Difference between revisions of "Contact assimilation vs. distant assimilation"
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German [[Kontaktassimilation vs. Distanzassimilation]] | German [[Kontaktassimilation vs. Distanzassimilation]] | ||
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[[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] | [[Category:Phonetics and phonology]] | ||
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Latest revision as of 19:19, 22 June 2014
In case of contact assimilation (also called immediate assimilation) the sound undergoing assimilation and the one causing it are immediately adjacent: Old English efn 'even' > West-Saxon emn. In case of distant assimilation the two sounds are not adjacent: Proto-Indo-European *penkʷe > Latin kʷinkʷe (spelled quinque). When distant assimilation applies over an entire word it is called harmony (e.g. vowel harmony, nasal harmony).
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German Kontaktassimilation vs. Distanzassimilation
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