Anticipatory assimilation to an adjacent segment Anticipatory assimilation to an adjacent segment is the most common type of assimilation by far and typically has the character of a conditioned sound change: it applies to all or part of the lexicon. For example,
in English, the place of articulation of
nasals assimilates to that of a following
stop (
handkerchief is pronounced ,
handbag in rapid speech is pronounced ). In
Italian, voiceless stops assimilated historically to a following : •
Latin "eight" > It. • Latin "bed" > • Latin – pronounced "under" > Italian and are examples of historical restructuring: and no longer contain pronounced , and is no longer the structure subject to the partial assimilation of devoicing of and full assimilation to produce . Over time, phonetic as a frequent assimilation of and was rather reinterpreted as reflecting . The structural sequence is now all but absent in Italian since all items in popular speech have undergone the same restructuring: . On the rare occasion that Italian is encountered, however, the same assimilation that triggered the restructuring can occur at the phonetic level. For example, the medical term 'stroke', a relatively recent direct borrowing from Latin, is usually pronounced in deliberate speech, but is frequent in more casual registers. • Latin > Italian , pronounced either or
Affrication in English There has been a notable change recognized across a variety of English dialects regarding the pronunciation of the and
consonant clusters. Starting around the mid-20th century, the alveolar stop in has slowly been replaced by a post-alveolar affricate instead, resulting in the all-postalveolar consonant clusters and . This phenomenon also occurs in , resulting in the all-postalveolar consonant cluster . The affrication of has been seen in American English, British English, Australian English, and New Zealand English.
Anticipatory assimilation at a distance For consonants, anticipatory assimilation at a distance is rare and usually a non-systematic irregular development in the history of a specific word. •
Standard Slovene (a toponym) > Slovene dialect •
Slovene > (a mountain ridge) There are two major types of coalescence: reductive and unreductive. Reductive coalescence is the type of coalescence in which sound segments are reduced after fusion is made. For example, in Xhosa, becomes (side). The segment in the first form reduces to . On the other hand, non-reductive coalescence have no reduction in sound segments even though there is evidence of fusion. For example, in Shona, (they sell) becomes (to sell). There, the original sound does not reduce with respect to sound segments even though the rising tone on the vowels in the coalesced form indicates the fusion of to the vowels. == See also ==