics harming the [[East Prussia]]n countryside and towns from 1709 until 1711<ref>[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Engl.pdf Donelaitis Source, Lithuania]</ref>. The regional dialect of [[Low German]] spoken in Prussia (or [[East Prussia]], [[Low Prussian]], preserved a number of Baltic Prussian words, such as ''kurp'', from the Old Prussian ''kurpi'', for ''[[shoe]]'' (in contrast to the standard German ''Schuh''). |
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==Influence on other languages== |
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The language is called “Old Prussian” to avoid confusion with the German dialects [[Low Prussian]] and [[High Prussian]], and the adjective “Prussian”, which also relates to the later German state. The Old Prussian name for the nation, not being Latinized, was ''Prūsa''. This too may be used to delineate the language and the Baltic state from the later German state. |
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===Germanic=== |
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The [[Low German]] language spoken in Prussia (or [[West Prussia]] and [[East Prussia]]), called [[Low Prussian]] (cf. [[High Prussian]], [[High German]]),<ref>{{cite journal|language=de|title=Niederpreuſsisch|trans-title=Lower Prussian|first=Walther|last=Mitzka|journal=Zeitschrift für deutsche Mundarten |date=1921|volume=16|pages=151–154|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|jstor=40498264}}</ref> preserved a number of Baltic Prussian words, such as ''{{lang|nds|Kurp}}'', from the Old Prussian ''{{lang|prg|kurpe}}'', for ''shoe'' in contrast to common {{langx|nds|Schoh}} (Standard German ''{{lang|de|Schuh}}''),<ref>{{cite book|language=de|first=Gerhard|last=Bauer|date=2005|url=http://www.annaberger-annalen.de//jahrbuch/2005/AnnabergNr.13_Kap1.pdf|chapter=Baltismen im ostpreußischen Deutsch: Hermann Frischbiers "Preussisches Wörterbuch" als volkskundliche Quelle|trans-chapter=Baltisms in Eastern Prussian German: Hermann Frischbier's "Prussian Dictionary" as ethnological source|issue=13|pages=5{{Hyphen}}82|title=Annaberger Annalen}}</ref> as did the [[High Prussian#Oberländisch|High Prussian Oberland subdialect]].<ref>{{cite journal|first=Walther|last=Ziesemer|title=Beobachtungen zur Wortgeographie Ostpreuſsens|trans-title=Obeservations on word geography in East Prussia|journal=Zeitschrift für deutsche Mundarten|jstor=40498279|date=1923|publisher=Franz Steiner Verlag|language=de|pages=149–160|issue=3/4, "Festschrift Ferdinand Wrede (1923)"|volume=18}}</ref> |
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Until the [[1938 changing of place names in East Prussia]], Old Prussian river- and place-names, such as ''{{lang|prg|Tawe}}'' and ''{{lang|prg|Tawellningken}}'', could still be found.<ref name="GerullisPlace">{{cite book|first=Georg|last=Gerullis|title=Die altpreußischen Ortsnamen|trans-title=The Old Prussian place names|language=de|date=1922|publisher=Vereinigung wissenschaftlicher Verleger|place=Berlin, Leipzig|url=https://klc.vdu.lt/prussian/Gerullis-APON.pdf}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Haack|first1=Hermann|title=Stielers Hand-Atlas|date=1930| publisher=Justus Perthes|edition=10|page=Plate 9}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|journal=Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte|volume=51|issue=2|year=2003|title='Grenzlandpolitik' und Ostforschung an der Peripherie des Reiches. Das ostpreußische Masuren 1919–1945|trans-title='Borderland politics' and Ostforschung in the periphery of the German Empire. The East-Prussian Masuria 1919–1945|first=Andreas|last=Kossert|pages=117–146|language=de|jstor=30196694 }}</ref>{{rp|page=137}} |
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Old Prussian began to be written down in the Latin alphabet in about the 13th century. A small amount of [[literature]] in the language survives. |
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===Polish=== |
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Until the 1930s, when the [[Nazi Germany|Nazi]] government began a program of [[Germanization]], and 1945, when the [[Soviet Union|Soviets]] annexed Prussia and made Old Prussian place-names illegal<ref name="Sov Illegal"><!--[http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/6623/prusa.htm]-->[http://poshka.bizland.com/prussian/reconstructions.htm] [http://pirmojiknyga.mch.mii.lt/Leidiniai/Prusviet.en.htm] [http://www.eki.ee/knn/ungegn/bd3_ltov.htm].</ref>, one could find Old Prussian river and place names in [[East Prussia]], like ''Tawe'', ''Tawelle'', and ''Tawelninken''. |
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One of the hypotheses regarding the origin of {{lang|pl|[[mazurzenie]]}} – a phonological [[merger (phonology)|merger]] of [[dentialveolar consonant|dentialveolar]] and [[postalveolar consonant|postalveolar]] [[sibilant]]s in many [[Polish dialects]] – states that it originated as a feature of [[Polonization|Polonized]] Old Prussians in [[Masuria]] (see [[Masurian dialects]]) and spread from there.<ref>{{unbulleted list citebundle|{{cite journal |last=Dobrzycki |first=Stanisław |title=O tzw. mazurzeniu w języku polskim |trans-title=About the so-called mazurzenie in Polish |journal=Rozprawy Wydziału Filologicznego PAU |issue=XXXII |year=1901 |language=pl |pages=228–231}}|{{cite journal |last=Селищев |first=Афанасий Матвеевич |title=Соканье и шоканье в славянских языках |journal=Slavia |volume=X |issue=4 |year=1931 |language=ru |pages=718–741|place=Prague|publisher=Slovanský ústav v Praze}}|{{cite book |last=Селищев |first=Афанасий Матвеевич |title=Западно-славянские языки|trans-title=Western Slavic languages|volume=I |series=Славянское Языкознание|orig-date=1941 |date=1969|publisher=Mouton & Company|place=The Hague|language=ru |pages=330–331}}|{{cite journal |last=Milewski |first=Tadeusz |author-link=Tadeusz Milewski |title=Stosunki językowe polsko-pruskie |trans-title=The linguistic relation of Polish and Old Prussian |journal=Slavia Occidentalis |issue=XVIII |year=1937 |language=pl |pages=21–84}}|{{cite book |last=Milewski |first=Tadeusz |author-link=Tadeusz Milewski |title=Chronologia i przyczyny mazurzenia |trans-title=Chronology and causes of the mazurzenie |year=1956 |language=pl |pages=34–38}}}}</ref> |
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==History== |
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A list of monuments of Old Prussian : |
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===Original territory=== |
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# Prussian-language geographical names within the territory of (Baltic) Prussia. The first basic study of these names was by Georg Gerullis, in ''Die altpreußischen Ortsnamen'' (''The Old Prussian Place-names''), written and published with the help of Walter de Gruyter, in 1922. |
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[[File:Baltic Tribes c 1200.svg|thumb|The approximate distribution of the [[Balts|Baltic tribes]], {{Circa|1200 [[Common Era|CE]]}}]] |
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# Prussian personal names.<ref name = "Trautmann">Reinhold Trautmann, ''[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Tr_APN.pdf Die altpreußischen Personennamen]'' (''The Old Prussian Personal-names''). ''Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht'', Göttingen: 1923. Includes the work of Ernst Lewy in 1904.</ref> |
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In addition to Prussia proper, the original territory of the Old Prussians may have included eastern parts of [[Pomerelia]] (some parts of the region east of the [[Vistula River]]). The language may also have been spoken much further east and south in what became [[Polesia]] and part of [[Podlasie]], before conquests by [[Rus (people)|Rus]] and [[Polish people|Poles]] starting in the 10th century and the [[Ostsiedlung|German colonisation]] of the area starting in the 12th century.{{r|Gimbutas|p=23}}<ref name="Dini">{{cite book|first=Pietro U.|last=Dini|title=Foundations of Baltic languages|translator-first1=Milda B.|translator-last1=Richardson|translator-first2=Robert E.|translator-last2=Richardson|publisher=Vilniaus universitetas|place=Vilnius|date=2014|isbn=978-609-437-263-6}}</ref>{{rp|page=324}} |
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# Separate words found in various historical documents. |
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# Vernacularisms in the former German dialects of East and West Prussia, as well words of Old Curonian origin in Latvian, and West-Baltic vernacularisms in Lithuanian and [[Belarusian language|Belarusian]]. |
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# The so-called [[Basel Epigram]]<ref name = "Basel">[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/bpt.htm Basel Epigram].</ref>. It reads: ''Kayle rekyse. thoneaw labonache thewelyse. Eg. koyte poyte. nykoyte. pe^nega doyte''; which may be: ''Kaīls rikīse! Tu ni jāu laban asei tēwelise, ik kwaitēi pōiti, ni kwaitēi peningā dōiti''. (In English: ''"Hello Sir! You are no longer a nice uncle, if you want to drink but do not want to give a penny!"''<ref name = "Schæken">[http://www.schaeken.nl/lu/research/online/editions/baselepigram/ Basel Epigram].</ref>) This is an inscription of the 14th century, most probably by a Prussian student studying in Prague, found by St. McCluskey in one of folios of the Basel university in 1974. |
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#Various fragmentary texts: |
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## Recorded in several versions by Hieronymus Maletius in Sudovian Nook in the middle of the 16th century, as noted by V. Mažiulis, are |
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###''Beigeite beygeyte peckolle'' - ''Run, run, devils!'' |
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###''Kails naussen gnigethe'' - ''Hello our friend!'' |
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###''Kails poskails ains par antres'' - (a drinking toast, reconstructed as ''Kaīls pas kaīls, aīns per āntran'', or, in English : ''A healthy one after a healthy one, one after another!'') |
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###''Kellewesze perioth, Kellewesze perioth'' - ''A carter drives here, a carter drives here!'' |
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###''Ocho moy myle schwante panicke'' (also recorded as ''O hoho Moi mile swente Pannike'', ''O ho hu Mey mile swenthe paniko'', ''O mues miles schwante Panick'') - ''Oh my dear holy fire!'' |
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## an expression from the list of the Vocabulary of friar Simon Grunau, an historian of the German Order: ''sta nossen rickie, nossen rickie'', ''This (is) our lord, our lord''. |
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# A manuscript fragment of the first words of the [[Pater Noster]] in Prussian, from the beginning of the 15th century: ''Towe Nüsze kås esse andangonsün swyntins''. |
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# 100 words (in ''strongly'' varying versions) of the [http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/GrG.pdf Vocabulary] by Simon Grunau, written ca. 1517–1526; these have been reconstructed into a more unified single system of spelling by V. Mažiulis. |
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# The so-called [http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Elbin.pdf Elbing Vocabulary], which consists of 802 thematically sorted words and their German equivalents. This manuscript, copied by Peter Holcwesscher from Marienburg on the boundary of the 14th and 15th centuries, was found in 1825 by Fr. Neumann among other manuscripts acquired by him from the heritage of the Elbing merchant A. Grübnau; it was thus dubbed the “Codex Neumannianus”. Again, the words have been reconstructed into a more unified single system of spelling by V. Mažiulis, <!-- begin phrase: --> a scholar and contributor to the revival of the Prussian language<!-- this phrase was added merely to clarify who V.M. is, as he has been mentioned a couple times, but if other more experienced editors feel that the line should be removed, please paste it to the talk page so that we'll have it if we need it, and then do so. -->. |
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# The three Catechisms<ref name = "Catechisms">[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Kat.pdf Prussian Catechisms].</ref> printed in the Prussian language in Königsberg in 1545, 1545, and 1561 respectively. The first two consist of only 6 pages text in Prussian — the second one being a correction of the first into another sub-dialect. The third one, however, consists of 132 pages of Prussian text, and is a translation by Abel Will of Martin Luther’s ''[[Enchiridion]]''. |
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# An adage of 1583, ''Dewes does dantes, Dewes does geitka''. This is, in all probability, not Prussian — the form ''does'' in the second instance corresponds to Lithuanian future tense ''duos'' ‘will give’ — however it is included in this list because it is commonly thought of as Prussian. As for ''trencke, trencke!'' (''Strike! Strike!''), it too is in all probability Lithuanian, not Prussian. |
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===Decline=== |
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==Examples of Prussian== |
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With the conquest of the Old Prussian territory by the [[Teutonic Knights]] in the 13th century, and the subsequent influx of Polish, Lithuanian and especially German speakers, Old Prussian experienced a 400-year-long decline as an "oppressed language of an oppressed population".<ref name="Trautmann1910">{{cite book|first=Reinhold|last=Trautmann|author-link=Reinhold Trautmann|title=Die altpreußischen Sprachdenkmäler|place=Göttingen|publisher=Vandenhoek & Ruprecht|date=1910|trans-title=The Old Prussian language monuments}}</ref>{{rp|page=VII|quote="Sie hat noch genau 400 Jahre nach der endgültigen Unterwerfung (1283) als unterdrückte Sprache einer unterdrückten Bevölkerung weitergelebt."}} Groups of people from Germany, [[Poland]],<ref name="Pl Refuge 1">{{cite book|title=A Short History of Austria-Hungary and Poland|first1=Henry Wickham|last1=Steed|first2=Walter Alison|last2=Phillips|first3=David|last3=Hannay|url=http://historicaltextarchive.com/books.php?op=viewbook&bookid=2&cid=24|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20030804090230/http://historicaltextarchive.com/books.php?op=viewbook&bookid=2&cid=24|archive-date=4 August 2003|chapter=The Reformation Period|date=1914|publisher=Encyclopaedia Britannica Company|place=London}}</ref>{{rp|page=115|quote=For a time, therefore, the Protestants had to be cautious in Poland proper, but they found a sure refuge in Prussia, where Lutheranism was already the established religion, and where the newly erected [[University of Königsberg]] became a seminary for Polish ministers and preachers.}} [[Lithuania]], [[Kingdom of Scotland|Scotland]],<ref name="scots">{{cite web|title=Scots in Eastern and Western Prussia, Part III – Documents (3)|url=http://www.electricscotland.com/history/prussia/part3-3.htm|access-date=2007-02-18}}</ref> [[Kingdom of England|England]],<ref name="Eastland">{{cite web|title=Elbing als ehemaliger englischer Handelsplatz|trans-title=Elbing as a former English trading post|publisher=Magistrat der Stadt Elbing|translator-first=W.|first=Hermann|translator-last=Baumfelder|last=Kownatzki|date=1977|orig-date=unknown|url=http://www.elbing.de/Eastland.pdf|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070730075606/http://www.elbing.de/Eastland.pdf|archive-date=30 July 2007|access-date=18 February 2007}}</ref> and [[Austria]] (see [[Salzburg Protestants]]) found refuge in Prussia during the [[Protestant Reformation]] and thereafter.<ref name="Szatkowski">{{cite journal|doi= 10.11649/a.2626|journal=Adeptus|first=Piotr|last=Szatkowski|date=2021|issue=18|title=Language practices in a family of Prussian language revivalists: Conclusions based on short-term participant observation|publisher=Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences |doi-access=free}}</ref>{{rp|page=1}} Old Prussian ceased to be spoken probably around the beginning of the 18th century,<ref name="Young2008" /> because many of its remaining speakers died in the [[famine]]s and the [[Great Northern War plague outbreak|bubonic plague outbreak]] which harrowed the [[East Prussia]]n countryside and towns from 1709 until 1711.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Engl.pdf|title=Dictionary of Revived Prussian|page=4|first=Mikkels|last=Klussis|year=2005|access-date=2 March 2018|archive-date=26 September 2007|archive-url=https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20070926162334/http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Engl.pdf|url-status=unfit }}</ref> |
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Here are several basic Prussian phrases : |
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===Revitalization=== |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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[[File:Mėnuo Juodaragio XXI Kellan.jpg|thumb|The Prussian post-folk band Kellan performing at the Baltic culture festival [[Mėnuo Juodaragis]] in Lithuania]] |
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|- bgcolor=#FFDEAD |
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In the 1980s, linguists [[Vladimir Toporov]] and [[Vytautas Mažiulis]] started reconstructing the Prussian language as a scientific project and a humanitarian gesture. Some enthusiasts thereafter began to [[Language revitalization|revive]] the language based on their reconstruction.{{r|Szatkowski|pages=3–4}} |
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! Translation |
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! Phrase |
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Most current speakers live in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and [[Kaliningrad Oblast|Kaliningrad]] (Russia). Additionally, a few children are native in Revived Prussian.{{r|Szatkowski|pages=4–7}}<ref name="culture.pl">{{cite web|url=http://culture.pl/en/article/little-prince-published-in-prussian|title=Little Prince Published in Prussian|website=Culture.pl|publisher=Adam Mickiewicz Institute|date=17 February 2015|access-date=15 November 2022}}</ref> |
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Today, there are websites, online dictionaries, learning apps and games for Revived Prussian, and one children's book – [[Antoine de Saint-Exupéry]]'s ''[[The Little Prince]]'' – was translated into Revived Prussian by Piotr Szatkowski (Pīteris Šātkis) and published by the Prusaspirā Society in 2015.{{r|Szatkowski|pages=4–7}}{{r|culture.pl}} Moreover, some bands use Revived Prussian, most notably in the Kaliningrad Oblast by the bands [[Romowe Rikoito]],<ref>{{Cite web|title=ROMOWE RIKOITO – Undēina|url=http://www.dangus.net/releases/albumai/043_RomoweRikoito.htm|access-date=29 August 2014|publisher=Dangus|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150324135735/http://www.dangus.net/releases/albumai/043_RomoweRikoito.htm|archive-date=24 March 2015}}</ref> Kellan<ref>{{Cite web|author-first=А.|author-last=Ржевский|title=Илья Левашов: То, что мы поем — это о нашей земле|url=https://day-off39.ru/novosti-kaliningrada-i-oblasti/6565-ilya-levashov|access-date=11 October 2020|language=ru|website=Выходной|date=12 December 2018 }}</ref> and Āustras Laīwan, as well as in Lithuania by [[Kūlgrinda (band)|Kūlgrinda]] on their 2005 album {{Lang|lt|Prūsų Giesmės}} ('Prussian Hymns'),<ref>{{Cite web|title=Senoji prūsų kalba atgimsta naujausioje grupės KŪLGRINDA plokštelėje|url=http://www.dangus.net/news/nauja418.htm|access-date=29 August 2014|publisher=Dangus|language=lt|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120910040212/http://www.dangus.net/news/nauja418.htm|archive-date=10 September 2012}}</ref> and Latvia by Rasa Ensemble in 1988<ref>{{cite book|last=Smidchens|first=Guntis|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_TfOAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA12|title=The Power of Song: Nonviolent National Culture in the Baltic Singing Revolution|publisher=[[University of Washington Press]]|year=2014| isbn=978-0-295-99310-2|page=12}}</ref> and [[Valdis Muktupāvels]] in his 2005 [[oratorio]] "Pārcēlātājs Pontifex" featuring several parts sung in Prussian.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Oratorio "Pārcēlātājs Pontifex"|url=http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/oratorio.htm|website=Prussian Reconstructions – Ethonology|first=Mykolas Letas|last=Palmaitis|access-date=15 November 2022}}</ref> |
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==Dialects== |
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The Elbing Vocabulary and the Catechisms display systematical differences in phonology, vocabulary and grammar. Some scholars postulate that this is due to them being recordings of different dialects:{{r|Trautmann1910|pages=XXI{{Hyphen}}XXII}} |
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Pomesanian{{r|Rinkevicius|pages=25{{Hyphen}}89}} and Sambian.{{r|Rinkevicius|pages=90{{Hyphen}}220}} |
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Phonetical distinctions are: Pom. ''ē'' is Samb. ''ī'' (''{{lang|prg|sweta- : swīta-}}'' 'world'); Pom. ''ō'', Samb. ''ū'' after a labial (''{{lang|prg|mōthe [mōte] : mūti}}'' 'mother') or Pom. ''ō'', Samb. ''ā'' (''{{lang|prg|tōwis : tāws}}'' 'father'; ''{{lang|prg|brōte : brāti }}'' 'brother'), which influences the nominative suffixes of feminine ā-stems (''{{lang|prg|crauyō [kraujō] : krawia}}'' 'blood'). The nominative suffixes of the masculine o-stems are weakened to ''-is'' in Pomesanian; in Sambian they are syncopated (''{{lang|prg|deywis : deiws}}'' 'god'). |
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Vocabulary differences encompass Pom. ''{{lang|prg|smoy}}'' [zmoy] (cf. Lith. ''žmuo)'' , Samb. ''{{lang|prg|wijrs}}'' 'man'; Pom. ''{{lang|prg|wayklis}}'', Samb. ''{{lang|prg|soūns}}'' 'son' and Pom. ''{{lang|prg|samien}}'', Samb. ''{{lang|prg|laucks}}'' [lauks] 'field'. |
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The neuter gender is more often found in Pomesianan than in Sambian. |
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Others argue that the Catechisms are written in a Yatvingized Prussian. The differences noted above could therefore be explained as being features of a different West Baltic language [[Sudovian language|Yatvingian/Sudovian]].<ref>{{cite conference|conference=Colloquium Pruthenicum Tertium|title=Grammatical Incompatibility of 2 Main Prussian "Dialects" as Implication of Different Phonological Systems|date=2001|first=Mykolas Letas|last=Palmaitis|pages=63{{Hyphen}}77|url=https://klc.vdu.lt/prussian/Diallang.pdf|place=Zakopane}}</ref> |
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==Phonology== |
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===Consonants=== |
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The Prussian language is described to have the following consonants:<ref name="Schmalstieg">{{cite book|last=Schmalstieg|first=William Riegel|title=An Old Prussian grammar|publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press|orig-date=1974|date=1991|isbn=9780271011707|place=University Park}}</ref>{{rp|16{{Hyphen}}28}}{{r|Rinkevicius|page=62}} |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | |
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! colspan="2" |[[Labial consonant|Labial]] |
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! colspan="2" |[[Dental consonant|Dental]]/<br>[[Alveolar consonant|Alveolar]] |
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! colspan="2" |[[Postalveolar consonant|Post-<br>alveolar]] |
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! colspan="2" |[[Velar consonant|Velar]] |
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! rowspan="2" |[[Glottal consonant|Glottal]] |
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!<small>plain</small> !! <small>[[Palatalization (phonetics)|pal.]]</small> |
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|Prussian [language] || ''Prūsiskan'' |
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!<small>plain</small> !! <small>[[Palatalization (phonetics)|pal.]]</small> |
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!<small>plain</small> !! <small>[[Palatalization (phonetics)|pal.]]</small> |
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!<small>plain</small> !! <small>[[Palatalization (phonetics)|pal.]]</small> |
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|- |
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! rowspan="2" |[[Plosive]] |
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|Hello || ''Kaīls'' |
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!<small>[[Voicelessness|voiceless]]</small> |
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|{{IPA link|p}} |
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|{{IPA link|pʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|t}} |
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|{{IPA link|tʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|k}} |
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|{{IPA link|kʲ}} |
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!<small>[[Voice (phonetics)|voiced]]</small> |
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|Good morning || ''Kaīls Anksteīnai'' |
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|{{IPA link|b}} |
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|{{IPA link|bʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|d}} |
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|{{IPA link|dʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|ɡ}} |
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|{{IPA link|ɡʲ}} |
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! rowspan="2" |[[Fricative]] |
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|Good-bye || ''Ērdiw'' |
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![[Voicelessness|<small>voiceless</small>]] |
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| colspan="2"|{{IPA link|f}}{{efn|name=fh|The sounds {{IPA|/f/}} and {{IPA|/h/}} also existed in Old Prussian, but are disputed as to whether they are native to the language as they are non-native to Lithuanian and Latvian.{{r|Schmalstieg|page=28}}}} |
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|{{IPA link|s}} |
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|{{IPA link|sʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|ʃ}}{{efn|name=sch|Palato-alveolar fricatives {{IPA|[ʃ, ʒ]}} are recorded as well, usually with the [[German orthography]]-style {{angbr|sch}}.{{r|Schmalstieg|p=27}} They were allophones of {{IPA|/s/}} or {{IPA|/z/}} in Pomesanian, but distinct phonemes in Sambian.{{r|Rinkevicius|page=101}}}} |
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|{{IPA link|ʃʲ}}{{efn|name=sch}} |
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|{{IPA link|h}}{{efn|name=fh}} |
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![[Voice (phonetics)|<small>voiced</small>]] |
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|Thank you || ''Dīnka'' |
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|{{IPA link|v}} |
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|{{IPA link|vʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|z}} |
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|{{IPA link|zʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|ʒ}}{{efn|name=sch}} |
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|{{IPA link|ʒʲ}}{{efn|name=sch}} |
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! colspan="2" |[[Nasal consonant|Nasal]] |
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|How much? || ''Kelli?'' |
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|{{IPA link|m}} |
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|{{IPA link|mʲ}} |
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|{{IPA link|n}} |
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|{{IPA link|nʲ}} |
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! colspan="2" |[[Trill consonant|Trill]] |
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|Yes || ''Jā'' |
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|{{IPA link|r}} |
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|{{IPA link|rʲ}} |
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! colspan="2" |[[Approximant]] |
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|No || ''Ni'' |
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|Where is the bathroom? || ''Kwēi ast Spektāstuba?'' |
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|{{IPA link|l}} |
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|{{IPA link|lʲ}} |
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|(Generic toast) || ''Kaīls pas kaīls aīns per āntran'' |
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| colspan="2" |{{IPA link|j}} |
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|- |
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|Do you speak English? || ''Bilāi tū Ēngliskan?'' |
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{{notelist}} |
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There is said to have existed palatalization (i.e. {{IPA|[tʲ]}}, {{IPA|[dʲ]}}) among nearly all of the consonant sounds except for {{IPA|/j/}}, and possibly for {{IPA|/ʃ/}} and {{IPA|/ʒ/}}.{{r|Schmalstieg|p=26}}{{r|Dini|page=348}} Whether or not the palatalization was phonemic remains unclear.{{r|Rinkevicius|page=62}} |
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Prussian was a highly inflected language, as can be seen from the declination of the demonstrative pronoun ''stas'', "''that''". (Note that translators of the [[Teutonic Order]] frequently misused ''stas'' as an article for the word "''the''".) |
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Apart from the palatalizations Proto-Baltic consonants were almost completely preserved. The only changes postulated are turning Proto-Baltic {{IPA|/ʃ, ʒ/}} into Prussian {{IPA|/s, z/}} and subsequently changing Proto-Baltic {{IPA|/sj/}} into {{IPA|/ʃ/}}.{{r|Rinkevicius|pages=61{{Hyphen}}62}}{{r|Dini|pages=348{{Hyphen}}349}} |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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===Vowels=== |
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The following description is based on the phonological analysis by Schmalstieg:<ref name="Schmalstieg2005">{{cite journal|title=Vytautas Mažiulis. Prūsų kalbos istorinė gramatika: recenzija|trans-title=Vytautas Mažiulis. Historical grammar of the Prussian language: A review|journal=Baltu filoloģija|date=2005|volume=14|issue=1|first=William Riegel|last=Schmalstieg|publisher= Latvijas Universitāte|pages=159{{Hyphen}}163|language=en|issn=1691-0036}}</ref> |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | |
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! colspan="2" |[[Front vowel|Front]] |
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! colspan="2" |[[Central vowel|Central]] |
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! colspan="2" |[[Back vowel|Back]] |
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|- |
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!<small>short</small> !! <small>long</small> |
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! [[Grammatical case|Case]] |
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!<small>short</small> !! <small>long</small> |
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! [[masculine gender|m]].[[singular number|sg]]. |
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!<small>short</small> !! <small>long</small> |
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! [[feminine gender|f]].[[singular number|sg]]. |
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! [[neutral gender|n]].[[singular number|sg]]. |
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! [[masculine gender|m]].[[plural number|pl]]. |
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! [[feminine gender|f]].[[plural number|pl]]. |
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! [[neutral gender|n]].[[plural number|pl]]. |
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|- |
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!colspan="2" |[[High vowel|High]] |
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! [[Nominative]] |
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| align="center" |{{IPA|i}} |
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| stas |
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|align="center" |{{IPA|iː}} |
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| stāi |
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| stan |
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| stāi |
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| align="center" |{{IPA|u}} |
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| stās |
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| align="center" |{{IPA|uː}} |
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| stai |
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!colspan="2" |[[Mid vowel|Mid]] |
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! [[Genitive]] |
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|{{IPA|e}} |
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| stesse |
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|{{IPA|eː}} |
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| stesses |
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| stesse |
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| stēisan |
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| stēisan |
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|{{IPA|oː}} |
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| stēisan <!-- üg. stessan--> |
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|- |
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!colspan="2" |[[Low vowel|Low]] |
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! [[Dative]] |
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| stesmu |
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| stessei |
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|{{IPA|a}} |
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| stesmu ''or'' stesmā |
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|{{IPA|aː}} |
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| stēimans |
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| stēimans |
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| stēimans <!-- üg. stesmuns --> |
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|} |
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* {{IPA|/a, a:/}} could also have been realized as {{IPA|[ɔ, ɔ:]}} |
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* {{IPA|/oː/}} is not universally accepted, p.e. by Levin (1975)<ref>{{cite journal|journal=General Linguistics|volume=15|issue=3|pages=144–158|year=1975|first=Jules|last=Levin|title=Dynamic Linguistics and Baltic Historical Phonology|place=London, University Park|publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press}}</ref> |
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====Diphthongs==== |
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Schmalstieg proposes three native diphthongs:{{r|Schmalstieg|pp=19{{Hyphen}}20}} |
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center" |
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! |
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![[Front vowel|Front]] |
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![[Back vowel|Back]] |
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|- |
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! |
![[Mid vowel|Mid]] |
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|{{IPA|ei}} |
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| stan |
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| stan |
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|- align="center" |
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| stan ''or'' sta |
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![[Open vowel|Open]] |
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| stans |
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|{{IPA|ai}} |
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| stans |
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|{{IPA|au}} |
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| stans ''or'' stas |
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|} |
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* {{IPA|/au/}} may have also been realized as a mid-back diphthong {{IPA|[eu]}} after palatalized consonants. |
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Prussian also possessed a [[vocative case]]. |
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* {{IPA|/ui/}} occurs in the word {{lang|prg|cuylis}}, which is thought to be a loanword. |
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==Grammar== |
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With other remains being merely word lists, the grammar of Old Prussian is reconstructed chiefly on the basis of the three Catechisms.<ref name="Berneker">{{cite book|first=Erich|last=Berneker|author-link=Erich Berneker|title=Die preußische Sprache|trans-title=The Prussian language|language=de|date=2019|orig-date=1896|location=Berlin, Boston|publisher=De Gruyter Mouton|isbn= 9783111474861}}</ref>{{rp|ix}} |
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===Nouns=== |
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====Gender==== |
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Old Prussian preserved the Proto-Baltic neuter. Therefore, it had three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter).<ref name="Nesselmann">{{cite book|publisher=De Gruyter Mouton|title=Die Sprache der alten Preußen an ihren Überresten erklärt|trans-title=The language of the old Prussians explained using its remains|first=Georg H. F.|last=Nesselmann|author-link= |
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Georg Heinrich Ferdinand Nesselmann|language=de|orig-date=1845|date=2018|publication-place=Berlin, Boston|isbn=9783111497969}}</ref>{{rp|pages=41{{Hyphen}}42; 47}}<ref name="HGOP">{{cite book|first=Vytautas|last=Mažiulis|author-link=Vytautas Mažiulis|translator-first=Mykolas Letas|translator-last=Palmaitis|title=Historical grammar of Old Prussian|isbn= 978-609-8122-90-9|place=Vilnius |year=2004|publisher=Vilniaus universiteto leidykla}}</ref>{{rp|page=40}}{{r|Dini|pages=355{{Hyphen}}356}} |
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====Number==== |
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Most scholars agree that there are two numbers, singular and plural, in Old Prussian,{{r|Nesselmann|pages=41{{Hyphen}}42; 47}}{{r|HGOP|page=40}}{{r|Dini|page=353}} while some consider remnants of a dual identifiable in the existent corpus.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Enzelīns |first1=Jānis |title=Senprūšu valoda: Ievads, gramatika un leksika |date=1943 |publisher=Universitātes apgāds |location=Riga |pages=76, 80, 83}}</ref><ref>{{cite conference | author-first=Jules |author-last=Levin |editor-first1=Arvids Jr.|editor-last1=Ziedonis|editor-first2=Jaan|editor-last2=Puhvel|editor-first3=Rimvydas|editor-last3=Šilbajoris|editor-last4=Valgemäe|editor-first4=Mardi|title=-ja stems and -e stems in the Elbing Vocabulary|book-title=Baltic Literature and Linguistics|place=Columbus|conference=Conference on Baltic studies|publisher=Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies|pages=189{{Hyphen}}196|year=1973|oclc=867673}}</ref>{{r|Berneker|page=198}} |
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====Cases==== |
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There is no consensus on the number of [[case (grammar)|cases]] that Old Prussian had, and at least four can be determined with certainty: nominative, genitive, accusative and dative, with different [[suffix]]es.{{r|Berneker|pages=171{{Hyphen}}197}}{{r|Dini|page=356}}{{r|HGOP|page=40}} Most scholars agree, that there are traces of a [[vocative case]], such as in the phrase ''{{lang|prg|O Deiwe Rikijs}}'' 'O God the Lord', reflecting the inherited [[Proto-Indo-European language|PIE]] vocative ending *''{{PIE|-e}}'',{{r|Berneker|pages=251}}{{r|Rinkevicius|page=109}} differing from nominative forms in o-stem nouns only.{{r|Dini|page=356}} |
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Some scholars find instrumental forms,{{r|Berneker|page=197}} while the traditional view is that no instrumental case existed in Old Prussian.{{r|Dini|page=356}} There could be some locative forms, e.g. {{lang|prg|bītai}} ('in the evening').{{r|Dini|page=356}}<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mažiulis |first1=Vytautas |author-link=Vytautas Mažiulis |title=Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas |date=1988 |publisher=Mokslas |location=Vilnius |page=144 |edition=1 |language=lt |volume=1 |trans-title=Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian }}</ref> |
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====Noun stems==== |
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Declensional classes were ''a''-stems (also called ''o''-stems), ''(i)ja''-stems (also called ''(i)jo''-stems), ''ā''-stems (feminine), ''ē''-stems (feminine), ''i''-stems, ''u''-stems, and consonant-stems.{{r|Rinkevicius|pages=66{{Hyphen}}80}}{{r|HGOP|pages=41{{Hyphen}}62}}{{r|Dini|pages=357}}{{r|Schmalstieg|pages=42{{Hyphen}}43}} Some also list ''ī''/''jā''-stems as a separate stem,{{r|Rinkevicius|pages=66{{Hyphen}}80}}{{r|HGOP|pages=41{{Hyphen}}62}} while others include ''jā''-stems into ''ā''-stems and do not mention ''ī''-stems at all.{{r|Schmalstieg|page=37}} |
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===Adjectives=== |
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There were three adjective stems (''a''-stems, ''i''-stems, ''u''-stems), of which only the first agreed with the noun in gender.{{r|Dini|page=360}}{{r|HGOP|pages=63{{Hyphen}}65}} |
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There was a comparative and a superlative form.{{r|HGOP|pages=65{{Hyphen}}66}}{{r|Dini|pages=360{{Hyphen}}361}} |
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===Verbal morphology=== |
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When it comes to verbal morphology present, future and past tense are attested, as well as [[optative]] forms (used with imperative or permissive forms of verbs), infinitive, and four participles (active/passive present/past).{{r|Berneker|pages=211{{Hyphen}}233}} |
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==Orthography== |
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The orthography varies depending on the author. |
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As the authors of many sources were themselves not proficient in Old Prussian, they wrote the words as they heard them using the orthographical conventions of their mother tongue. |
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For example, the use of {{Grapheme|s}} for both {{IPA|/s/}} and {{IPA|/z/}} is based on German orthography. |
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Additionally, the writers misunderstood some phonemes and, when copying manuscripts, they added further mistakes.{{r|Rinkevicius|p=63}}{{r|britannica.com}}{{r|Dini|page=337}} |
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==Corpus of Old Prussian== |
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[[File:The epigram of Basel - oldest known inscription in Prussian language and Baltic language in general, middle of 14th c.jpg|thumb|right|upright|The epigram of Basel – oldest known inscription in Prussian language and Baltic language in general, middle of 14th century]] |
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===Onomastics=== |
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There was Prussian toponomy and hydronomy within the territory of (Baltic) Prussia. Georg Gerullis undertook the first basic study of these names in ''{{lang|de|Die altpreußischen Ortsnamen}}'' ('The Old Prussian Place-names'), written and published with the help of Walter de Gruyter, in 1922.{{r|GerullisPlace}} |
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Another source are personal names.<ref name="Trautmann">{{cite book|first=Reinhold|last=Trautmann|author-link=Reinhold Trautmann|title=Die altpreußischen Personennamen|trans-title=The Old Prussian personal names|language=de|publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht|place=Göttingen|orig-date=1925|date=1974|isbn=3-525-27302-9}}</ref> |
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===Evidence from other languages=== |
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Further sources for Prussian words are Vernacularisms in the German dialects of East and West Prussia, as well as words of Old Curonian origin in Latvian and West-Baltic vernacularisms in Lithuanian and Belarusian.{{r|Klussis|p=4}}<ref>{{cite journal|first=Walther|last=Mitzka|title=Altpreußisches|trans-title=Old Prussian|language=de|journal=Zeitschrift für vergleichende Sprachforschung auf dem Gebiet der Indogermanischen Sprachen|publisher=Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht|date=1924|issue=1/2|volume=52|pages=129–147|jstor=40799583}}</ref> |
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===Vocabularies=== |
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Two Prussian vocabularies are known. The older one by [[Simon Grunau]] (Simon Grunovius), a historian of the [[Teutonic Knights]], encompasses 100 words (in strongly varying versions). He also recorded an expression: {{lang|prg|sta nossen rickie, nossen rickie}} ('This (is) our lord, our lord'). The vocabulary is part of the ''{{lang|de|Preussische Chronik}}'' written {{circa|1517–1526}}.{{r|Trautmann1910|pages=XXV{{Hyphen}}XXVI}} |
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The second one is the so-called Elbing Vocabulary, which consists of 802 thematically sorted words and their German equivalents. Peter Holcwesscher from [[Malbork|Marienburg]] copied the manuscript around 1400; the original dates from the beginning of the 14th or the end of the 13th century. It was found in 1825 by Fr Neumann among other manuscripts acquired by him from the heritage of the Elbing merchant A. Grübnau; it was thus dubbed the ''{{lang|la|Codex Neumannianus}}''.{{r|Klussis|page=7{{Hyphen}}8}}{{r|Schmalstieg|p=4}} |
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===Fragmentary texts=== |
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There are separate words found in various historical documents.{{r|Klussis|p=4}} |
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The following fragments are commonly thought of as Prussian, but are probably actually [[Lithuanian language|Lithuanian]] (at least the adage, however, has been argued to be genuinely West Baltic, only an otherwise unattested dialect<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hill |first1=Eugen |
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|title=Die sigmatischen Modus-Bildungen der indogermanischen Sprachen. Erste Abhandlung: Das baltische Futur und seine Verwandten |journal=International Journal of Diachronic Linguistics and Linguistic Reconstruction |date=2004 |issue=1 |volume=1 |pages=69–171 |url=https://www.academia.edu/3884660 |access-date=29 August 2014 |language=de|trans-title=The sigmatic modus formation in Indo-European languages. 1st Treatise: The Baltic future and its relatives}} |
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</ref>): |
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# An adage of 1583, ''{{lang|bat|Dewes does dantes, Dewes does geitka}}'': the form ''{{lang|prg|does}}'' in the second instance corresponds to Lithuanian future tense ''{{lang|lt|duos}}'' ('will give') |
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# ''{{lang|bat|Trencke, trencke!}}'' ('Strike! Strike!') |
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====Fragmentary Lord's Prayer==== |
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Additionally, there is one manuscript fragment of the first words of the {{lang|la|[[Pater Noster]]}} in Prussian, from the beginning of the 15th century:{{r|Klussis|p=437}} |
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''{{lang|prg|<poem>Towe Nüsze kås esse andangonsün |
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swyntins</poem>}}'' |
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====Maletius' Sudovian Book==== |
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[[Vytautas Mažiulis]] lists another few fragmentary texts recorded in several versions by Hieronymus Maletius in the [[Sudovian Book]] in the middle of the 16th century. Palmaitis regards them as Sudovian proper.{{r|Klussis|p=7; 437}} |
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#''{{lang|prg|Beigeite beygeyte peckolle}}'' ('Run, run, devils!') |
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#''{{lang|prg|Kails naussen gnigethe}}'' ('Hello our friend!') |
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#''{{lang|prg|Kails poskails ains par antres}}'' – a drinking toast, reconstructed as ''{{lang|prg|Kaīls pas kaīls, aīns per āntran}}'' ('A cheer for a cheer, a tit for tat', literally: 'A healthy one after a healthy one, one after another!') |
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#''{{lang|prg|Kellewesze perioth, Kellewesze perioth}}'' ('A carter drives here, a carter drives here!') |
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#''{{lang|prg|Ocho moy myle schwante panicke}}'' – also recorded as ''{{lang|prg|O hoho Moi mile swente Pannike}}'', ''{{lang|prg|O ho hu Mey mile swenthe paniko}}'', ''{{lang|prg|O mues miles schwante Panick}}'' ('Oh my dear holy fire!') |
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===Complete texts=== |
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In addition to the texts listed beneath, there are several colophons written by Prussian scriptors who worked in Prague and in the court of Lithuanian duke [[Butautas|Butautas Kęstutaitis]]. |
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====Basel Epigram==== |
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The so-called Basel Epigram is the oldest written Prussian sentence (1369).{{r|Klussis|pages=33{{Hyphen}}35}}<ref>{{cite web| url = http://www.schaeken.nl/lu/research/online/editions/baselepigram/| title = The Old Prussian Basel Epigram|first=Jos|last=Schaeken |year=2003}}</ref> It reads: {{Verse translation |lang=prg |
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| |
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Kayle rekyse |
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thoneaw labonache thewelyse |
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Eg koyte poyte |
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nykoyte pênega doyte |
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| |
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Cheers, Sir! |
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You are no longer a good little comrade |
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if you want to drink |
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(but) do not want to give a penny! |
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}} |
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This jocular inscription was most probably made by a Prussian student studying in [[Prague]] ([[Charles University in Prague|Charles University]]); found by Stephen McCluskey (1974) in manuscript MS F.V.2 (book of physics ''{{lang|la|Questiones super Meteororum}}'' by [[Nicholas Oresme]]), fol. 63r, stored in the [[Basel University]] library. |
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====Catechisms==== |
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The longest texts preserved in Old Prussian are three Catechisms printed in {{lang|de|[[Königsberg]]|italic=no}} in 1545, 1545, and 1561 respectively. The first two consist of only six pages of text in Old Prussian – the second one being a correction of the first. The third catechism, or ''Enchiridion'', consists of 132 pages of text, and is a translation of [[Luther's Small Catechism]] by a German cleric called Abel Will, with his Prussian assistant Paul Megott. Will himself knew little or no Old Prussian, and his Prussian interpreter was probably illiterate, but according to Will spoke Old Prussian quite well. The text itself is mainly a word-for-word translation, and Will phonetically recorded Megott's oral translation. Because of this, the ''Enchiridion'' exhibits many irregularities, such as the lack of case agreement in phrases involving an [[article (linguistics)|article]] and a [[noun]], which followed word-for-word German originals as opposed to native Old Prussian syntax.{{r|Trautmann1910|page=XXVII}}{{r|Klussis|pages=8{{Hyphen}}9}} |
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====Trace of Crete==== |
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The "Trace of Crete" is a short poem added by a Baltic writer in [[Chania]] to a manuscript of the '' Logica Parva'' by [[Paul of Venice]].<ref>{{unbulleted list citebundle|{{cite journal |last1=Kessler |first1=Stephan |last2=Mossman |first2=Stephen |year=2013 |title=Ein Fund aus dem Jahre 1440: Ein bisher unbekannter Text in einer baltischen Sprache |journal=Archivum Lithuanicum |volume=15 |pages=511–534 |url=https://www.academia.edu/8450574|language=de|trans-title=Find from the year 1440: A hitherto unknown text in a Baltic language}} |
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|{{cite journal |last1=Lemeshkin |first1=Ilja |title=Lituanica aliter |url=https://www.academia.edu/41917389 |journal=Billēmai Bhe Ersinnimai |date=January 2019 |access-date=12 November 2020}}}}</ref> |
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{{Verse translation |lang=prg |
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| |
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Atonaige maian meilan am ne wede maianwargan |
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Thaure ne ſtonais po pieſ pievſſenabdolenai galei ragai |
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Stonais po leipen zaidiant acha peda bete medde |
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| |
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Stand under the May tree willingly/dear – the May tree does not bring you to misery |
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Aurochs, do not stand under the pine tree – horns bring death, |
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Stand under the blooming linden tree – the bee brings honey here. |
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}} |
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==Sample texts== |
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'''Lord's Prayer in Old Prussian''' (from the so-called "1st Catechism"){{r|Klussis|pages=118, 122}}{{r|Nesselmann|page=4}} |
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{{lang|prg|<poem>Thawe nuson kas tu asse andangon. |
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Swintits wirst twais emmens. |
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Pergeis twais laeims. |
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Twais quaits audasseisin na semmey, key audangon. |
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Nusan deininan geittin deis numons schindeinan. |
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Bha atwerpeis numans nuson auschantins, kay mas atwerpimay nuson auschautenikamans. |
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Bha ny wedais mans enperbandan. |
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Sclait is rankeis mans assa wargan. Amen</poem>}} |
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'''Lord's Prayer after [[Simon Grunau]] (Curonian)'''{{r|Dini|pages=297}}<ref>{{cite journal|last=Schmid|first=Wolfgang P.|year=1962|title=Zu Simon Grunaus Vaterunser|trans-title=On Simon Grunau's Lord's Prayer|language=de|place=Berlin|journal=Indogermanische Forschung|pages=261–273|issue=67}}</ref>{{r|Nesselmann|page=XV}} |
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{{lang|xcu|<poem> |
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Nossen thewes cur tu es delbes |
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sweytz gischer tho wes wardes |
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penag munis tholbe mystlastilbi |
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tolpes prahes girkade delbeszisne tade symmes semmes worsunii |
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dodi mommys an nosse igdemas mayse |
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unde gaytkas pames mumys nusze noszeginu cademes pametam musen prettane kans |
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newede munis lawnā padomā |
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swalbadi munis nowusse loyne Jhesus amen.</poem>}} |
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'''Lord's Prayer after Prätorius (Curonian)'''<ref name="Mithridates">{{cite book |title=Mithridates oder Allgemeine Sprachenkunde, mit dem Vater Unser als Sprachprobe in bey nahe fünfhundert Sprachen und Mundarten|volume=2|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-bs4AQAAMAAJ&q=Thewes+nossen%2C+cur+tu+es+Debbes&pg=PA703 |chapter=VII. Germanisch-Slavischer oder Lettischer Volksstamm |first=Johann Christoph |last=Adelung |author-link=Johann Christoph Adelung |editor-first=Johann Severin |editor-last=Vater |editor-link=Johann Severin Vater |year=1809 |location=Berlin |publisher={{ill|Christian Friedrich Voß|de|lt=Vossische Buchhandlung}} |trans-chapter=VII. The Germanic-Slavic or Latvian tribe |access-date=21 November 2022|trans-title=Mithridates or General linguistics using the Lord's Prayer in almost fivehundert languages and dialects|language=de}}</ref>{{rp|p=703}}{{efn|[[Johann Christoph Adelung|Adelung]] simply says "der Prätorius". This is most likely [[Matthäus Prätorius]]; because two pages earlier Adelung refers with approval to the writings of both Hartknoch and Prätorius,{{r|Mithridates|p=701}} and [[Christoph Hartknoch]] worked with Matthäus Prätorius.}} |
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{{lang|bat|<poem>Thewes nossen, cur tu es Debbes, |
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Schwisch gesger thowes Wardes; |
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Pena mynis thowe Wiswalstybe; |
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Toppes Patres gir iat Delbeszisne, tade tymnes senjnes Worsinny; |
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Annosse igdenas Mayse dodi mums szon Dien; |
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Pamutale mums musu Noschegun, kademas pametan nousson Pyktainekans; |
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No wede numus panam Paadomam; |
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Swalbadi names ne wust Tayne.</poem>}} |
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'''Lord's Prayer in Lithuanian dialect of [[Insterburg]]''' (Prediger Hennig){{r|Mithridates|page=707}} |
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{{lang|olt-RU|<poem>Tewe musu, kurs essi Danguje, |
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Buk szwenczamas Wardas tawo, |
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Ateik tawo Karalijste; |
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Buk tawo Walle kaip Danguje, taip ir an Zemes; |
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Duna musu dieniszka duk mums ir sze Diena; |
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Atleisk mums musu Kaltes, kaip mes atoeidzjam sawo Kaltiems; |
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Ne wesk mus Pagundima; |
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Bet gelbek mus nu Pikto.</poem>}} |
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'''Lord's Prayer in Lithuanian dialect of [[Nadruvia]], corrupted''' (Simon Praetorius){{r|Mithridates|p=708}} |
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{{lang|olt-RU|<poem>Tiewe musu, kursa tu essi Debsissa, |
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Szwints tiest taws Wards; |
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Akeik mums twa Walstybe; |
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Tawas Praats buk kaip Debbesissa taibant wirszu Sjemes; |
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Musu dieniszka May e duk mums ir szen Dienan; |
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Atmesk mums musu Griekus, kaip mes pammetam musi Pardokonteimus; |
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Ne te wedde mus Baidykle; |
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Bet te passarge mus mi wissa Louna (Pikta)</poem>}} |
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==See also== |
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* [[High Prussian dialect]] |
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* [[Low Prussian dialect]] |
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* [[Masurian dialects]] |
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==Notes== |
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{{notelist}} |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
{{Reflist}} |
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== Literature == |
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==Literature== |
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*G. H. F. Nesselmann, Thesaurus linguae Prussicae, Berlin, 1873. |
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* Johann Christoph Adelung, Johann Severin Vater: Mithridates oder allgemeine Sprachenkunde mit dem Vater Unser als Sprachprobe in beynahe fünfhundert Sprachen und Mundarten, vol. 2, Berlin 1809, p. 700ff. ([https://books.google.com/books?id=0DdT-xoT080C&pg=PA700]) |
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*E. Berneker, Die preussische Sprache, Strassburg, 1896. |
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* Johann Severin Vater: Die Sprache der alten Preußen: Einleitung, Ueberreste, Sprachlehre, Wörterbuch, Braunschweig 1821 |
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*R. Trautmann, Die altpreussischen Sprachdenkmäler, Göttingen, 1910. |
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* [[Georg Heinrich Ferdinand Nesselmann|G. H. F. Nesselmann]], Forschungen auf dem Gebiete der preußischen Sprache, 2. Beitrag: Königsberg, 1871. |
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*G. Gerullis, Die altpreussischen Ortsnamen, Berlin-Leipzig, 1922. |
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* [[Georg Heinrich Ferdinand Nesselmann|G. H. F. Nesselmann]], Thesaurus linguae Prussicae, Berlin, 1873. |
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*R. Trautmann, Die altpreussischen Personnennamen, Göttingen, 1925. |
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* [[Erich Berneker|E. Berneker]], Die preussische Sprache, Strassburg, 1896 ([https://books.google.com/books?id=RhPlJWl5XB8C]). |
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*J. Endzelīns, Senprūšu valoda. – Gr. Darbu izlase, IV sēj., 2. daļa, Rīga, 1982. 9.-351. lpp. |
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* [[Reinhold Trautmann|R. Trautmann]], Die altpreussischen Sprachdenkmäler, Göttingen, 1910. |
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*V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos paminklai, Vilnius, t. I 1966, t. II 1981. |
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* Wijk, Nicolaas van, [[iarchive:altpreussichestu00wijk|Altpreussiche Studien : Beiträge zur baltischen und zur vergleichenden indogermanischen Grammatik]], Haag, 1918. |
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*W. R. Schmalstieg, An Old Prussian Grammar, University Park and London, 1974. |
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* G. Gerullis, Die altpreussischen Ortsnamen, Berlin-Leipzig, 1922. |
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*W. R. Schmalstieg, Studies in Old Prussian, University Park and London, 1976. |
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* [[Reinhold Trautmann|R. Trautmann]], Die altpreussischen Personnennamen, Göttingen, 1925. |
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*V. Toporov, Prusskij jazyk: Slovar', A - L, Moskva, 1975-1990 (nebaigtas, not finished). |
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* G. Gerullis, Zur Sprache der Sudauer-Jadwinger, in Festschrift A. Bezzenberger, Göttingen 1927 |
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*V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas, Vilnius, t. I-IV, 1988-1997. |
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* W. R. Schmalstieg, An Old Prussian Grammar, University Park and London, 1974. |
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*M. Biolik, Zuflüsse zur Ostsee zwischen unterer Weichsel und Pregel, Stuttgart, 1989. |
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* W. R. Schmalstieg, Studies in Old Prussian, University Park and London, 1976. |
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*R. Przybytek, Ortsnamen baltischer Herkunft im südlichen Teil Ostpreussens, Stuttgart, 1993. |
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* V. Toporov, Prusskij jazyk: Slovar', A – L, Moskva, 1975–1990 (not finished). |
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*M. Biolik, Die Namen der stehenden Gewässer im Zuflussgebiet des Pregel, Stuttgart, 1993. |
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* L. Kilian: Zu Herkunft und Sprache der Prußen Wörterbuch Deutsch–Prußisch, Bonn 1980 |
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*M. Biolik, Die Namen der fließenden Gewässer im Flussgebiet des Pregel, Stuttgart, 1996. |
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* (In Lithuanian) V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos paminklai, Vilnius, t. I 1966, t. II 1981. |
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*G. Blažienė, Die baltischen Ortsnamen in Samland, Stuttgart, 2000. |
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* J. Endzelīns, Senprūšu valoda. – Gr. Darbu izlase, IV sēj., 2. daļa, Rīga, 1982. 9.-351. lpp. |
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*A. Kaukienė, Prūsų kalba, Klaipėda, 2002. |
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*V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos |
* [[Vytautas Mažiulis|V. Mažiulis]], Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas, Vilnius, t. I-IV, 1988–1997. |
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* M. Biolik, Zuflüsse zur Ostsee zwischen unterer Weichsel und Pregel, Stuttgart, 1989. |
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*LEXICON BORVSSICVM VETVS. Concordantia et lexicon inversum. / Bibliotheca Klossiana I, Universitas Vytauti Magni, Kaunas, 2007. |
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* R. Przybytek, Ortsnamen baltischer Herkunft im südlichen Teil Ostpreussens, Stuttgart, 1993. |
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*OLD PRUSSIAN WRITTEN MONUMENTS. Facsimile, Transliteration, Reconstruction, Comments. / Bibliotheca Klossiana II, Universitas Vytauti Magni / Lithuanians' World Center, Kaunas, 2007. |
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* R. Przybytek, Hydronymia Europaea, Ortsnamen baltischer Herkunft im südlichen Teil Ostpreußens, Stuttgart 1993 |
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* M. Biolik, Die Namen der stehenden Gewässer im Zuflussgebiet des Pregel, Stuttgart, 1993. |
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* M. Biolik, Die Namen der fließenden Gewässer im Flussgebiet des Pregel, Stuttgart, 1996. |
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* G. Blažienė, Die baltischen Ortsnamen in Samland, Stuttgart, 2000. |
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* A. Kaukienė, Prūsų kalba, Klaipėda, 2002. |
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* [[Vytautas Mažiulis|V. Mažiulis]], Prūsų kalbos istorinė gramatika, Vilnius, 2004. |
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* LEXICON BORVSSICVM VETVS. Concordantia et lexicon inversum. / Bibliotheca Klossiana I, Universitas Vytauti Magni, Kaunas, 2007. |
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* OLD PRUSSIAN WRITTEN MONUMENTS. Facsimile, Transliteration, Reconstruction, Comments. / Bibliotheca Klossiana II, Universitas Vytauti Magni / Lithuanians' World Center, Kaunas, 2007. |
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* (In Lithuanian) V. Rinkevičius, Prūsistikos pagrindai (Fundamentals of Prussistics). 2015. |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{Commons category|Prussian language|Old Prussian language}} |
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* [http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/index.htm Studies in Prussian language, history, archeology and culture, experimental revival of Prussian, the fate of Baltic Prussia and Baltic Prussians, bibliograhy and links] |
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{{Incubator|code= prg}} |
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*[http://poshka.bizland.com/prussian/reconstructions.htm Prussian-German-English dictionary] |
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{{wiktionary category}} |
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*[http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Engl.pdf Dictionary of recovered and reconstructed Prussian] |
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*[http://www. |
* [http://www.prusistika.flf.vu.lt/ Database of the Old Prussian Linguistic Heritage] (Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian (in Lithuanian) and full textual corpus) |
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* [http://www.kortlandt.nl/editions/ Frederik Kortlandt: Electronic text editions] (contains transcriptions of Old Prussian manuscript texts) |
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*[http://forum.prusai.org/ Discussion forum in Prussian] |
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* [https://sitti.vdu.lt/prussian/GrG.pdf Vocabulary by friar Simon Grunau]<!-- old: [http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/GrG.pdf] --> |
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*[http://prusa.strefa.pl/nertiks.html Nērtiks website (in Prussian)] |
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* [https://sitti.vdu.lt/prussian/Elbin.pdf Elbing Vocabulary]<!-- old: [http://donelaitis.vdu.lt/prussian/Elbin.pdf] --> |
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*[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=prg Prussian language on Ethnologue] |
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*[http://prusa.strefa.pl/tautaskarti.html Map of former Old Prussian language area, with placenames in Old Prussian] |
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*[http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Requests_for_new_languages/Wikipedia_Prussian Discussion on possibiity of having a Prussian Wikipedia] |
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*[http://www.hab.de/ausstellung/postille/expo-2.htm Bilingual catechism (first page) of 1545] |
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{{Baltic languages}} |
{{Baltic languages}} |
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*[http://209.85.173.104/search?q=cache:e3NfRHojAqsJ:www.vaidilute.com/books/gimbutas/gimbutas-01.html+tributary+prussia&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=5&gl=us M. Gimbutas Map Western Balts-Old Prussians] |
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Latest revision as of 19:05, 20 October 2024
Old Prussian | |
---|---|
Prūsiskai[1][2]: 387 Prūsiska bilā (revived)[3] | |
Region | Prussia |
Ethnicity | Baltic Prussians |
Extinct | Early 18th century[4] |
Revival | 2 L1 speakers (2021)[5]: 4–7 50 L2 speakers (no date)[6] |
Indo-European
| |
Latin | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | prg |
prg.html | |
Glottolog | prus1238 |
Linguasphere | 54-AAC-a |
Old Prussian is an extinct West Baltic language belonging to the Baltic branch of the Indo-European languages, which was once spoken by the Old Prussians, the Baltic peoples of the Prussian region. The language is called Old Prussian to avoid confusion with the German dialects of Low Prussian and High Prussian and with the adjective Prussian as it relates to the later German state. Old Prussian began to be written down in the Latin alphabet in about the 13th century, and a small amount of literature in the language survives. In modern times, there has been a revival movement of Old Prussian, and there are families which use Old Prussian as their first language.[5]: 4–7
Classification
[edit]Old Prussian is an Indo-European language belonging to the Baltic branch. It is considered to be a Western Baltic language.
Old Prussian was closely related to the other extinct West Baltic languages, namely Sudovian, West Galindian[7] and possibly Skalvian and Old Curonian.[8]: 33 [9] Other linguists consider Western Galindian and Skalvian to be Prussian dialects.[10]: 15
It is related to the East Baltic languages such as Lithuanian and Latvian, and more distantly related to Slavic. Compare the words for 'land': Old Prussian semmē [zemē], Latvian: zeme, Lithuanian: žemė, Russian: земля́, (zemljá) and Polish: ziemia.[citation needed]
Old Prussian had loanwords from Slavic languages (e.g., Old Prussian curtis [kurtis] 'hound', like Lithuanian kùrtas and Latvian kur̃ts, cognate with Slavic (compare Ukrainian: хорт, khort; Polish: chart; Czech: chrt)), as well as a few borrowings from Germanic, including from Gothic (e.g., Old Prussian ylo 'awl' as with Lithuanian ýla, Latvian īlens) and from Scandinavian languages.[11]
Influence on other languages
[edit]Germanic
[edit]The Low German language spoken in Prussia (or West Prussia and East Prussia), called Low Prussian (cf. High Prussian, High German),[12] preserved a number of Baltic Prussian words, such as Kurp, from the Old Prussian kurpe, for shoe in contrast to common Low German: Schoh (Standard German Schuh),[13] as did the High Prussian Oberland subdialect.[14]
Until the 1938 changing of place names in East Prussia, Old Prussian river- and place-names, such as Tawe and Tawellningken, could still be found.[15][16][17]: 137
Polish
[edit]One of the hypotheses regarding the origin of mazurzenie – a phonological merger of dentialveolar and postalveolar sibilants in many Polish dialects – states that it originated as a feature of Polonized Old Prussians in Masuria (see Masurian dialects) and spread from there.[18]
History
[edit]Original territory
[edit]In addition to Prussia proper, the original territory of the Old Prussians may have included eastern parts of Pomerelia (some parts of the region east of the Vistula River). The language may also have been spoken much further east and south in what became Polesia and part of Podlasie, before conquests by Rus and Poles starting in the 10th century and the German colonisation of the area starting in the 12th century.[8]: 23 [19]: 324
Decline
[edit]With the conquest of the Old Prussian territory by the Teutonic Knights in the 13th century, and the subsequent influx of Polish, Lithuanian and especially German speakers, Old Prussian experienced a 400-year-long decline as an "oppressed language of an oppressed population".[20]: VII Groups of people from Germany, Poland,[21]: 115 Lithuania, Scotland,[22] England,[23] and Austria (see Salzburg Protestants) found refuge in Prussia during the Protestant Reformation and thereafter.[5]: 1 Old Prussian ceased to be spoken probably around the beginning of the 18th century,[4] because many of its remaining speakers died in the famines and the bubonic plague outbreak which harrowed the East Prussian countryside and towns from 1709 until 1711.[24]
Revitalization
[edit]In the 1980s, linguists Vladimir Toporov and Vytautas Mažiulis started reconstructing the Prussian language as a scientific project and a humanitarian gesture. Some enthusiasts thereafter began to revive the language based on their reconstruction.[5]: 3–4
Most current speakers live in Germany, Poland, Lithuania and Kaliningrad (Russia). Additionally, a few children are native in Revived Prussian.[5]: 4–7 [25]
Today, there are websites, online dictionaries, learning apps and games for Revived Prussian, and one children's book – Antoine de Saint-Exupéry's The Little Prince – was translated into Revived Prussian by Piotr Szatkowski (Pīteris Šātkis) and published by the Prusaspirā Society in 2015.[5]: 4–7 [25] Moreover, some bands use Revived Prussian, most notably in the Kaliningrad Oblast by the bands Romowe Rikoito,[26] Kellan[27] and Āustras Laīwan, as well as in Lithuania by Kūlgrinda on their 2005 album Prūsų Giesmės ('Prussian Hymns'),[28] and Latvia by Rasa Ensemble in 1988[29] and Valdis Muktupāvels in his 2005 oratorio "Pārcēlātājs Pontifex" featuring several parts sung in Prussian.[30]
Dialects
[edit]The Elbing Vocabulary and the Catechisms display systematical differences in phonology, vocabulary and grammar. Some scholars postulate that this is due to them being recordings of different dialects:[20]: XXI–XXII Pomesanian[10]: 25–89 and Sambian.[10]: 90–220
Phonetical distinctions are: Pom. ē is Samb. ī (sweta- : swīta- 'world'); Pom. ō, Samb. ū after a labial (mōthe [mōte] : mūti 'mother') or Pom. ō, Samb. ā (tōwis : tāws 'father'; brōte : brāti 'brother'), which influences the nominative suffixes of feminine ā-stems (crauyō [kraujō] : krawia 'blood'). The nominative suffixes of the masculine o-stems are weakened to -is in Pomesanian; in Sambian they are syncopated (deywis : deiws 'god').
Vocabulary differences encompass Pom. smoy [zmoy] (cf. Lith. žmuo) , Samb. wijrs 'man'; Pom. wayklis, Samb. soūns 'son' and Pom. samien, Samb. laucks [lauks] 'field'. The neuter gender is more often found in Pomesianan than in Sambian.
Others argue that the Catechisms are written in a Yatvingized Prussian. The differences noted above could therefore be explained as being features of a different West Baltic language Yatvingian/Sudovian.[31]
Phonology
[edit]Consonants
[edit]The Prussian language is described to have the following consonants:[32]: 16–28 [10]: 62
Labial | Dental/ Alveolar |
Post- alveolar |
Velar | Glottal | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
plain | pal. | plain | pal. | plain | pal. | plain | pal. | |||
Plosive | voiceless | p | pʲ | t | tʲ | k | kʲ | |||
voiced | b | bʲ | d | dʲ | ɡ | ɡʲ | ||||
Fricative | voiceless | f[a] | s | sʲ | ʃ[b] | ʃʲ[b] | h[a] | |||
voiced | v | vʲ | z | zʲ | ʒ[b] | ʒʲ[b] | ||||
Nasal | m | mʲ | n | nʲ | ||||||
Trill | r | rʲ | ||||||||
Approximant | l | lʲ | j |
- ^ a b The sounds /f/ and /h/ also existed in Old Prussian, but are disputed as to whether they are native to the language as they are non-native to Lithuanian and Latvian.[32]: 28
- ^ a b c d Palato-alveolar fricatives [ʃ, ʒ] are recorded as well, usually with the German orthography-style ⟨sch⟩.[32]: 27 They were allophones of /s/ or /z/ in Pomesanian, but distinct phonemes in Sambian.[10]: 101
There is said to have existed palatalization (i.e. [tʲ], [dʲ]) among nearly all of the consonant sounds except for /j/, and possibly for /ʃ/ and /ʒ/.[32]: 26 [19]: 348 Whether or not the palatalization was phonemic remains unclear.[10]: 62
Apart from the palatalizations Proto-Baltic consonants were almost completely preserved. The only changes postulated are turning Proto-Baltic /ʃ, ʒ/ into Prussian /s, z/ and subsequently changing Proto-Baltic /sj/ into /ʃ/.[10]: 61–62 [19]: 348–349
Vowels
[edit]The following description is based on the phonological analysis by Schmalstieg:[33]
Front | Central | Back | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
short | long | short | long | short | long | ||
High | i | iː | u | uː | |||
Mid | e | eː | oː | ||||
Low | a | aː |
- /a, a:/ could also have been realized as [ɔ, ɔ:]
- /oː/ is not universally accepted, p.e. by Levin (1975)[34]
Diphthongs
[edit]Schmalstieg proposes three native diphthongs:[32]: 19–20
Front | Back | |
---|---|---|
Mid | ei | |
Open | ai | au |
- /au/ may have also been realized as a mid-back diphthong [eu] after palatalized consonants.
- /ui/ occurs in the word cuylis, which is thought to be a loanword.
Grammar
[edit]With other remains being merely word lists, the grammar of Old Prussian is reconstructed chiefly on the basis of the three Catechisms.[35]: ix
Nouns
[edit]Gender
[edit]Old Prussian preserved the Proto-Baltic neuter. Therefore, it had three genders (masculine, feminine, neuter).[36]: 41–42, 47 [37]: 40 [19]: 355–356
Number
[edit]Most scholars agree that there are two numbers, singular and plural, in Old Prussian,[36]: 41–42, 47 [37]: 40 [19]: 353 while some consider remnants of a dual identifiable in the existent corpus.[38][39][35]: 198
Cases
[edit]There is no consensus on the number of cases that Old Prussian had, and at least four can be determined with certainty: nominative, genitive, accusative and dative, with different suffixes.[35]: 171–197 [19]: 356 [37]: 40 Most scholars agree, that there are traces of a vocative case, such as in the phrase O Deiwe Rikijs 'O God the Lord', reflecting the inherited PIE vocative ending *-e,[35]: 251 [10]: 109 differing from nominative forms in o-stem nouns only.[19]: 356
Some scholars find instrumental forms,[35]: 197 while the traditional view is that no instrumental case existed in Old Prussian.[19]: 356 There could be some locative forms, e.g. bītai ('in the evening').[19]: 356 [40]
Noun stems
[edit]Declensional classes were a-stems (also called o-stems), (i)ja-stems (also called (i)jo-stems), ā-stems (feminine), ē-stems (feminine), i-stems, u-stems, and consonant-stems.[10]: 66–80 [37]: 41–62 [19]: 357 [32]: 42–43 Some also list ī/jā-stems as a separate stem,[10]: 66–80 [37]: 41–62 while others include jā-stems into ā-stems and do not mention ī-stems at all.[32]: 37
Adjectives
[edit]There were three adjective stems (a-stems, i-stems, u-stems), of which only the first agreed with the noun in gender.[19]: 360 [37]: 63–65
There was a comparative and a superlative form.[37]: 65–66 [19]: 360–361
Verbal morphology
[edit]When it comes to verbal morphology present, future and past tense are attested, as well as optative forms (used with imperative or permissive forms of verbs), infinitive, and four participles (active/passive present/past).[35]: 211–233
Orthography
[edit]The orthography varies depending on the author. As the authors of many sources were themselves not proficient in Old Prussian, they wrote the words as they heard them using the orthographical conventions of their mother tongue. For example, the use of ⟨s⟩ for both /s/ and /z/ is based on German orthography. Additionally, the writers misunderstood some phonemes and, when copying manuscripts, they added further mistakes.[10]: 63 [11][19]: 337
Corpus of Old Prussian
[edit]Onomastics
[edit]There was Prussian toponomy and hydronomy within the territory of (Baltic) Prussia. Georg Gerullis undertook the first basic study of these names in Die altpreußischen Ortsnamen ('The Old Prussian Place-names'), written and published with the help of Walter de Gruyter, in 1922.[15]
Another source are personal names.[41]
Evidence from other languages
[edit]Further sources for Prussian words are Vernacularisms in the German dialects of East and West Prussia, as well as words of Old Curonian origin in Latvian and West-Baltic vernacularisms in Lithuanian and Belarusian.[2]: 4 [42]
Vocabularies
[edit]Two Prussian vocabularies are known. The older one by Simon Grunau (Simon Grunovius), a historian of the Teutonic Knights, encompasses 100 words (in strongly varying versions). He also recorded an expression: sta nossen rickie, nossen rickie ('This (is) our lord, our lord'). The vocabulary is part of the Preussische Chronik written c. 1517–1526.[20]: XXV–XXVI
The second one is the so-called Elbing Vocabulary, which consists of 802 thematically sorted words and their German equivalents. Peter Holcwesscher from Marienburg copied the manuscript around 1400; the original dates from the beginning of the 14th or the end of the 13th century. It was found in 1825 by Fr Neumann among other manuscripts acquired by him from the heritage of the Elbing merchant A. Grübnau; it was thus dubbed the Codex Neumannianus.[2]: 7-8 [32]: 4
Fragmentary texts
[edit]There are separate words found in various historical documents.[2]: 4
The following fragments are commonly thought of as Prussian, but are probably actually Lithuanian (at least the adage, however, has been argued to be genuinely West Baltic, only an otherwise unattested dialect[43]):
- An adage of 1583, Dewes does dantes, Dewes does geitka: the form does in the second instance corresponds to Lithuanian future tense duos ('will give')
- Trencke, trencke! ('Strike! Strike!')
Fragmentary Lord's Prayer
[edit]Additionally, there is one manuscript fragment of the first words of the Pater Noster in Prussian, from the beginning of the 15th century:[2]: 437
Towe Nüsze kås esse andangonsün
swyntins
Maletius' Sudovian Book
[edit]Vytautas Mažiulis lists another few fragmentary texts recorded in several versions by Hieronymus Maletius in the Sudovian Book in the middle of the 16th century. Palmaitis regards them as Sudovian proper.[2]: 7; 437
- Beigeite beygeyte peckolle ('Run, run, devils!')
- Kails naussen gnigethe ('Hello our friend!')
- Kails poskails ains par antres – a drinking toast, reconstructed as Kaīls pas kaīls, aīns per āntran ('A cheer for a cheer, a tit for tat', literally: 'A healthy one after a healthy one, one after another!')
- Kellewesze perioth, Kellewesze perioth ('A carter drives here, a carter drives here!')
- Ocho moy myle schwante panicke – also recorded as O hoho Moi mile swente Pannike, O ho hu Mey mile swenthe paniko, O mues miles schwante Panick ('Oh my dear holy fire!')
Complete texts
[edit]In addition to the texts listed beneath, there are several colophons written by Prussian scriptors who worked in Prague and in the court of Lithuanian duke Butautas Kęstutaitis.
Basel Epigram
[edit]The so-called Basel Epigram is the oldest written Prussian sentence (1369).[2]: 33–35 [44] It reads:
Kayle rekyse |
Cheers, Sir! |
This jocular inscription was most probably made by a Prussian student studying in Prague (Charles University); found by Stephen McCluskey (1974) in manuscript MS F.V.2 (book of physics Questiones super Meteororum by Nicholas Oresme), fol. 63r, stored in the Basel University library.
Catechisms
[edit]The longest texts preserved in Old Prussian are three Catechisms printed in Königsberg in 1545, 1545, and 1561 respectively. The first two consist of only six pages of text in Old Prussian – the second one being a correction of the first. The third catechism, or Enchiridion, consists of 132 pages of text, and is a translation of Luther's Small Catechism by a German cleric called Abel Will, with his Prussian assistant Paul Megott. Will himself knew little or no Old Prussian, and his Prussian interpreter was probably illiterate, but according to Will spoke Old Prussian quite well. The text itself is mainly a word-for-word translation, and Will phonetically recorded Megott's oral translation. Because of this, the Enchiridion exhibits many irregularities, such as the lack of case agreement in phrases involving an article and a noun, which followed word-for-word German originals as opposed to native Old Prussian syntax.[20]: XXVII [2]: 8–9
Trace of Crete
[edit]The "Trace of Crete" is a short poem added by a Baltic writer in Chania to a manuscript of the Logica Parva by Paul of Venice.[45]
Atonaige maian meilan am ne wede maianwargan |
Stand under the May tree willingly/dear – the May tree does not bring you to misery |
Sample texts
[edit]Lord's Prayer in Old Prussian (from the so-called "1st Catechism")[2]: 118, 122 [36]: 4
Thawe nuson kas tu asse andangon.
Swintits wirst twais emmens.
Pergeis twais laeims.
Twais quaits audasseisin na semmey, key audangon.
Nusan deininan geittin deis numons schindeinan.
Bha atwerpeis numans nuson auschantins, kay mas atwerpimay nuson auschautenikamans.
Bha ny wedais mans enperbandan.
Sclait is rankeis mans assa wargan. Amen
Lord's Prayer after Simon Grunau (Curonian)[19]: 297 [46][36]: XV
Nossen thewes cur tu es delbes
sweytz gischer tho wes wardes
penag munis tholbe mystlastilbi
tolpes prahes girkade delbeszisne tade symmes semmes worsunii
dodi mommys an nosse igdemas mayse
unde gaytkas pames mumys nusze noszeginu cademes pametam musen prettane kans
newede munis lawnā padomā
swalbadi munis nowusse loyne Jhesus amen.
Lord's Prayer after Prätorius (Curonian)[47]: 703 [a]
Thewes nossen, cur tu es Debbes,
Schwisch gesger thowes Wardes;
Pena mynis thowe Wiswalstybe;
Toppes Patres gir iat Delbeszisne, tade tymnes senjnes Worsinny;
Annosse igdenas Mayse dodi mums szon Dien;
Pamutale mums musu Noschegun, kademas pametan nousson Pyktainekans;
No wede numus panam Paadomam;
Swalbadi names ne wust Tayne.
Lord's Prayer in Lithuanian dialect of Insterburg (Prediger Hennig)[47]: 707
Tewe musu, kurs essi Danguje,
Buk szwenczamas Wardas tawo,
Ateik tawo Karalijste;
Buk tawo Walle kaip Danguje, taip ir an Zemes;
Duna musu dieniszka duk mums ir sze Diena;
Atleisk mums musu Kaltes, kaip mes atoeidzjam sawo Kaltiems;
Ne wesk mus Pagundima;
Bet gelbek mus nu Pikto.
Lord's Prayer in Lithuanian dialect of Nadruvia, corrupted (Simon Praetorius)[47]: 708
Tiewe musu, kursa tu essi Debsissa,
Szwints tiest taws Wards;
Akeik mums twa Walstybe;
Tawas Praats buk kaip Debbesissa taibant wirszu Sjemes;
Musu dieniszka May e duk mums ir szen Dienan;
Atmesk mums musu Griekus, kaip mes pammetam musi Pardokonteimus;
Ne te wedde mus Baidykle;
Bet te passarge mus mi wissa Louna (Pikta)
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Adelung simply says "der Prätorius". This is most likely Matthäus Prätorius; because two pages earlier Adelung refers with approval to the writings of both Hartknoch and Prätorius,[47]: 701 and Christoph Hartknoch worked with Matthäus Prätorius.
References
[edit]- ^ The adverb Prūsiskai ('in Prussian') appears on the title page of the Königsberg catechism of 1561.
See Mažiulis, Vytautas (1996). Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas [Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian]. Vol. 3. Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidykla. pp. 360–361. ISBN 978-54-2000-109-7. - ^ a b c d e f g h i Palmaitis, Mykolas Letas (2007). Old Prussian Written Monuments: Text and Comments (PDF). Kaunas: Lithuanian's World Center for Advancement of Culture, Science and Education. ISBN 978-9986-418-42-9.
- ^ Rantawa.org; suplits (31 May 2016). "Prūsiska bilā". Prūsas Tāutas Prēigara. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ a b Young, Steven (2008). "Baltic". In Kapović, Mate (ed.). The Indo-European Languages. London: Routledge. pp. 486–518. ISBN 978-03-6786-902-1.
- ^ a b c d e f Szatkowski, Piotr (2021). "Language practices in a family of Prussian language revivalists: Conclusions based on short-term participant observation". Adeptus (18). Institute of Slavic Studies, Polish Academy of Sciences. doi:10.11649/a.2626.
- ^ Old Prussian language at Ethnologue (22nd ed., 2019)
- ^ Tarasov, Iliya (January 2017). "The Balts in the migration period". Istoričeskij Format Исторический Формат (in Russian). 3–4: 95–124.
- ^ a b Gimbutas, Marija (1963). The Balts. Ancient peoples and places. Vol. 33. London: Thames and Hudson.
- ^ Zinkevičius, Zigmas (1996). The History of the Lithuanian Language. Vilnius: Mokslo ir enciklopedijų leidykla. p. 51. ISBN 9785420013632.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Rinkevičius, Vytautas (2015). Prūsistikos pagrindai [Fundamentals of Prussian linguistics] (in Lithuanian). Vilnius: Vilniaus universitetas. ISBN 978-609-417-101-7.
- ^ a b Mažiulis, Vytautas. "Baltic languages". Encyclopædia Britannica. September 2022. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
- ^ Mitzka, Walther (1921). "Niederpreuſsisch" [Lower Prussian]. Zeitschrift für deutsche Mundarten (in German). 16. Franz Steiner Verlag: 151–154. JSTOR 40498264.
- ^ Bauer, Gerhard (2005). "Baltismen im ostpreußischen Deutsch: Hermann Frischbiers "Preussisches Wörterbuch" als volkskundliche Quelle" [Baltisms in Eastern Prussian German: Hermann Frischbier's "Prussian Dictionary" as ethnological source]. Annaberger Annalen (PDF) (in German). pp. 5–82.
- ^ Ziesemer, Walther (1923). "Beobachtungen zur Wortgeographie Ostpreuſsens" [Obeservations on word geography in East Prussia]. Zeitschrift für deutsche Mundarten (in German). 18 (3/4, "Festschrift Ferdinand Wrede (1923)"). Franz Steiner Verlag: 149–160. JSTOR 40498279.
- ^ a b Gerullis, Georg (1922). Die altpreußischen Ortsnamen [The Old Prussian place names] (PDF) (in German). Berlin, Leipzig: Vereinigung wissenschaftlicher Verleger.
- ^ Haack, Hermann (1930). Stielers Hand-Atlas (10 ed.). Justus Perthes. p. Plate 9.
- ^ Kossert, Andreas (2003). "'Grenzlandpolitik' und Ostforschung an der Peripherie des Reiches. Das ostpreußische Masuren 1919–1945" ['Borderland politics' and Ostforschung in the periphery of the German Empire. The East-Prussian Masuria 1919–1945]. Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte (in German). 51 (2): 117–146. JSTOR 30196694.
- ^
- Dobrzycki, Stanisław (1901). "O tzw. mazurzeniu w języku polskim" [About the so-called mazurzenie in Polish]. Rozprawy Wydziału Filologicznego PAU (in Polish) (XXXII): 228–231.
- Селищев, Афанасий Матвеевич (1931). "Соканье и шоканье в славянских языках". Slavia (in Russian). X (4). Prague: Slovanský ústav v Praze: 718–741.
- Селищев, Афанасий Матвеевич (1969) [1941]. Западно-славянские языки [Western Slavic languages]. Славянское Языкознание (in Russian). Vol. I. The Hague: Mouton & Company. pp. 330–331.
- Milewski, Tadeusz (1937). "Stosunki językowe polsko-pruskie" [The linguistic relation of Polish and Old Prussian]. Slavia Occidentalis (in Polish) (XVIII): 21–84.
- Milewski, Tadeusz (1956). Chronologia i przyczyny mazurzenia [Chronology and causes of the mazurzenie] (in Polish). pp. 34–38.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Dini, Pietro U. (2014). Foundations of Baltic languages. Translated by Richardson, Milda B.; Richardson, Robert E. Vilnius: Vilniaus universitetas. ISBN 978-609-437-263-6.
- ^ a b c d Trautmann, Reinhold (1910). Die altpreußischen Sprachdenkmäler [The Old Prussian language monuments]. Göttingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht.
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- ^ Schmalstieg, William Riegel (2005). "Vytautas Mažiulis. Prūsų kalbos istorinė gramatika: recenzija" [Vytautas Mažiulis. Historical grammar of the Prussian language: A review]. Baltu filoloģija. 14 (1). Latvijas Universitāte: 159–163. ISSN 1691-0036.
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- ^ Enzelīns, Jānis (1943). Senprūšu valoda: Ievads, gramatika un leksika. Riga: Universitātes apgāds. pp. 76, 80, 83.
- ^ Levin, Jules (1973). "-ja stems and -e stems in the Elbing Vocabulary". In Ziedonis, Arvids Jr.; Puhvel, Jaan; Šilbajoris, Rimvydas; Valgemäe, Mardi (eds.). Baltic Literature and Linguistics. Conference on Baltic studies. Columbus: Association for the Advancement of Baltic Studies. pp. 189–196. OCLC 867673.
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Literature
[edit]- Johann Christoph Adelung, Johann Severin Vater: Mithridates oder allgemeine Sprachenkunde mit dem Vater Unser als Sprachprobe in beynahe fünfhundert Sprachen und Mundarten, vol. 2, Berlin 1809, p. 700ff. ([1])
- Johann Severin Vater: Die Sprache der alten Preußen: Einleitung, Ueberreste, Sprachlehre, Wörterbuch, Braunschweig 1821
- G. H. F. Nesselmann, Forschungen auf dem Gebiete der preußischen Sprache, 2. Beitrag: Königsberg, 1871.
- G. H. F. Nesselmann, Thesaurus linguae Prussicae, Berlin, 1873.
- E. Berneker, Die preussische Sprache, Strassburg, 1896 ([2]).
- R. Trautmann, Die altpreussischen Sprachdenkmäler, Göttingen, 1910.
- Wijk, Nicolaas van, Altpreussiche Studien : Beiträge zur baltischen und zur vergleichenden indogermanischen Grammatik, Haag, 1918.
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- R. Trautmann, Die altpreussischen Personnennamen, Göttingen, 1925.
- G. Gerullis, Zur Sprache der Sudauer-Jadwinger, in Festschrift A. Bezzenberger, Göttingen 1927
- W. R. Schmalstieg, An Old Prussian Grammar, University Park and London, 1974.
- W. R. Schmalstieg, Studies in Old Prussian, University Park and London, 1976.
- V. Toporov, Prusskij jazyk: Slovar', A – L, Moskva, 1975–1990 (not finished).
- L. Kilian: Zu Herkunft und Sprache der Prußen Wörterbuch Deutsch–Prußisch, Bonn 1980
- (In Lithuanian) V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos paminklai, Vilnius, t. I 1966, t. II 1981.
- J. Endzelīns, Senprūšu valoda. – Gr. Darbu izlase, IV sēj., 2. daļa, Rīga, 1982. 9.-351. lpp.
- V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos etimologijos žodynas, Vilnius, t. I-IV, 1988–1997.
- M. Biolik, Zuflüsse zur Ostsee zwischen unterer Weichsel und Pregel, Stuttgart, 1989.
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- A. Kaukienė, Prūsų kalba, Klaipėda, 2002.
- V. Mažiulis, Prūsų kalbos istorinė gramatika, Vilnius, 2004.
- LEXICON BORVSSICVM VETVS. Concordantia et lexicon inversum. / Bibliotheca Klossiana I, Universitas Vytauti Magni, Kaunas, 2007.
- OLD PRUSSIAN WRITTEN MONUMENTS. Facsimile, Transliteration, Reconstruction, Comments. / Bibliotheca Klossiana II, Universitas Vytauti Magni / Lithuanians' World Center, Kaunas, 2007.
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External links
[edit]- Database of the Old Prussian Linguistic Heritage (Etymological Dictionary of Old Prussian (in Lithuanian) and full textual corpus)
- Frederik Kortlandt: Electronic text editions (contains transcriptions of Old Prussian manuscript texts)
- Vocabulary by friar Simon Grunau
- Elbing Vocabulary