Syncope (phonetics)
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- For other uses of the word syncope, see syncope (disambiguation)
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 phonology, syncope /ˈsɪŋ.kə.pi:/ (Greek syn- + kopein “to strike”) is the loss of one or more sounds from the interior of a word; especially, the loss of an unstressed vowel.
Contents |
[edit] Syncope as a historical sound change
In historical phonetics, the term "syncope" is often but not always limited to the loss of an unstressed vowel:
[edit] The loss of any sound
- Old English hláford > English lord
- English Worcester, pronounced [ˈwʊstə]
- English Gloucester, pronounced [ˈɡlɒstə]
[edit] The loss of an unstressed vowel
- Latin cál[i]dum > Italian caldo "hot"
- Latin óc[u]lum > Italian occhio "eye"
- Latin trem[u]láre > Italian tremare "to tremble"
[edit] Syncope as a poetic device
Sounds may be removed from the interior of a word as a rhetoric or poetic device, whether for embellishment or for the sake of the meter.
- Latin commo[ve]rat > poetic commorat ("he had moved")
- English hast[e]ning > poetic hast'ning
- English heav[e]n > poetic heav'n
- English over > poetic o'er
[edit] Syncope in informal speech
Various sorts of colloquial reductions might be called "syncope". Forms such as "didn't" that are written with an apostrophe are, however, generally called contractions:
- English [Au]stra[lia]n > colloquial Strine
- English go[ing t]o> gonna
- English wa[nt t]o > wanna
- English did n[o]t > didn't
- English do[n't k]no[w] > dunno
- English I [woul]d [h]ave > I'd've