List of Sound Changes

From FrathWiki
Revision as of 10:03, 15 March 2017 by Dedalvs (talk | contribs) (→‎Tonogenesis: Flipped the changes so they're in alphabetical order (might as well?).)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Below is a large list of attested sound changes in natural languages.

Assimilation

Deletion

Aphaeresis

  • {C/V} > Ø / #_
    • Example: μνημονικός /mnemonikos/ (Greek) > mnemonic /nǝmɑnɪk/ (English)
    • Example: *cneo /kneo/ (Old English) > knee /niː/ (English)
    • Notes: This sound change is also spelled "apheresis". Often this is a way to resolve complex onset consonant clusters. As a counterpart to this sound change, see prothesis.

Dissimilation

Epenthesis

Prothesis

  • Ø > V / #_
    • Example: *scola /skola/ (Latin) > escuela /eskuela/ (Spanish)[1]
    • Example: *scola /skola/ (Latin) > école /ekol/ (French)[1]
    • Notes: Often the vowel inserted has the status of the most neutral or basic vowel in the system (with the terms "neutral" and "basic" being defined internal to the system). Also, this sound change often applies to words that begin with an impermissible consonant cluster. As a counterpart to this sound change, see aphaeresis.

Lenition

Word Final Devoicing

  • {C/V} > [-voice] / _#
    • Example: друг /drug/ [dɾuk] “friend” (Russian)
    • Example: /xaːj/ [xaːj̥] "house" (Mayan)[1]
    • Notes: Often these are near mergers, where the vowel length may differ between forms that end with a phonologically voiced vs. voiceless consonant, or there may be a difference in how the voiceless stop is released if it’s phonologically voiced vs. voiceless.

Tonogenesis

Consonant Opposition Loss

  • C[phonation]V > CV[tone]
    • Example: /keta/ [kʰèdá] "fold", /kʰeta/ [kʰédà] "dig" (Korean)
    • Notes: Typically "more voiced" consonants become lower tone, and "more aspirated" consonants become higher tone.

Final Consonant Loss

  • C > [tone] / _#
    • Example: *pah > pâ (Vietnamese)
    • Notes: Typically lower-sonority consonants (e.g. voiceless stops) become higher tone, while higher-sonority consonants (voiced stops, fricatives) become lower tones.
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 From Historical Linguistics: An Introduction by Lyle Campbell (1999).