affricatize
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]affricatize (third-person singular simple present affricatizes, present participle affricatizing, simple past and past participle affricatized)
- (linguistics, intransitive) To become affricative.
- 1999, Wen-Chao Li, A Diachronically-motivated Segmental Phonology of Mandarin Chinese:
- Coleman(1995: 376) and Palmada (1995: 308–310) have pointed out that there is a cross-linguistic tendency for fronted velar stops to affricatize in the palatal region, and have both proposed a [palatal] → [continuant] implication to account for this dependency.
- 2004, Bede Fahey, Mayan: a Sino-Tibetan Language?: A Comparative Study, page 35:
- The uvular stop forward shifted to become a velar stop (i.e., q>k) in many Mayan dialects, and the velar stop tended to affricatize (e.g., k>tʃ).
- 2011, Elżbieta Mańczak-Wohlfeld, Studia Linguistica Universitatis Iagellonicae Cracoviensis, page 81:
- The only information we can extract from Grzegorzewski (1916-1918) is, firstly, that [t] becomes palatalized before [i] and tends to affricatize into [ć], and, secondly, that the word halidi 'present, today's' [we note it in Grzegorzewski's transcription] was in his lifetime already being pronounced more like haligi (Grzegorzewski 1916–1918: 278).
Translations
[edit]Translations
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