Difference between revisions of "Sound change typology"
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[[sound change|Sound changes]] can be classified and grouped together according to the type of change, its conditioning and other factors. | [[sound change|Sound changes]] can be classified and grouped together according to the type of change, its conditioning and other factors. | ||
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It occurred, e.g., in the history of most Iranian languages, Middle Indo-Aryan, in Western Romance, British Celtic, Old Danish, in many Uralic languages etc. | It occurred, e.g., in the history of most Iranian languages, Middle Indo-Aryan, in Western Romance, British Celtic, Old Danish, in many Uralic languages etc. | ||
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+ | [[Category:En]] | ||
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+ | [[Category:Phonetics]] |
Revision as of 17:03, 22 May 2013
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Sound changes can be classified and grouped together according to the type of change, its conditioning and other factors.
For a certain type of change, we can observe in which languages it occurred, and collections of attested sound changes then may show how frequent this type of change is. Some changes are very common, as, e.g., intervocalic voicing of voiceless stops:
[-son][-cont][-voiced] > [-son][-cont][+voiced] /[+voc]__[+voc]
or (simplified and more concrete)
p, t, k > b, d, g /V__V
It occurred, e.g., in the history of most Iranian languages, Middle Indo-Aryan, in Western Romance, British Celtic, Old Danish, in many Uralic languages etc.