Old Moca Sėanaga


 * When a name ended in /Vs/ and the following name began in a vowel or /sV/, then the final /s/ (or /s/ in both names) rhotacized to /r/ attached to the second name due to Old Moca experiencing s>r/V_V. The same would happen if a name beginning in /sV/ follows a name ending in a vowel:
 * Skologes, Selgove > Skologe, Relgove
 * Plortiges, Anuges, > Plortige, Ranuges,
 * Peekiños, Yrhos, > Pēkiño, Ryrhos,
 * Brumnos, Asdros, > Brumno, Rasdros,
 * When a name begins in /t/ and follows a name ending in /n/, the /t/ becomes /s/. This happened on one line only:
 * Hadylain, Tyrai > Hadylain, Syrai
 * When a name ending in a vowel is before a name beginning in the same vowel, the vowel of the first name assimilated as length on the preceding name:
 * (Maawatarraa, Arada >) Māwatārā, Arada > Māwatārā, Rada
 * When a name ended in the same consonant which began the next name, both were analysed as geminates, eventually shortening the previous vowel if one preceded. This happened regardless of voicing:
 * Türtast, Tyrsast. > Türtastt, Yrsast,
 * (Gilgak, Gilla,) > Gilgak, Gīla, > Gilgāk, Īla,
 * When a name ended in /uV oV iV/ and the following name began in a vowel, the /u o i/ became /w w j/ on the following name:
 * Pasgodni, Üngodne, > Pasgodn, Jüngodne,
 * Džietnutemi, Utemu > Džietnutem, Jutemu
 * When a name ended in /VC/ came before a noun beginning in /C/, or a name ending in a vowel came before a name beginning in /CC/, it would be perceived as a /VCC/ cluster which them became /VːC/ where the first consonant dropped. This did not happen if the first consonant was a voiceless nasal or a voiceless liquid:
 * Žponja, Mnoja, Gloja, > Žpōjā, Nojā, Loja,
 * (Rasdros, Tuaksunjos >)Rasdros, Twaksunjos, > Rādrō, Twāsūjos,
 * (Kialge, Kjarnast >) Kjialge > Kjarnast > Kjāgē, Jarnāt
 * When word final vowels are lost after /l r n/, only the vowel at the end of the last name is lost:
 * (Anepi, Bodatri, Wedlisi >) Anepi, Bodāri, Vēliri > Anepi, Bodāri, Vēlir
 * When word final /p b t d/ is lost, ony the final plosive of the last name is lost:
 * (Merirt, Merituk >) Merīt, Merituk, > Merīt, Meritu,
 * When a name ended in /l/ and a name beginning in a back vowel (or historically back) followed, ten the /l/ became /w/:
 * (Peryl, Oskül >) 'Kʷeröl, Ūkȳs > Kʷeröw, Ūkȳs''