Paragoge
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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 |
Paragoge is the addition of a sound to the end of a word. Often, this is due to nativization, and a logical counterpart of epenthesis, particularly vocalic epenthesis.
[edit] Diachronic paragoge
Some languages have undergone paragoge as a sound change, so that modern forms are longer than the historical forms they are derived from.
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[edit] Paragoge in loanwords
Languages that do not allow words to end in consonants, or do not allow certain consonants to occur word-finally, will add a dummy vowel to the end of loanwords from other languages that include an illegal final consonant. For example, English rack becomes Finnish räkki and Japanese rakku. Similarly, Arabic ‘araq became raki in Modern Greek.