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Encyclopedia > Palatalisation

Palatalization means pronouncing a sound nearer to the hard palate, making it more like a palatal consonant; this is towards the front of the mouth for a velar or uvular consonant, but towards the back of the mouth for a front (e.g. alveolar) consonant. The modification can be purely phonological, or it can become lexical if it is absorbed as a historical change. It tends to occur in the vicinity of front vowels or palatal approximants.


Palatalization is common in many languages. Some English examples are:

  • The 't' of "question" and "nature" are pronounced as 'ch', or the 'd' of "soldier" and "procedure" sound like 'j'. As these examples suggest, in English orthography, palatalization is often indicated by a following 'i' or 'u'. An example from casual speech can be found when "what are you up to" comes out like "whacha up to."
  • The historical change in pronunciation of the initial sound in Caesar from the /k/ sound in Classical Latin to the familiar /s/ sound in English and some other languages. This change occurred universally in Latin after front vowels such as 'e' or 'i.'

Palatalization has played a major role in the history of the Romance, Slavic, Japanese, Chinese, and Indic languages, among many others throughout the world.


See also

References

Bynon, Theodora. Historical Linguistics. Cambridge University Press, 1977. ISBN 0-521-21582-X (hardback) or ISBN 0-521-291188-7 (paperback).


  Results from FactBites:
 
Tatar language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1576 words)
Palatalisation is not common in the Tatar language.
In general, Russian words with palatalisation have entered into the speech of bilingual Tatars since the 1930s.
In today's Latin alphabet version palatalisation is sometimes represented by an acute diacritic under the vowel.
Phonetics and Phonology (2754 words)
Simultaneous palatalisation very often occurs as a result of co-articulation when a sound with an anterior primary articulation is uttered adjacent to palatal consonants such as [ j] or high front vowels such as [i].
In English the consonant [l] is usually pronounced with palatalisation when it precedes a vowel at the beginning of a syllable (this is generally referred to as the "clear l").
This is identical to the transcription of simultaneous palatalisation.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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