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Old Besokian is likely to have been spoken throughout the Old Besokian period and only have met its decline in the 18th century. Once the Besokian populations had spread too far from their point of origin, their loyalty to Nishûnâc began to dwindle. Possibly in a struggle over power, a Soskish raid seem to have hit Nishûnâc in the early 18th century B.E.B., destroying most of the complex. The site was abandoned around 1750 B.E.B., its last inhabitants migrating into the neighbouring Soskish kingdoms, Old Besokian going extinct soon after. | Old Besokian is likely to have been spoken throughout the Old Besokian period and only have met its decline in the 18th century. Once the Besokian populations had spread too far from their point of origin, their loyalty to Nishûnâc began to dwindle. Possibly in a struggle over power, a Soskish raid seem to have hit Nishûnâc in the early 18th century B.E.B., destroying most of the complex. The site was abandoned around 1750 B.E.B., its last inhabitants migrating into the neighbouring Soskish kingdoms, Old Besokian going extinct soon after. | ||
==Innovations== | ==Innovations== | ||
Old Besokian | Old Besokian is very close in both form and lexicon to Proto-Besokian, to the degree that it can be considered a dialect or late stage of the latter. The two languages are usually separated as Old Besokian is thoroughly attested whereas little record remains of Proto-Besokian; the latter is generally considered the ancestor to the Besokian languages, while the former is regarded a mostly isolated religious and literary language. | ||
===Phonology=== | |||
Little change seems to have occurred in the language’s sound system, although phonological innovations only appear delayed in writing, and not all changes might be reflected even in the youngest texts at Nishûnâc. The earliest Old Besokian records show no difference to the known Proto-Besokian sound system; it is not until the mid-20th century that the irregular disappearance of word-initial <h> suggests this sound had been lost. By c. 1870, initial <h> has disappeared entirely from the textual record, and by c. 1800, former <VhV> combinations had come to be expressed as single vowels. | |||
Shortly after the first disappearances of the <h> glyph, the <V> glyph is used more and more regularly in word-final position, suggesting elision of final consonants if followed by a similar consonant in the next word. This is first apparent with the consistent dropping of final nasals if the following word begins in a nasal and eventually affects <c#k> clusters as well. By the 1830s, vowel-hiatus is always resolved by deletion of the second vowel. | |||
==Attestation and Written Form== | |||
==Trivia== | |||