Fronting (sound change)


In phonology, fronting is a sound change in which a vowel or consonant becomes fronted, advanced or pronounced farther to the front of the vocal tract than some reference point. The opposite situation, in which a sound becomes pronounced farther to the back of the vocal tract, is called backing or retraction. Fronting may be triggered by a nearby sound, in which case it is a form of assimilation, or may occur on its own.

Examples

Assimilation

In i-mutation and Germanic umlaut, a back vowel is fronted under the influence of or in a following syllable. This is assimilation.

Vowel shifts

In the Attic and Ionic dialects of Ancient Greek, Proto-Greek close back were fronted to. This change occurred in all cases and was not triggered by a nearby front consonant or vowel.
In Old English and Old Frisian, the back vowels were fronted to in certain cases. For more information, see First a-fronting and Second a-fronting.
In many dialects of English, the vowel is fronted to or, a sound change that is sometimes called goose-fronting. The same sound change occurred in many dialects of Norwegian and Standard Swedish but not in Danish.
Fronting can also take place as part of a chain shift. For example, in the Northern Cities Shift, the raising of left room in the low-front area of the vowel space for to expand. Thus, words like cot and father are often pronounced with a low-front vowel.