Concept
The physiological or psychological mechanisms of coarticulation are unknown, and coarticulation is often loosely referred to as a segment being "triggered" by an assimilatory change in another segment. In assimilation, the phonological patterning of the language, discourse styles and accent are some of the factors contributing to changes observed. There are four configurations found in assimilations: *Between adjacent segments. *Between segments separated by one or more intervening segments. *Changes made in reference to a preceding segment *Changes made in reference to a following segment Although all four occur, changes in regard to a following adjacent segment account for virtually all assimilatory changes and most of the regular ones. Assimilations to an adjacent segment are vastly more frequent than assimilations to a nonadjacent one. Those radical asymmetries might contain hints about the mechanisms involved, but they are not obvious. If a sound changes with reference to a following segment, it is traditionally called "regressive assimilation". Changes with reference to a preceding segment are traditionally called "progressive". Many find those terms confusing, as they seem to mean the opposite of the intended meaning. Accordingly, a variety of alternative terms have arisen, not all of which avoid the problem of the traditional terms. Regressive assimilation is also known as right-to-left, leading, or anticipatory assimilation. Progressive assimilation is also known as left-to-right, perseveratory, preservative, lagging, or lag assimilation. The terms anticipatory and lag are used here. Occasionally, two sounds (invariably adjacent) may influence each other in reciprocal assimilation. When such a change results in a single segment with some of the features of both components, it is known as coalescence or fusion. Assimilation occurs in two different types: complete assimilation, in which the sound affected by assimilation becomes exactly the same as the sound causing assimilation, and partial assimilation, in which the sound becomes the same in one or more features but remains different in other features. Tonal languages may exhibit tone assimilation (in effect tonal umlaut), but sign languages also exhibit assimilation when the characteristics of neighbouringExamples
Anticipatory assimilation to an adjacent segment
Anticipatory assimilation to an adjacent segmentSihler, Andrew L. 2000. ''Language History: An Introduction''. Amsterdam: John Benjamins, pp. 21–22. is the most common type of assimilation by far, and typically has the character of a conditioned sound change, i.e., it applies to the whole lexicon or part of it. 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 : *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. It is suspected that this change has occurred due to assimilation. One of the first papers that discussed the affrication of is "Pre-School Children's Knowledge of English Phonology" by Charles Read, published in 1971. The study discussed in this paper focuses on how children in pre-school analyze the phonetic aspect of language in order to determine the proper spelling of English words. Read noticed that many of the children involved in the study misspelled words that began with , spelling words like ''troubles'' and ''dragon'' as "chribls" and "jragin", respectively. In a different test, Read also found that many of the children believed that words like ''train'' and ''chicken'' both started with .Anticipatory assimilation at a distance
Anticipatory assimilation at a distance is rare and usually merely an accident in the history of a specific word. * Standard Slovene (a toponym) > Slovene dialect * Slovene > (a mountain ridge) However, the diverse and common assimilations known as umlaut in which the phonetics of a vowel are influenced by the phonetics of a vowel in a following syllable, are common and in the nature of sound laws. Such changes abound in the histories ofLag assimilation to an adjacent segment
Lag assimilation to an adjacent segment is tolerably common and often has the nature of a sound law. Proto-Indo-European becomes in both Germanic and Italic: "hill" > PreLat. > Lat. ; > PGmc > OE > ''hill''. The enclitic form of English ''is'', eliding the vowel, becomes voiceless when adjacent to a word-final voiceless nonsibilant: ''it is'' , ''that is'' > ''it's'' , ''that's'' . In Polish, regularly becomes after a voiceless obstruent: * 'flower', pronounced , instead of * 'face', pronounced , instead of This does not apply across word boundaries, so that the placename Grodzisk Wielkopolski is pronounced , not . In that context, patterns with other voiced obstruents. Because of a similar process, Proto-Indo-Iranian became inLag assimilation at a distance
Lag assimilation at a distance is rare and usually sporadic (except when part of a broader change, as for the Sanskrit - example, above): Greek > Lat. "lily". In vowel harmony, a vowel's phonetic features are often influenced by those of a preceding vowel. For example, most Finnish case markers come in two forms, with (written ) and (written ), depending on whether the preceding vowel is back or front. However, it is difficult to know where and how in the history of Finnish an actual ''assimilatory change'' took place. The ''distribution'' of pairs of endings in Finnish is not the operation of an assimilatory innovation, but it is probably the outbirth of such an innovation long ago. In the opposite direction, in umlaut, a vowel is modified to conform more closely to the vowel in the next syllable.Coalescence (fusion)
Coalescence is a phonological situation whereby adjacent sounds are replaced by a single sound that shares the features of the two originally adjacent sounds. In other words, coalescence is a type of assimilation whereby two sounds fuse to become one, and the fused sound shares similar characteristics with the two fused sounds. Some examples in English include ‘don’t you’ -> /dəʊnt ju/ -> əʊntʃu In this instance, /t/ and /j/ have fused to ʃ /tʃ/ is a palato-alveolar sound; its palatal feature is derived from /j/ while its alveolar is from /t/. Another English example is ‘would you’ -> /wʊd ju/ -> ʊdʒu There are examples in other languages, such as Chumburung where /ɪ̀wú ɪ̀sá/ -> /ɪ̀wúɪ̀sá/ becomes �̀wɪ́sá- ‘three horns’. In this case, /ɪ/ is retained in the coalescence and the rising tone on /u/ appears on the coalesced sound.Sibanda, G. (2009)See also
* Assibilation * Phonological history of English consonant clusters * Co-articulated consonant * Consonant harmony * Crasis * Deletion (phonology) * Dissimilation * Epenthesis * Labialization * Palatalization * Pharyngealization * Secondary articulation * VelarizationNotes
References
Citations
Sources
* Crowley, Terry. (1997) ''An Introduction to Historical Linguistics.'' 3rd edition. Oxford University Press. {{DEFAULTSORT:Assimilation (Linguistics) Phonetics