Palatalization (sound change)
In linguistics, palatalization is a sound change that either results in a palatal or palatalized consonant or a front vowel, or is triggered by one of them. Palatalization involves change in the place or manner of articulation of consonants, or the fronting or raising of vowels. In some cases, palatalization involves assimilation or lenition.
An example of palatalization in English is one of the possible pronunciations of did you? as rather than
Types
Palatalization is sometimes an example of assimilation. In some cases, it is triggered by a palatal or palatalized consonant or front vowel, but in other cases, it is not conditioned in any way.Consonant
Palatalization changes place of articulation or manner of articulation of consonants. It may add palatal secondary articulation or change primary articulation from velar to palatal or alveolar, alveolar to postalveolar.It may also cause a consonant to change its manner of articulation from stop to affricate or fricative. The change in the manner of articulation is a form of lenition. However, the lenition is frequently accompanied by a change in place of articulation.
- >,,,,,
Palatalization, as a sound change, is usually triggered only by mid and close front vowels and the semivowel. The sound that results from palatalization may vary from language to language. For example, palatalization of may produce, etc. A change from to may pass through as an intermediate state, but there is no requirement for that to happen.
In some Zoque languages, does not palatalize velar consonants but it turns alveolars into palato-alveolars. In the Nupe language, and are palatalized both before front vowels and, while velars are only palatalized before front vowels. In Ciluba, palatalizes only a preceding,, or. In some variants of Ojibwe, velars are palatalized before, but apicals are not. In Indo-Aryan languages, dentals and are palatalized when occurring in clusters before, but velars are not.
Vowel
Palatalization sometimes refers to vowel shifts, the fronting of a back vowel or raising of a front vowel. The shifts are sometimes triggered by a nearby palatal or palatalized consonant or by a high front vowel. The Germanic umlaut is a famous example.A similar change is reconstructed in the history of Old French in which Bartsch's law turned open vowels into or after a palatalized velar consonant. If it was true for all open vowels in Old French, it would explain the palatalization of velar plosives before.
In Erzya, a Uralic language, the open vowel is raised to near-open after a palatalized consonant, as in the name of the language,.
In Russian, the back vowels are fronted to central, and the open vowel is raised to near-open, near palatalized consonants. The palatalized consonants also factor in how unstressed vowels are reduced.
Unconditioned
Palatalization is sometimes unconditioned or spontaneous, not triggered by a palatal or palatalized consonant or front vowel.In southwestern Romance, clusters of a voiceless obstruent with were palatalized once or twice. This first palatalization was unconditioned. It resulted in a cluster with a palatal lateral, a palatal lateral on its own, or a cluster with a palatal approximant. In a second palatalization, the was affricated to or spirantized to.
- Vulgar Latin clāmāre "to call" > Aromanian cl'imari /kʎimari/, Aragonese clamar /kʎamar/, Spanish llamar, Italian chiamare
- Vulgar Latin noctem "night" > French nuit, Portuguese noite, eastern Occitan nuèit, Catalan nit, Mozarabic noxte
A similar change is reconstructed for Ancient Greek. In the Attic dialect before the Classical period, the back vowels were fronted to. During the Koine or Medieval Greek period, they were unrounded to, and they finally merged as short, the pronunciation that they have in Modern Greek.
Anticipatory and progressive
When palatalization is assimilatory or triggered by a consonant or vowel, it is triggered by a following sound or by a preceding sound.Effects
Allophony and phonemic split
Palatalization may result in a phonemic split, a historical change by which a phoneme becomes two new phonemes over time through palatalization.Old historical splits have frequently drifted since the time they occurred and may be independent of current phonetic palatalization. The lenition tendency of palatalized consonants is important. According to some analyses, the lenition of the palatalized consonant is still a part of the palatalization process itself.
In Japanese, allophonic palatalization affected the dental plosives and, turning them into alveolo-palatal affricates and before, romanized as ⟨ch⟩ and ⟨j⟩ respectively. Japanese has, however, recently regained phonetic and from loanwords, and the originally-allophonic palatalization has thus become lexical. A similar change has also happened in Polish and Belarusian. That would also be true about most dialects of Brazilian Portuguese but for the strong phonotactical resistancy of its native speakers that turn dental plosives into post-alveolar affricates even in loanwords: McDonald's.
For example, Votic has undergone such a change historically, *keeli → tšeeli 'language', but there is currently an additional distinction between palatalized laminal and non-palatalized apical consonants. An extreme example occurs in Spanish, whose palatalized g has ended up as from a long process where Latin became palatalized to and then affricated to , deaffricated to , devoiced to , and finally retracted to a velar, giving ..
Examples
Palatalization has played a major role in the history of English, and of other languages and language groups throughout the world, such as the Romance, Greek, Slavic, Baltic, Finnic, Swedish, Norwegian, Mordvinic, Samoyedic, Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Goidelic, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Albanian, Arabic, and Micronesian languages.English
Anglo-Frisian
In Anglo-Frisian, the language that gave rise to English and the Frisian languages, the velar stops and the consonant cluster were palatalized in certain cases and became the sounds,,, and. Many words with Anglo-Frisian palatalization survive in Modern English, and the palatalized sounds are typically spelled,,, and in Modern English.Palatalization only occurred in certain environments, and so it did not apply to all words from the same root. This is the origin of some alternations in cognate words, such as speak and speech, cold and chill, burrow and bury, dawn and day. Here originates from unpalatalized and from unpalatalized.
Some English words with palatalization have unpalatalized doublets from the Northumbrian dialect and from Old Norse, such as shirt and skirt, church and kirk, ditch and dike. German only underwent palatalization of : cheese and Käse ; lie and lay, liegen and legen ; fish and Fisch.
The pronunciation of wicca as with a hard is a spelling pronunciation, since the actual Old English pronunciation gave rise to witch.
Yod-coalescence
Later in English, another palatalization called yod-coalescence occurred. Alveolar stops and fricatives were palatalized before the palatal approximant so that the clusters,, and changed into,, and respectively, frequently occurring with clusters that would be considered to span a syllable boundary. Yod-coalescence in stressed syllables, such as in tune and dune, occurs in Australian, Cockney, Estuary English, Hiberno-English, Newfoundland English, South African English, and to a certain extent in New Zealand English and Scottish English. This can lead to additional homophony; for instance, dew and due come to be pronounced the same as Jew.In certain varieties—such as Australian English, South African English, and New Zealand English— and in stressed syllables can coalesce into and, respectively. In Australian English for example, assume is pronounced by some speakers. Furthermore, some speakers may palatalize the to a when it comes before the cluster /tr/, so words like student and stress would be pronounced and, respectively, with the former pronunciation being less common among North American speakers. According to author Wayne P. Lawrence, "this phonemic change seems to be neither dialectal nor regional."
Other
Others include the following:- Rhotic palatalization:
- In Glasgow and some other urban Scottish accents, is given an apico-alveolar articulation, which auditorily gives an impression of a retracted pronunciation similar to.
Semitic languages
Arabic
Historical
While in most Semitic languages, e.g. Aramaic, Hebrew, Ge'ez the Gimel represents a, Arabic is considered unique among them where the Gimel or Jīm was palatalized to an affricate or a fricative in most dialects from classical times. While there is variation in Modern Arabic varieties, most of them reflect this palatalized pronunciation except in Egyptian Arabic and a number of Yemeni and Omani dialects, where it is pronounced as. It is not well known when this change occurred or if it is connected to the pronunciation of Qāf as a, but in most of the Arabian peninsula which is the homeland of the Arabic language, the represents a and represents a, except in western and southern Yemen and parts of Oman where represents a and represents a, which shows a strong correlation between the palatalization of to and the pronunciation of the as a as shown in the table below:Modern Arabic dialects
Some modern Arabic varieties developed palatalization of , and , usually when adjacent to front vowel, though these palatalizations also occur in other environments as well. These three palatalizations occur in a variety of dialects, including Iraqi, rural Palestinian varieties, a number of Gulf Arabic dialects, such as Kuwaiti, Qatari, Bahraini, and Emarati, as well as others in the Arab peninsula like Najdi, the southern dialects of Saudi Arabia, and various Bedouin dialects. Examples:- Classical Arabic كلب > Iraqi and Gulf , and Najdi.
- Classical Arabic ديك > rural Palestinian
- Classical Arabic الشارقة > Gulf while other neighboring dialects without palatalization.
- Classical Arabic جديد > Gulf
- Classical Arabic قربة > Najdi although this phenomenon is fading among the younger generations where قربة is pronounced like in most other dialects in Saudi Arabia.
Classical Arabic عَيْنُكِ is pronounced:
- in Gulf, Iraqi, and rural Palestinian dialects
- in Najdi and a number of bedouin dialects.
- or in some southern dialects in Saudi Arabia and Yemen.
Assyrian Neo-Aramaic
features the palatalization of kaph, taw and gimel, albeit in some dialects only and seldom in the standardized version of the language.- In the Upper Tyari dialects, in a stressed syllable is palatalized and replaced with .
- may be palatalized to among Assyrians who originate from Urmia; Iran; and Nochiya, southeastern Turkey.
- In Urmian and some Tyari dialects, is palatalized to.
Romance languages
Gallo-Romance
In Gallo-Romance, Vulgar Latin * became * very early, with the subsequent deaffrication and some further developments of the vowel. For instance:- cattus "cat" > chat
- calva "bald" > chauve
- *blanca "white" > blanche
- catēna "chain" > chaîne
- carus "dear" > cher
Mouillé
Mouillé is a term for palatal consonants in the Romance languages. Palatal consonants in the Romance languages developed from or by palatalization.l mouillé | n mouillé | |
Italian | gl | gn |
French | il | gn |
Occitan | lh | nh |
Catalan | ll | ny |
Spanish | ll | ñ |
Portuguese | lh | nh |
L and n mouillé have a variety of origins in the Romance languages. In these tables, letters that represent or used to represent or are bolded. In French, merged with in pronunciation in the 18th century; in many dialects of Spanish, has merged with. Romanian formerly had both and, but both have merged with : vīnea > > Romanian vie "vineyard"; mulierem > > Romanian muiere "woman".
Latin | meliōrem "better" | coaglāre "to coagulate" | auricla "ear" | caballum "horse" | lunam "moon" | clavem "key" |
Italian | migliore | cagliare | orecchio | cavallo | luna | chiave |
French | meilleur | cailler | oreille | cheval | lune | clé |
Occitan | melhor | calhar | aurelha | caval | luna | clau |
Catalan | millor | quallar | orella | cavall | lluna | clau |
Spanish | mejor | cuajar | oreja | caballo | luna | llave |
Portuguese | melhor | coalhar | orelha | cavalo | lua | chave |
Romanian | — | închega | ureche | cal | lună | cheie |
Latin | seniōrem "older" | cognātum "related" | annum "year" | somnum "sleep" | somnium "dream" | unglam "claw" | vīnum "wine" |
Italian | signore | cognato | anno | sonno | sogno | unghia | vino |
French | seigneur | — | an | somme | songe | ongle | vin |
Occitan | senhor | cunhat | an | sòm | sòmi | ongla | vin |
Catalan | senyor | cunyat | any | son | somni | ungla | vi |
Spanish | señor | cuñado | año | sueño | sueño | uña | vino |
Portuguese | senhor | cunhado | ano | sono | sonho | unha | vinho |
Romanian | — | cumnat | an | somn | — | unghie | vin |
Satem languages
In certain Indo-European language groups, the reconstructed "palato-velars" of Proto-Indo-European were palatalized into sibilants. The language groups with and without palatalization are called satem and centum languages, after the characteristic developments of the PIE word for "hundred":- PIE > Avestan satəm
Slavic languages