Labialized velars frequently derive from a plain velar followed by a
rounded (labialized) vowel, such as or . In turn, they may sometimes develop into simple
bilabial consonants. An example of this is the
development of Proto-Indo-European *kʷ, *gʷ before *a or *o into
Greek /p, b/, producing cognates as different as English
come and
basis. The full sequence is demonstrated by the
Satsuma dialect of Japanese: in northern Satsuma, Standard Japanese 'eat!' has contracted to ; in southern Satsuma, it has proceeded further to . A notable development is the initial *kʷ in
Proto-Indo-European interrogative words. In English, it developed into
wh or
h (
how), pronounced /w/ in most dialects and /h/, respectively, via
Grimm's law followed by
wh-cluster reductions. By contrast, in
Latin and its descendants, the
Romance languages, that developed into
qu (later Spanish
cu (
cuando) and
c (
como)), pronounced as /kʷ/ in Latin and variously as /kw/ or /k/ in the Romance languages. See
etymology of English interrogative words for details. The English
phonemic spelling kw for
qu (as in
kwik) echoes its origin. ==See also==