Fusion (phonetics)
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Historical sound change |
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General |
Metathesis |
Dissimilation |
Fortition |
Lenition (weakening) |
Sonorization (voicing) |
Spirantization (assibilation) |
Rhotacism |
Debuccalization (loss of place) |
Elision (loss) |
Apheresis (initial) |
Syncope (medial) |
Apocope (final) |
Haplology (similar syllables) |
Fusion |
Cluster reduction |
Compensatory lengthening |
Epenthesis (addition) |
Anaptyxis (vowel) |
Excrescence (consonant) |
Prosthesis (initial) |
Paragoge (final) |
Unpacking |
Vowel breaking |
Assimilation |
Coarticulation |
Palatalization (before front vowels) |
Labialization (before rounded vowels) |
Final devoicing (before silence) |
Vowel harmony |
Consonant harmony |
Cheshirisation (trace remains) |
Nasalization |
Tonogenesis |
Floating tone |
Sandhi (boundary change) |
Crasis (contraction) |
Liaison, linking R |
Consonant mutation |
Tone sandhi |
Hiatus |
In phonetics and historical linguistics, fusion is the merger of the features of two segment into one.
A common form of fusion is found in the development of nasal vowels, which frequently become phonemic when final nasal consonants are lost from a language. This occurred in French and Portuguese. Compare the French words un vin blanc [œ̃ vɛ̃ blɑ̃] "a white wine" with their English cognates, one, vine, blank, which retain the n's.
Another example is the development of Greek bous "cow" from Indo-European *gwous. Although *gw was already a single consonant, [ɡʷ], it had two places of articulation, a velar stop ([ɡ]) and labial secondary articulation ([ʷ]). In Greek bous these elements have fused into a purely labial stop [b].
An extreme example of fusion occurred in Old Irish, where a vowel fused with a consonant before another consonant. The only feature that remained of the lost consonant was its length, in the form of a long vowel: *[magl] → [maːl] "prince". This phenomenon is called compensatory lengthening.
[edit] See also
The opposite of fusion is unpacking.