protolexicons
Protolexicon is a term used in historical linguistics to refer to the reconstructed inventory of lexical items that a proto-language would have used. It consists of proto-forms with phonological shape and semantic glosses, derived from systematic correspondences among related languages. Protolexicons are hypothetical and not directly attested; they are built through the comparative method and are constrained by regular sound correspondences, semantic shifts, and the known phonology of daughter languages.
Reconstruction usually focuses on core vocabulary—terms for body parts, kinship terms, basic actions, natural phenomena, and
Limitations and challenges affect protolexicon reliability. Data quality, contact-induced borrowing, semantic drift, and the depth of
Protolexicons have been compiled for several language families, notably Proto-Indo-European, Proto-Afroasiatic, and Proto-Austronesian; these reconstructions inform