Iotation is a phonological process prominent in the Slavic languages, characterized by the palatalization of a consonant when it precedes the palatal approximant /j/ (from underlying clusters like [CjV]), often resulting in the creation of new palatal or affricate consonants such as /t/ → /t͡ɕ/, /d/ → /d͡zʲ/, or /s/ → /ɕ/.[1] This mutation, known as transitive softening or transitive palatalization, originated in Proto-Slavic as part of a series of historical palatalizations triggered by yers (reduced vowels like *ĭ and *ŭ) and glides, fundamentally reshaping the consonant inventory across Slavic branches.[2][3]In Proto-Slavic, iotation typically applied to non-palatal consonants before /j/, leading to systematic changes documented in comparative Slavic linguistics, such as the evolution of dental stops (*tj → *č', *dj → *dž') that later varied by dialect—merging with velar palatalization outcomes in West Slavic while retaining distinct affricates in East and South Slavic.[4] This process was progressive, affecting consonants in contact with following palatal elements, and interacted with other sound shifts like the first regressive palatalization of velars (*k, g, x → č, ʒ, ś before front vowels) and the second (*k, g, x → c, z, s before front yers).[3] Unlike general palatalization (which softens consonants via secondary articulation), iotation often involves complete assimilation or affrication, distinguishing it as a key driver of consonant mutation in Slavic historical phonology.[1]In modern Slavic languages, iotation manifests primarily in morphology, such as verb conjugations, diminutive formations, and adjectival declensions, where it conditions stem-final consonant alternations despite the absence of overt /j/ in contemporary forms. For instance, in Russian, the verbpisátʲ 'to write' shows iotation in its infinitive (pisa-tʲ) versus present stem (piš-ú), reflecting historical [s j] → [ɕ]; similarly, diminutives like luk 'onion' → lut͡ɕók illustrate /k/ → /t͡ɕ/ before a suffix historically containing /j/.[1][2] In Polish, iotation appears in processes like the diminutive suffixation in chemik 'chemist' versus chemi-czek, where palatalization applies cyclically to derive soft variants.[3] These patterns underscore iotation's role in maintaining paradigmatic consistency and its variation across East, West, and South Slavic, with West Slavic often showing further innovations like dental mergers.[4]
Fundamentals
Definition and Scope
Iotation is a phonological process in Slavic languages in which a preceding consonant is palatalized or affricated when followed by the palatal glide /j/ (yod), often resulting from underlying clusters like [CjV]. This phenomenon originated in Proto-Slavic and alters the articulation of the affected consonant through assimilation to the palatal features of /j/, typically in morphological contexts.[5] In essence, iotation represents a specific form of palatal influence distinct from broader palatalization processes triggered by front vowels alone.[6]The scope of iotation includes consonant softening leading to fricative or affricate outcomes and glide assimilation, where /j/ fuses with the preceding consonant. Representative examples include the historical shift of /tj/ to /tɕ/ in Polish, as in the diminutive formation but + jek > buczka (though modern forms vary), or /s/ + /j/ > /ɕ/ in verbal stems like piś- in pisać yielding pisze (3sg present).[6] These changes highlight iotation's role in morphological allomorphy and historical sound shifts in Slavic languages.[5]The term "iotation" derives from the Ancient Greek iōta (ἰῶτα), the letter ι symbolizing the palatal glide, reflecting its historical notation in scripts influenced by Greek orthography.[7] While similar palatalization processes occur elsewhere, iotation is particularly prominent as an inherited feature in Slavic languages from Proto-Slavic, though analogous phenomena appear in other Eurasian languages.[5]
Phonetic Mechanisms
Iotation involves the articulatory process where the tongue body is raised toward the hard palate in anticipation of or during the production of the palatal glide , resulting in a secondary palatal articulation that fronts or affricates the preceding consonant.[8] This gesture overlap creates coarticulatory effects, with the tongue dorsum advancing and elevating to approximate the palate, often leading to a more centralized or prepalatal place of articulation for the consonant.[9] For instance, the conflicting demands of the primary consonant constriction and the palatal glide can cause temporal blending of gestures, enhancing fronting without fully delinking the original articulator.[8]Acoustically, iotation manifests as an increase in high-frequency formants, particularly a raised second formant (F2) and lowered first formant (F1), due to the compact spectral properties of palatal resonance.[10] Spectrographic analysis reveals prolonged frication noise with a higher center of gravity (typically 800–1000 Hz elevation) and steeper spectral slopes in palatalized segments compared to non-palatalized counterparts, reflecting the forward tongue position and reduced oral cavity volume.[9] These changes reduce perceptual distinctions between places of articulation, as the glide masks transitional cues, potentially triggering affrication to preserve contrast.[8]Phonologically, iotation is formalized in feature geometry as the spreading of [+high, +front] (or equivalently [-back]) features from the glide to the adjacent consonant's place node, often under a regressive assimilation rule.[11] This autosegmental spreading promotes the palatal features to primary articulation in some cases, yielding affricates or fricatives, while in others it results in secondary palatalization.[10] The process adheres to markedness constraints in optimality theory, where faithfulness to input features competes with demands for agreement in backness or coronality.[8]Iotation typically involves regressive (right-to-left) assimilation, where the following influences the preceding segment, predominant in most attested cases.[8] It occurs specifically before , driven by contextual adjacency to the glide.[10]
Sound Changes
Palatalization Processes
Iotation, as a specific form of palatalization in Proto-Slavic, occurs when non-palatal consonants precede the palatal approximant /j/, resulting in affrication or palatalization. This process primarily affects dentals, sibilants, and labials, leading to changes such as *tj > *ć (t͡ɕ), *dj > *ǯ (d͡zʲ or ʑ), *sj > *ś (ɕ), *zj > *ź (ʑ), and *nj > *ń (ɲ), while velars had already undergone earlier palatalizations.[12]These changes originated from clusters like C+jV, where /j/ assimilated to the preceding consonant, often across morpheme boundaries in morphology. For example, in verb stems or diminutives, historical *t + j > ć is seen in Russian pisátʲ (infinitive) vs. pišú (present), reflecting *s + j > š (though influenced by prior sibilant shifts). The process interacted with yer vocalism, where reduced vowels *ь and *ъ triggered similar softening before /j/-like glides.[1]In Slavic, iotation is distinct from the first palatalization (velars *k,g,x > č,ž,š/ʃ before front vowels like *i,ě) and second ( *k,g,x > c,ʒ,s before front vowels in next syllable, e.g., *k > c in cělъ 'whole' from Proto-Balto-Slavic *káilas < PIE *kéh₂ilos). Iotation represents a progressive assimilation, creating new palatals without full merger in most branches, though West Slavic shows some depalatalization or mergers.[13][14]Iotation initiated chain shifts, where affricates like *ć preserved contrasts with earlier *č from velar palatalization, expanding the consonant inventory. In East and South Slavic, these remain distinct (e.g., Russian /tɕ/ vs. /tʃ/), while West Slavic innovated further, such as Polish č from both sources. This reorganization is key to Slavic consonant gradation in morphology.[4]
Vowel and Consonant Interactions
In iotation, the palatal glide /j/ fuses with preceding consonants, indirectly affecting adjacent vowels through palatalization-induced coarticulation. Palatalized consonants raise and front the tongue, promoting vowel fronting or raising in sequences. For example, in Russian, velar + /j/ + /i/ > [tɕi], as in diminutivekusočík 'little piece' from kusók, where the affricate enhances front vowel quality.[15]Consonant clusters simplify via iotation: *n + j > ɲ, as in Russian denʲ 'day' (gen.sg.) to dnʲí (nom.pl.), fusing the glide to avoid *[nj]. Similar assimilations occur with sibilants, *s + j > ɕ, conditioning vowel adjustments in stems. These adhere to phonological constraints like AGREE-C/_i >> AGREE-C/_e, prioritizing harmony with high front vowels.[15]Bidirectional effects arise: palatalized consonants front adjacent back vowels, e.g., Russian [tʲ] in otvétitʲ 'to answer' advances following /e/. Conversely, /ja/ sequences propagate regressive palatalization. Corpus data show high productivity: velar palatalization before /i/ in 97.5% of Russian cases vs. 58.3% before stressed /e/; Polish /o/ raising to with voiced obstruents in 85.2% of nominals, often with softening.[15]Post-2000 phonetic studies integrate iotation into prosody, with palatalized segments showing enhanced F2 formants in stressed positions for perceptual clarity in Russian and Polish. This variability aids rhythmic cues in speech.[16][5]
Orthographic Systems
Representations in Cyrillic
In Cyrillic-based orthographies, particularly those of Slavic languages, iotation is primarily represented through dedicated letters for vowels preceded by the palatal approximant /j/, known as iotated vowels. These include я (/ja/), ю (/ju/), ё (/jo/), and е (/je/) in Russian, which denote sequences of /j/ followed by a vowel sound, typically appearing at the beginning of a word, after another vowel, or after the hard sign ъ.[17] In Ukrainian, similar representations use я (/ja/), ю (/ju/), є (/je/), and ї (/ji/), where these letters combine the /j/ glide with the respective vowels to reflect historical iotation processes.[18] These iotated forms originated in Old Church Slavonic and were adapted to distinguish palatalized onsets in modern Slavic writing systems.[19]For iotated consonants, Cyrillic employs the soft sign ь to indicate palatalization resulting from prior iotation, softening the preceding consonant by raising the tongue toward the hard palate without inserting a full /j/ sound. In Russian, ь follows consonants that have undergone iotation, as in день (/dʲenʲ/ "day"), where it marks the palatalized /nʲ/.[20] Ukrainian similarly uses ь for this purpose, though palatalization can also occur allophonically before front vowels, with ь providing explicit orthographic indication.[18] In Bulgarian, the soft sign ь denotes palatalization of consonants, but combinations like ьо emphasize softening without full iotation, reflecting the language's reduced /j/ usage compared to East Slavic. Digraphs or positional rules occasionally supplement ь, especially in historical texts where iotation led to consonant-vowel assimilation.The 1918 Russian orthographic reform significantly altered iotation representations by eliminating the hard sign ъ at the end of words and in positions without phonetic value, but retained it after hard prefixes before iotated vowels to prevent palatalization, as in подъезд (/podʲjɛst/).[21] This reform, decreed by the Soviet government on October 10, 1918, also restricted ь after certain prefixes and prohibited it after sibilants before о or е, streamlining palatalization notation while preserving iotated vowels like я and ю in initial or post-vocalic positions.[22] Ukrainian orthography shows variations, such as the reintroduction of ґ in 1990 after its 1933 abolition, but retains iotated forms like є and ї with ь for consonant softening, differing from Russian in handling /g/ palatalization.[18] Bulgarian reforms in the 19th century standardized ь for palatalization without emphasizing iotation, aligning with its phonological system where /j/ is less prominent.[23]In non-Slavic languages using Cyrillic, such as Kazakh, iotation is minimally represented, as the script adapts Russian letters without dedicated iotated vowels; /j/ is instead conveyed via й, and palatalization occurs phonologically without orthographic soft signs in most cases.[24] Kazakh Cyrillic, with 42 letters including extensions like ә and ұ, prioritizes Turkic vowel harmony over Slavic-style iotation.[25]Digital encoding of iotation in Cyrillic relies on Unicode, where standard iotated vowels like я (U+044F) and ю (U+044E) are in the basic Cyrillic block (U+0400–U+04FF), while historical forms such as iotified A (Ꙗ, U+A656) and iotified E (Ѥ, U+0464) appear in the Cyrillic Extended-B block for Old Church Slavonic manuscripts.[19] Combining marks like U+2DFC (for iotified A) support scholarly editions of early Slavic texts, ensuring accurate reproduction of iotation in digital formats.[19]
Representations in Latin and Other Scripts
In Latin-based orthographies, iotation and resulting palatalization are commonly represented through diacritics on consonants or vowels, digraphs involving or , and sometimes the letter for the /j/ glide. These notations vary by language but aim to indicate the palatal quality introduced by historical or synchronic contact with /j/ or front vowels. For instance, acute accents modify base letters to denote palatal affricates and fricatives, while inserted signals palatalization before back vowels.In Polish, palatalized coronals and velars are distinctly marked with acute diacritics: <ć> for /tɕ/, <ś> for /ɕ/, <ź> for /ʑ/, and <ń> for /ɲ/, contrasting with their non-palatal counterparts , , , and . The letter represents the /j/ semivowel directly, as in "jeden" (/jɛdɛn/). These conventions stem from 19th-century orthographic reforms by Polish linguists to reflect phonetic reality without excessive digraphs. In other West Slavic languages like Czech and Slovak, iotation results are represented by diacritics such as <ť> for /c/, <ď> for /ɟ/, <ň> for /ɲ/, and <č> for /tʃ/, distinguishing palatal affricates and nasals from plain consonants. In Lithuanian, palatalization before back vowels is orthographically indicated by inserting between the consonant and the vowel (e.g., for /tʲa/, where has no phonetic value), while before front vowels, it relies on allophonic realization or diacritics like the dot on <ė> (/eː/, often in iotated contexts). This system, formalized in the 20th century by the Institute of the Lithuanian Language, preserves Baltic palatal contrasts without dedicated palatal letters.[26]South Slavic languages using Latin script, such as Croatian and Slovene, employ digraphs like for /ʎ/, for /ɲ/, and <dž> for /dʒ/, alongside single letters with diacritics like <ć> /tɕ/ and <đ> /dʑ/, reflecting conservative treatment of iotation products without acute accents on all palatals.Romance languages adapted Latin script to historical iotation via digraphs or trigraphs rather than diacritics. In French, the sequence typically denotes /ij/, as in "fille" (/fij/), reflecting medieval palatalization of /l/ before /i/; marks /ɲ/ from earlier /nj/, as in "montagne" (/mɔ̃taɲ/). These spellings, standardized by the Académie Française since the 17th century, prioritize etymology over phonetics, leading to inconsistent notation for /j/ (e.g., in "yeux" /jø/).[27] In Finnic languages like Estonian, palatalization is largely allophonic—consonants soften before front vowels such as <ä>, <ö>, <ü>—and unmarked in orthography, which follows a near-phonemic principle established in the 19th-century national awakening. Latvian, while Baltic, influences Finnic borders with its own for /j/ and diacritics like <ģ> for palatal /ɟ/, but Estonian avoids such marks to simplify spelling.[28]Non-Latin scripts handle iotation remnants differently, often without explicit notation for phonetic palatalization. In Devanagari for Sanskrit, historical iotation produced the palatal consonant row (e.g., <च> /tɕ/, <ज> /dʑ/), derived from proto-Indo-European *k + *i; vowel matras like <ि> (/i/) or <े> (/e/) indicate potential triggers, but modern usage embeds these in conjuncts without separate iotation marks. This abugida structure, codified in ancient grammars like Pāṇini's Aṣṭādhyāyī (c. 4th century BCE), prioritizes syllabic units over linear glides.[29]Arabic orthography, a consonantal abjad, assimilates /j/ (written <ي>) to preceding coronals via phonetic palatalization (e.g., /n/ → [nʲ] before /i/), but does not notate it; the script focuses on roots, omitting short vowels and secondary articulations unless vocalized for pedagogy. This approach, rooted in Qur'anic standardization (7th century CE), treats palatalization as predictable allophony.[30]Standardization of iotation representations in Latin script involves national bodies and international bodies like ISO. Polish and Lithuanian orthographies were unified by linguistic academies in the early 20th century to incorporate diacritics consistently, balancing tradition and phonetics. ISO 9 (1995) provides transliteration rules for palatal sounds from Cyrillic to Latin, using for iotation (e.g., <я> → ), influencing cross-script adaptations. In constructed languages like Esperanto, iotation is straightforward: denotes /j/ (e.g., "jes" /jes/), with no palatal consonants beyond affricates like <ĉ> /tʃ/; Zamenhof's 1887 design emphasized phonetic regularity using Latin diacritics for clarity in international use.[31]
Linguistic Distribution
In Indo-European Languages
Palatalization processes, akin to iotation in Slavic and involving the effect of a palatal approximant /j/ or front vowels, play a significant role in the phonological evolution of many Indo-European languages, particularly in how they shape consonant inventories and interact with morphological patterns.[32] In branches like Slavic and Romance, such palatalization is extensive and phonemically contrastive, leading to doubled consonant systems, whereas in Germanic and Baltic, it is more restricted, often limited to historical or contextual softening.[5] This variation reflects divergent sound changes from shared Proto-Indo-European roots, influencing everything from lexical items to grammatical alternations.[33]In Slavic languages, iotation is a core feature, inherited from Proto-Slavic and manifesting as secondary palatalization that distinguishes soft (palatalized) from hard consonants. East Slavic languages like Russian exhibit extensive iotation, where the soft sign (ь, or мягкий знак) marks palatalization, as in брат [brat] "brother" versus брать [bratʲ] "to take," affecting nearly all obstruents and sonorants before front vowels.[5]South Slavic languages, such as Serbian and Bulgarian, show similar processes but with reduced phonemic contrast in some cases, where iotation triggers affrication or spirantization in verb stems. This palatalization extends to morphology, particularly verb conjugations, where iotation creates alternations in present tense forms, such as Russian нести [nʲɪsʲtʲi] "to carry" (palatalized stem) versus несёт [nʲɪsʲot] (third person), reinforcing aspectual and person distinctions through consonant softening.[34]Ukrainian exemplifies variable iotation in j-effects, where gemination and palatalization interact in derivational morphology, as in nouns like tovstý [tɔu̯stɪ́] "fat" (cf. tovstyj [tɔu̯stɪj] "fatty"), blending /j/ insertion with consonant palatalization.[34]Romance languages demonstrate palatalization akin to iotation primarily through Vulgar Latin developments, where sequences like /tj, dj, kj, gj/ before front vowels or /j/ underwent palatalization to affricates and fricatives. In Western Romance, such as French and Spanish, this led to widespread palatal consonants; for instance, Vulgar Latin /tj/ evolved to affricates like /tʃ/, as in Latin nātiō > Spanish nación [naˈθjon].[32]Spanish retains palatals like /tʃ/ from /tj/, as in Latin octō > ocho [ˈotʃo] (via intermediate changes), while French shows further lenition to /s/ or /ʒ/, as in Latin decem > dix [dis]. These changes influenced morphology minimally compared to Slavic, but they affected nominal and verbal paradigms indirectly through lexical shifts, such as in Romance verb infinitives where palatalized stems alternate in tenses (e.g., Spanish decir [deˈθiɾ] "to say" from Latin dicere, with /θ/ from palatalized /k/). Eastern Romance, like Romanian, preserves more conservative forms with less affrication, but palatalization still softens consonants before /e, i/.[35] In Celtic languages, such as Irish, phonemic palatalization distinguishes hard and soft consonants, similar to Baltic, affecting morphology in initial mutations and declensions. Indo-Iranian languages show more limited palatalization, often involving retroflex rather than purely palatal shifts.Germanic and Baltic branches exhibit more limited palatalization, often confined to historical contexts rather than phonemic systems. In Germanic, particularly Old English, palatalization occurred before front vowels, inserting /j/ or softening velars, as in Proto-Germanic *kindą > Old English cild [tʃild] "child," where /k/ became /tʃ/ via /j/-like glide effects.[36] West Germanic languages like Dutch and German show residual palatalization in dialects, but it rarely impacts morphology beyond occasional stem alternations in strong verbs. In Baltic, Lithuanian features phonemic palatalization with doubled consonant inventories, where consonants soften before /i, e/, as in rankà [rɐŋkɐ] "hand" versus rɑŋkʲɑ̀ [rɑŋkʲɑ̀] (palatalized locative), influencing nominal declensions. Latvian, however, has minimal palatalization, with consonant softening limited to prosodic contexts and no robust phonemic opposition, resulting in simpler morphology without widespread palatal alternations.[37]The density of palatalization varies markedly across Indo-European branches, with Slavic and Romance showing high prevalence due to inherited Proto-Slavic and Vulgar Latin triggers, while Germanic and Baltic display lower incidence tied to specific environments.
Phonemic in Lithuanian (palatalized vs. plain); prosodic softening in Latvian.
Nominal declensions in Lithuanian (e.g., palatalized locatives).[37]
In Non-Indo-European Languages
In Uralic languages, palatalization akin to iotation manifests as consonant palatalization triggered by adjacent high front vowels or glides like , particularly in Finnic branches. In Estonian and Livonian, palatalized consonants such as ĺ, ń, ś, and t́ developed historically from the influence of following i and j, often before vowel syncope, as seen in forms like Estonianpaĺk 'log' from palkki.[38] This process created phonemic contrasts in dentals and sibilants, with Livonian exhibiting additional palatal phonemes like ḑ, ļ, ņ, and ţ under similar conditioning.[38]Finnish, by contrast, lacks phonemic palatalization, though coarticulatory effects occur with front vowels.[38] In Hungarian, palatalization appears morphologically through palatal suffixes and stops, where consonants like /t/ and /d/ alternate to palatal [tɕ] and [dʑ] (orthographic ty, gy) before front vowels, as in plural forms adapting to stem harmony.[39] This reflects a broader Uralic pattern of palatal series in consonants, except in Finnish, correlating with areal contacts.[40]Among Turkic and Mongolic languages, palatalization involves consonant alternations and vowel shifts before front vowels or , akin to palatal harmony. In Kazakh, palatalization assimilation targets consonants before , producing affricates or fricatives, as in potential shifts like /k/ to in compounds, a natural process cross-linguistically.[41] Urban varieties further palatalize /e/ to [eʲ], enhancing frontness in harmony with preceding palatals. Mongolian dialects exhibit extensive palatalization affecting both vowels and consonants, with historical processes fronting vowels after palatalized coronals and creating contrasts like vs. [nʲ] in Khalkha.[42] This includes vowel palatalization in Eastern dialects like Horchin, where front vowels trigger consonant softening, distinct from RTR harmony in central varieties.[43] Such features underscore typological parallels with Uralic vowel harmony, potentially diffused through Eurasian contacts.[44]Japanese demonstrates palatalization akin to iotation through consonant changes before /i/, a synchronic process yielding affricates and fricatives, as in /si/ realized as [ɕi] and /ti/ as [tɕi].[45] This involves linguopalatal contact adjustments in sequences like VCV and VC/j/V, where the consonant acquires secondary palatal articulation without full merger in some cases.[45] Expressive palatalization in mimetics and babytalk further amplifies this, associating palatals with smallness or affection, as consonants like /k/ shift to in diminutives.[46] In Semitic languages, emphatic consonants (*ṭ, *ṣ, q) involve pharyngealization or glottalization rather than palatal shifts, though secondary palatal effects appear in some Arabic dialects via front vowel coarticulation.[47]Palatalization in non-Indo-European languages often arises as a contact-induced feature across Eurasia, with Uralic and Altaic families showing shared palatal patterns from prolonged interactions, as proposed in early theories linking Proto-Slavic palatalization to Altaic influences via substrate borrowing.[44] Typological studies highlight palatalization's diffusion in multilingual zones, where Uralic palatal series correlate with Turkic harmony through bilingualism.[48] Recent analyses (2020s) of pidgins and creoles emphasize substrate influences on phonology, including palatalization from African or Asian languages in contact varieties like Nigerian Pidgin, where front vowel triggers mirror source features without genetic inheritance.[49] This underscores palatalization's role in areal typology, favoring convergence over universal tendencies.[49]
Historical Evolution
Proto-Language Origins
In Proto-Indo-European (PIE), palatalization before the semivowel *y (yod) is reconstructed as a precursor to later processes like iotation in descendant branches. This involved the influence of *y on preceding consonants, leading to articulatory fronting, particularly in clusters or before front vowels, as seen in cognate sets such as the PIE root *dyēw- "sky," yielding Greek Ζεύς (with /z/ from *dy-), Latin diēs "day," and Sanskrit dýauḥ "sky," where *y triggered affricate-like developments in some languages.[50]Theories posit a common source in PIE *y as a trigger for palatalization across dialects, though debates exist on phonetic pathways. Laryngeal theory refinements indicate laryngeals (*h₁, *h₂, *h₃) colored adjacent vowels (e.g., *e > *a before *h₂), influencing environments for later palatal developments.[51]
Developments in Major Branches
In the Slavic branch, iotation evolved through multiple palatalizations in Common Slavic (ca. 5th–9th centuries AD), including the first palatalization of velars before front vowels (e.g., *k > *č), the second before jers (*ъ, *ь), and the third progressive palatalization before a jer plus consonant. Iotation specifically refers to the progressive palatalization before /j/, affecting non-velars like dentals (e.g., *tj > *č, *dj > *dž, *stj > *šč) and contributing to consonant softening as jers were lost, opening syllables. For instance, Common Slavic *otъ "from" reflects interactions with jer loss. Evidence from 9th–10th-century Old Church Slavonic texts, such as the Codex Zographensis, shows palatalized consonants before historic /j/ or front vowels, using diacritics for soft variants.[52][53]In the Romance branch, palatalization before /i/ and /j/ occurred during medieval periods (ca. 8th–12th centuries AD) in Vulgar Latin, affecting dentals, velars, and labials. An example is the shift in Italian from Latin *centum to [ˈtʃɛnto], with /k/ assimilating to the front vowel. Western Romance languages like French and Spanish saw depalatalization, as in French /sɑ̃/ from *centum.[54][55]Among other Indo-European branches, Iranian languages show palatalization in satem developments, as in Avestan (ca. 1000–600 BC), where velars became sibilants before front vowels (e.g., *ḱ > *ś). In Celtic, palatalization occurred post-Proto-Celtic (ca. 1000 BC), especially in Goidelic varieties like Old Irish (6th–10th centuries AD), creating slender (palatalized) consonants before front vowels or historic /j/, with alternations like broad /k/ versus slender /cʲ/ (leniting to /ç/). These were less systematic than in Slavic.[56]Across branches, factors like analogy regularized forms, and dialect leveling homogenized variations during contact periods; in Slavic, this mitigated overpalatalization by the 10th century.[57] These unfolded from ancient Iranian to medieval Slavic and Romance stages.[58]