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  1. Palatalization in the Romance languages. Palatalization in the Romance languages encompasses various historical sound changes which caused consonants to develop a palatal articulation or secondary articulation, as well as certain further developments such as affrication.

  2. Jul 30, 2020 · Palatalizations in the Romance Languages. Daniel Recasens. . Summary and Keywords. Major dialect-dependent differences in articulatory fronting and strengthening for the. front lingual...

  3. Palatalization has played a major role in the history of English, and of other languages and language groups throughout the world, such as the Romance, Greek, Slavic, Baltic, Finnic, Swedish, Norwegian, Mordvinic, Samoyedic, Iranian, Indo-Aryan, Goidelic, Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Albanian, Arabic, and Micronesian languages.

  4. This chapter provides a structural overview of the varieties of palatalization found in Romance varieties today as well as considering diachronic issues. It covers the emergence in Romance of a new order of palatals, both fricatives and affricates, due to original yod, and how new, secondary sources of palatalizing yod developed from asyllabic ...

  5. Summary. Major dialect-dependent differences in articulatory fronting and strengthening for the front lingual affricate and fricative outcomes of Latin sequences composed of /t, d, k, g/ and a following front vocalic segment in the Romance languages may be accounted for assuming that those outcomes were issued from (alveolo)palatal or ...

  6. Palatalization in the Romance languages encompasses various historical sound changes which caused consonants to develop a palatal articulation or secondary articulation, as well as certain further developments such as affrication. It resulted in the creation of several consonants that had not existed in Classical Latin, such as the Italian.

  7. Aug 22, 2019 · This chapter traces the evolutionary pathways of palatals that emerged in the history of the Romance languages due to the effects of the palatal glide [j] (henceforth yod) and palatal vowels over Latin sonorant and obstruent consonants, as well as from palatalization processes incurred by Latin consonant clusters and geminates.

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