The Tuscan gorgia arose perhaps as late as the
Middle Ages as a natural phonetic phenomenon, much like the consonant voicing that affected the
Gallo-Italic languages and the rest of the
Western Romance languages (now phonemicised as in 'friend' (f.) > ), but it remained allophonic in Tuscany, as laxing or voicing generally does elsewhere in Central Italy and in
Corsica. Although it was once hypothesised that the phenomena are the continuation of similar features in the language that predated Romanization of the area,
Etruscan, that view is no longer held by most specialists. Instead, it is increasingly accepted as being a local form of the same consonant weakening that affects other speech in Central Italy, extending far beyond, to Western Romance. Support for that hypothesis can be found in several facts: • The phonetic details of Etruscan are unknown and so it is impossible to identify their continuance. • There is no mention of the phenomenon until the 16th century, and no trace in older writing (since the is a phonetic phenomenon, not
phonemic, its appearance in writing might not be expected, but it appears in writing in the 19th century). • The is less evident in
Lucca and does not exist in the far south of Tuscany or in
Lazio, where the
Etruscan civilization was quite concentrated. • Sociolinguistic studies in Eastern Tuscany (such as Cravens and Giannelli 1995, Pacini 1998) show that the competes with traditional laxing in the same postvocalic position, suggesting that the two results are phonetically different resolutions of the same phonological rule. • The shows all the characteristics of a naturally-developed allophonic rule in its alternations with full
plosives ( 'house', 'the house', 'three houses'). • Fricativisation of is common in the languages of the world. Similar processes have happened such as in
proto-Germanic (which is why in
Germanic languages there are words such as
father,
horn,
three as opposed to Italian
padre,
corno,
tre, from
Grimm's law) and during the development of the
Hungarian language and from
Proto-Austronesian to
Chamorro. ==References==