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References
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[1]
Linguistics 001 -- Language Change and Historical ReconstructionLinguists rely on systematic sound changes to establish the relationships between languages. The basic idea is that when a change occurs within a speech ...
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[PDF] The phonological basis of sound change - Stanford UniversityThe neogrammarians portrayed sound change as an exceptionless, purely pho- netically conditioned process rooted in the mechanism of speech production.1.
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[PDF] DOCUMENT RESUME Explanation of Sound Change. How Far ...Early explanations of sound change were often sought in extralinguistic factors such as climate or the speakers' physiology. More recently, scholars have ...
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[PDF] John Benjamins Publishing Company - UNM LinguisticsLabov distinguishes two types of sound change: the first he calls Neogrammarian sound change; the outcome is lexically regular and he characterizes it as ' ...
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NoneBelow is a merged summary of sound change from Campbell (1998), *Historical Linguistics: An Introduction*, based on the provided segments. To retain all information in a dense and organized manner, I will use a combination of narrative text and a table in CSV format to capture details such as definitions, scope, distinctions, key concepts, quotes, page references, and URLs. The narrative will provide an overarching synthesis, while the table will detail specific information from each segment for clarity and completeness.
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[PDF] historical linguistics: the study of language changeIn 1814, the Danish linguist Rasmus Rask carefully documented the relationships among cognates ... by the German scholar Franz Bopp in 1816. In 1822 ...
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A Reader in Nineteenth Century Historical Indo-European LinguisticsGrimm has given nine rules, relating the consonants of Germanic with those of Greek and Latin, less commonly with Sanskrit and other Indo-European languages.Missing: 1822 | Show results with:1822
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[PDF] HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGEFranz BOPP (1791-1863). Founder of Historical Linguistics. Born at. Mainz, moved to Bavaria (where he read Schlegel's book), then to Paris where he studied ...
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A Reader in Nineteenth Century Historical Indo-European LinguisticsAugust Schleicher (1821-68) may not have achieved a definitive work because of his short life. The first edition of his Compendium was published in 1861, on the ...
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Linguistic synchrony and diachrony, according to Saussure and LyonsJun 17, 2016 · Saussure's study has two perspectives; one synchronic and the other one diachronic. Language -a combination of signs that a linguistic community shares- as a ...
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Prague School Phonologya. Prague school linguistics' success essentially changed the character of European linguistics. found the Functionalist School, i.e., Prague School is the ...
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(PDF) Sound Change In Functional Phonology - ResearchGateSound systems may never stop changing, not even if only internal factors are present, because there may always be a better system.
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[PDF] THE SOUND PATTERN OF ENGLISH - MITThis study of English sound structure is an interim report on work in progress rather than an attempt to present a definitive and exhaustive study of ...
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[14]
Osthoff and Brugmann 1878 - Foundations of LinguisticsAug 25, 2009 · The Neogrammarian account would seem to assume a rather sudden change in the speech of an individual, in which all words were affected, and ...Missing: Leskien Paul 1875-1880
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12 - The Neogrammarians and their Role in the Establishment of the ...... sound laws operate without exception; analogical changes explain violations of sound laws. The last two axioms were criticized (e.g., Curtius), but the ...
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Prinzipien der sprachgeschichte : Paul, Hermann, 1846-1921Apr 15, 2009 · Prinzipien der sprachgeschichte ; Publication date: 1920 ; Topics: Language and languages ; Publisher: Halle a.S. : Max Niemeyer ; Collection ...Missing: quote change
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A Reader in Nineteenth Century Historical Indo-European LinguisticsThe principles elaborated by Brugmann were also applied by the other notable neogrammarians: Braune, Delbruck, Paul, and Sievers in addition to those mentioned ...Missing: 1875-1880 | Show results with:1875-1880
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[PDF] 1 Phonetic bias in sound change - UC Berkeley LinguisticsThe structure imposed on the phonetic input to sound change, via the directionality of phonetic variation, is a key source of the typological patterns of sound ...
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Lenition, perception and neutralisation* | Phonology | Cambridge CoreJun 15, 2016 · This paper argues that processes traditionally classified as lenition fall into at least two subsets, with distinct phonetic reflexes, formal properties and ...
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History of Spanish ConsonantsBy the end of the fifteenth century, however, Old Spanish [-b-] (< Lat. /-p-/) had weakened to [-β-], yielding modern pronunciations like [ˈloβo] lobo. In short ...
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Lenition, fortition and the status of plosive affricationApr 16, 2012 · This paper reports on a phonetic and phonological study of /t/-affrication in spontaneous British English Received Pronunciation.
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[PDF] DissimilationDissimilation is a process by which one segment systematically avoids taking on a feature (or a set of features) of a neighboring segment.<|separator|>
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Pilgrim - Etymology, Origin & MeaningPilgrim, from Old French and Late Latin origins meaning "foreigner," refers to a traveler journeying to a holy place for penance, vows, or spiritual ...
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[PDF] 5 The evolution of metathesis - UC Berkeley LinguisticsIn our view sound change is mainly caused by listener-based reinterpretation. This in turn may arise in several ways. For example, the actual phonetic string ...
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[PDF] metathesis in the history of english - ojs tnkulThe two kinds of metathesis discussed appear to employ two opposing tendencies – to eliminate a TR cluster and replace it with a RT combination, as in brid bird ...
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Full article: Phonological processes in English connected speechHaplology refers to the reduction or simplification of repeated or similar sound sequences within words or phrases (Campbell, Citation1998). Finally ...<|separator|>
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Exploring Chain Shifts, Mergers, and Near-Mergers as Changes in ...This chapter explores methodological and theoretical issues related to chain shifts and mergers, familiar concepts in historical phonology.
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Phonological Change (Chapter 7) - The New Cambridge History of ...Oct 27, 2025 · This chapter examines in detail one such type of phonological change, that is shifts, in order to illustrate the challenges posed by historical ...
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[PDF] Phonological changes - Fon.Hum.Uva.Nl.Conditioned mergers (also called primary splits, a specific case of phoneme split) are prototypical cases of such a rephonologization, as they involve a change ...
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Methodological and Theoretical Issues in the Study of Chain ShiftingNov 2, 2011 · This article explores how the process of chain shifting is investigated with a focus on studies of active language changes (ie, changes in progress)
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[PDF] Labov, Sound Change, and Phonological Theory∗How and why are chain shifts initiated? Historical phonologists distinguish pull-chains from push-chains according to whether they are triggered by vacant slots ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] 9 Investigating Chain Shifts and MergersIn a chain shift, the vowels often shift at differential rates according to phonological context; some envi- ronments seem to favor the change, and others ...
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[PDF] A holistic approach to sound change typology Juliette BlEvolutionary phonology aims to explain why certain sound patterns are common, like final devoicing, and how they relate to sound change. Phonetic explanations ...
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[PDF] Class 6 Types of sound changes (and phonological processes)Oct 1, 2019 · Assimilation is a process where one sound becomes more similar to an adjacent sound. 2.1 Characterizing assimilation. • We can characterize each ...<|control11|><|separator|>
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[PDF] Phonetic Symbols and Conventions - LinguisticsIt is standard in historical linguistics to use > to mean 'changed into', for example: *p > b (original p changed into b), and < to mean 'changed from ...
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[PDF] Indo-EuropeanAs a final but crucial touch we must add an asterisk before this reconstruction (*dente), which is the conventional marker in historical linguistics for a ...
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[PDF] Explaining universal tendencies and language particulars in ... - MITa paradigm; X→Y represents a synchronic morphological or phonological rule changing input X to surface Y; X>Y indicates regular sound change from X to its ...
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Indo-European and Grimm's Law*p, *t, *k — once again stayed the same in Latin and Greek, but changed in Germanic as part of Grimm's Law. In Germanic ( ...
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[PDF] The Sound Changes which Distinguish Germanic from Indo-EuropeanAccording to this model, Grimm's Law was initiated by a change of the original voiceless stops to voiceless fricatives. The original voiced stops were then ' ...Missing: notation contextual
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[PDF] Laws of sound ChangeGrimm's Law: a series of changes for the stops from PIE to Proto-Germanic: 1. voiceless stops (p, t, k) > voiceless fricatives (f, θ, h(x) ). 2. voiced stops ...
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(PDF) Chapter 1. Grimm's Law and Verner's Law - Academia.eduThis work explores the mechanisms behind Grimm's Law and Verner's Law, emphasizing the systematic changes to stop consonants in the Germanic languages from ...
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(PDF) Centum and satem languages - Academia.eduCentum languages retain plain velars while satem languages merge them with palatovelars into sibilants. The classification of Indo-European languages as centum ...
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[PDF] Sound changes from Proto-Indo-European to Early Modern EnglishProto-Germanic voiceless spirants in medial and final positions underwent another shift when the preceding syllable did not carry the main stress. Through this ...
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(PDF) Palatalizations in the Romance Languages - ResearchGateFeb 24, 2023 · In Romance languages, the origins of palatalization can be found in Late Latin: this process is known as the 2 nd Romance palatalization.
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(PDF) The origins of Pharyngealization in Semitic - Academia.eduThis study explores the origins of pharyngealization in Arabic and other Semitic languages, focusing on the phonological feature known as the "emphatic" ...
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[PDF] The Typology of Pharyngealization in Arabic Dialects Focusing on a ...Emphasis may spread from the underlying emphatic consonant onto the neighboring vowels only over a certain number of open syllables in multi-syllabic words (Ali ...
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[PDF] The Philippine Languages and the Determination of PAN Syllable ...Nov 29, 2005 · un 'weave' (from an earlier *tine?un by vowel metathesis and syncope of the medial syllable), Amis mi-tinu?un 'weave'). There are other forms ...
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reduplication in some Austronesian languages | MorphologyNov 27, 2009 · This paper traces the diachronic developments of C1V1- reduplicative processes and their functions in some Austronesian languages.
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THE FINAL CONSONANTS OF OLD CHINESE - jstorIn the development from Old Chinese to Middle Chinese the six original types of consonants were reduced to the three types that still existed at that time ...
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[PDF] phonetic motivation for diachronic sound change in bantuThe noun classes in question, 9 and 10, were historically marked by mu- and ni-, but deletion of the vowels resulted in nasals prefixing to stems beginning with ...
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[PDF] Phonological Asymmetries of Bantu Nasal PrefixesApr 14, 2015 · In Bantu, two kinds of nasal prefixes are observed: bilabial /m/ and underspecified /N/ (or /n/). The two prefixes are diachronic relics of ...
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Competing Changes as a Cause of Residue - jstorWang 1967a. Results so far based on the measure developed in that ... COMPETING CHANGES AS A CAUSE OF RESIDUE 13 before the change, all speakers ...
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foot-fronting and foot–strut splitting: vowel variation in the East ...Sep 14, 2020 · This article investigates the status of the foot–strut split in the counties of Leicestershire, Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire in the East ...
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Resolving the Neogrammarian Controversy - jstorFrom the standpoint of the Neogrammarian hypothesis, this was a new idea: irregularities might be the result of two regular sound changes, rather than the ...
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[PDF] The Social Motivation of a Sound Change - Language LogDec 4, 2015 · The work which is reported in the following pages concerns the direct observation of a sound change in the context of the community life ...
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Driving forces in linguistic changeAug 2, 2002 · The Northern Cities Shift is a rotation of five vowels of English as shown in Figure 1. It apparently began in the middle of the 20th century, ...
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1. THE NORTHERN CITIES SHIFT - Duke University PressIn language-change situations, numerous stud- ies have reported females leading males in the use of innovative forms (see Labov 1990).17 For the most part ...
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[PDF] Three Waves of Variation Study: The Emergence of Meaning in the ...Jun 19, 2012 · Finally, the simple view of women as more conservative was contradicted by studies in the United States showing women leading in sound change.
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[PDF] World Englishes: The Study of New Linguistic Varieties - uogbooksThe main focus of the book is on the second-language varieties of English that have developed in the former British colonies of East and West. Africa, the ...
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Editorial: Englishes in a globalized world: Exploring contact effects ...Research on aspects of the contact type of Global Englishes continues with two in-depth studies that each trace the integration and development of one English ...
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The competing sound changes in the dialects of migrant ...Philadelphia: John Benjamins. WANG, William S.Y. 1969. Competing changes as a cause of residue. Language 45(1): 9–25.
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(PDF) Dialect Diversity and Social Change: New Approaches in ...May 1, 2025 · This study examines how contemporary social changes – including urbanization and the rise of social media – reshape dialect diversity in English.
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Globalising the study of language variation and change: A manifesto ...May 26, 2022 · Sociolinguistic study of variation and change has a long-standing bias towards speech communities in Western and especially Anglophone ...