Hard and soft C


In the Latin-based orthographies of many European languages, a distinction between hard and soft occurs in which represents two distinct phonemes. The sound of a hard is that of the voiceless velar stop, while the sound of a soft , depending on language, may be a fricative or affricate. In English, the sound of soft is .
There was no soft in classical Latin, where it was always pronounced as.

History

This alternation is caused by a historical palatalization of which took place in Late Latin, and led to a change in the pronunciation of the sound before the front vowels and. Later, other languages not directly descended from Latin, such as English, inherited this feature as an orthographic convention.

English

General overview

In English orthography, the pronunciation of hard is and of soft is generally. Yod-coalescence has altered instances of particularly in unstressed syllables to in most varieties of English affecting words such as ocean, logician and magician. Generally, the soft pronunciation occurs before ; it also occurs before and in a number of Greek and Latin loanwords. The hard pronunciation occurs everywhere else except in the letter combinations,, and which have distinct pronunciation rules. Double generally represents before, as in accident, succeed, and coccyx.
There are exceptions to the general rules of hard and soft :
A silent can occur after at the end of a word or component root word part of a larger word. The can serve a marking function indicating that the preceding is soft as in dance and enhancement. The silent often additionally indicates that the vowel before is a long vowel, as in rice, mace, and pacesetter.
When adding suffixes with to root words ending in, the final of the root word is often dropped and the root word retains the soft pronunciation as in danced, dancing, and dancer from dance. The suffixes -ify and -ise/-ize can be added to most nouns and adjectives to form new verbs. The pronunciation of in newly coined words using these suffixes is not always clear. The digraph may be used to retain the hard pronunciation in inflections and derivatives of a word such as trafficking from the verb traffic.
There are several cases in English in which hard and soft alternate with the addition of suffixes as in critic/criticism and electric/electricity.

Letter combinations

A number of two-letter combinations or digraphs follow distinct pronunciation patterns and do not follow the hard/soft distinction of. For example, may represent , , or . Other letter combinations that don't follow the paradigm include,,,,, and. These come primarily from loanwords.
Besides a few examples, fits neatly with the regular rules of : Before, the second is soft while the first is hard. Words such as accept and success are pronounced with and words such as succumb and accommodate are pronounced with. Exceptions include loanwords from Italian such as cappuccino with for.
Many placenames and other proper nouns with -cester are pronounced with such as Worcester, Gloucester, and Leicester. The pronunciation occurs as a combination of a historically soft pronunciation and historical elision of the first vowel of the suffix.

Italian loanwords

The original spellings and pronunciations of Italian loanwords have mostly been kept. Many English words that have been borrowed from Italian follow a distinct set of pronunciation rules corresponding to those in Italian. The Italian soft pronunciation is , while the hard is the same as in English. Italian orthography uses to indicate a hard pronunciation before or, analogous to English using and .
In addition to hard and soft, the digraph represents when followed by or . Meanwhile, in Italian represents, not, but English-speakers commonly mispronounce it as due to familiarity with the German pronunciation. Italian uses to indicate the gemination of before,, or before or. English does not usually geminate consonants and therefore loanwords with soft are pronounced with as with cappuccino, pronounced.

Suffixation issues

Rarely, the use of unusual suffixed forms to create neologisms occurs. For example, the words sac and bloc are both standard words but adding -iness or -ism would create spellings that seem to indicate soft pronunciations.. Potential remedies include altering the spelling to sackiness and blockism, though no standard conventions exist.

Replacement with

Sometimes replaces,, or, as a trope for giving words a hard-edged or whimsical feel. Examples include the Mortal Kombat franchise and product names such as Kool-Aid and Nesquik. More intensely, this use of has also been used to give extremist or racist connotations. Examples include ' or '.

Other languages

Most modern Romance languages make the hard/soft distinction with, except a few that have undergone spelling reforms such as Ladino and archaic variants like Sardinian. Some non-Romance languages like German, Danish and Dutch use in loanwords and also make this distinction. The soft pronunciation, which occurs before, and, is:
  1. in Italian, Romanian, and Old English;
  2. in English, French, Portuguese, Catalan, Latin American Spanish, Dutch, and the Scandinavian languages;
  3. in European Spanish;
  4. in words loaned into German. This is one of the more archaic pronunciations, and was also the pronunciation in Old Spanish, Old French and other historical languages where it is now pronounced. Most languages in eastern and central Europe came to use only for, and only for .
The hard occurs in all other positions and represents in all these aforementioned languages.
In Italian and Romanian, the orthographic convention for representing before front vowels is to add . is used to accomplish the same purpose in Catalan, Portuguese, Spanish, and French.
In French, Catalan, Portuguese, and Old Spanish a cedilla is used to indicate a soft pronunciation when it would otherwise seem to be hard.. Spanish is similar, though is used instead of .
In the orthographies of Irish and Scottish Gaelic, most consonants including have a "broad" vs "slender" distinction for many of its other consonants generally based on whether the nearest vowel is or, respectively. In Irish, ⟨c⟩ usually represents a hard, but represents before e or i, or after i. In Scottish Gaelic, broad is one of /kʰ ʰk ʰk k/, and slender is one of /kʰʲ ʰkʲ ʰkʲ kʲ/, depending on the phonetic environment.
A number of orthographies do not make a hard/soft distinction. The is always hard in Welsh but is always soft in Slavic languages, Hungarian, and in Hanyu Pinyin transcription system of Mandarin Chinese, where it represents and in Indonesian and many of the transcriptions of the languages of India such as Sanskrit and Hindi, where it always represents. See also C § Other languages.
Swedish has a similar phenomenon with hard and soft : this results from a similar historical palatalization development. Soft is typically a palatal or an alveolo-palatal, and occurs before not only , and, but also,, and. Another similar system with hard and soft is found in Faroese with the hard being and the soft being, and Turkish where the soft is.
The Vietnamese alphabet, while based on European orthographies, does not have a hard or a soft per se. The letter, outside of the digraph, always represents a hard /k/ sound. However, it never occurs in "soft positions", i.e. before, where is used instead, while never occurs elsewhere except in the digraph and a few loanwords. Hồ Chí Minh had proposed a simplified spelling, as shown in the title of one of his books, Đường kách mệnh.