Proto-Algic (sometimes abbreviated PAc) is the proto-language from which the Algic languages (Wiyot language, Yurok language, and Proto-Algonquian) are descended. It is estimated to have been spoken about 7,000 years ago somewhere in the American Northwest, possibly around the Columbia Plateau. It is an example of a second-level proto-language (a proto-language whose reconstruction depends on data from another proto-language, namely its descendant language Proto-Algonquian) which is widely agreed to have existed. Its main researcher was Paul Proulx.

Vowels

Proto-Algic had four basic vowels, which could be either long or short:

long: *i·, *e·, *a·, *o·

short: *i, *e, *a, *o

Consonants

Proto-Algic had the following consonants:

Proto-Algic consonant phonemes
BilabialAlveolarPalatalVelarGlottal
centrallateralplainlabialized
Stopplain*p*t*k*kʷ
aspirated*pʰ*tʰ*kʰ*kʷʰ
glottalized*pʼ*tʼ*kʼ*kʷʼ
Affricateplain*c /t͡s/*č /t͡ʃ/
aspirated*cʰ /t͡sʰ/*čʰ /t͡ʃʰ/
glottalized*cʼ /t͡sʼ/*čʼ /t͡ʃʼ/
Fricative*s*ɬ1*š /ʃ/*h
Nasalplain*m*n
glottalized*mʼ*nʼ
Liquidplain*r*l
glottalized*rʼ*lʼ
Semivowelplain*y /j/*w
glottalized*yʼ /jʼ/*wʼ

1 The identity of this consonant is not entirely certain; in Proto-Algonquian, it is sometimes alternatively reconstructed as /θ/.

It is unknown if *č /tʃ/ was an independent phoneme or only an allophone of *c and/or *t in Proto-Algic (as in Proto-Algonquian). In 1992, Paul Proulx theorized that Proto-Algic also possessed a phoneme *gʷ, which became *w in Proto-Algonquian and g in Wiyot and Yurok.

All stops and affricates in the above chart have aspirated counterparts, and all consonants, except fricatives, have glottalized ones. Proto-Algonquian significantly reduced this system by eliminating all glottalized and aspirated phonemes.

See also

Further reading