Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sound_change> ?p ?o }
- Sound_change abstract "Sound change includes any processes of language change that affect pronunciation (phonetic change) or sound system structures (phonological change). Sound change can consist of the replacement of one speech sound (or, more generally, one phonetic feature) by another, the complete loss of the affected sound, or even the introduction of a new sound in a place where there previously was none. Sound changes can be environmentally conditioned, meaning that the change only occurs in a defined sound environment, whereas in other environments the same speech sound is not affected by the change. The term "sound change" refers to diachronic changes, or changes in a language's underlying sound system over time; "alternation", on the other hand, refers to surface changes that happen synchronically and do not change the language's underlying system (for example, the -s in the English plural can be pronounced differently depending on what sound it follows; this is a form of alternation, rather than sound change). However, since "sound change" can refer to the historical introduction of an alternation (such as post-vocalic /k/ in Tuscan, once [k], but now [h]), the label is inherently imprecise and often must be clarified as referring to phonetic change or restructuring. Sound change is usually assumed to be regular, which means that it is expected to apply mechanically whenever its structural conditions are met, irrespective of any non-phonological factors (such as the meaning of the words affected). On the other hand, sound changes can sometimes be sporadic, affecting only one particular word or a few words, without any seeming regularity.For regular sound changes, the term sound law is sometimes still used. This term was introduced by the Neogrammarian school in the 19th century and is commonly applied to some historically important sound changes, such as Grimm's law. While real-world sound changes often admit exceptions (for a variety of known reasons, and sometimes without one), the expectation of their regularity or "exceptionlessness" is of great heuristic value, since it allows historical linguists to define the notion of regular correspondence (see: comparative method).Each sound change is limited in space and time. This means it functions within a specified area (within certain dialects) and during a specified period of time. For these (and other) reasons, some scholars avoid using the term "sound law"—reasoning that a law should not have spatial and temporal limitations—replacing the term with phonetic rule.Sound change that affects the phonological system, in the number or distribution of its phonemes, is covered more fully at phonological change.".
- Sound_change wikiPageID "29641".
- Sound_change wikiPageLength "15549".
- Sound_change wikiPageOutDegree "75".
- Sound_change wikiPageRevisionID "670725074".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Adjective.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Alternation_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Analogy.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Anglo-Frisian_nasal_spirant_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Apheresis_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Apical_consonant.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Apocope.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Assimilation_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Category:Historical_linguistics.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Category:Phonology.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sound_laws.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Comparative_method.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Comparative_method_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Dahls_Law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Dahls_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Diachronics.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Dialect.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Dissimilation.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Distinctive_feature.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Elision.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink English_plural.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink English_plurals.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Epenthesis.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Fricative_consonant.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Grassmanns_Law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Grassmanns_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Great_Vowel_Shift.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Grimms_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Haplology.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Heuristic.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink High_German_consonant_shift.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Historical_linguistics.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink I-mutation.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Ingvaeonic_nasal_spirant_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Iranian_languages.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Japanese_phonology.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Kluges_Law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Kluges_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Language_change.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Lexical_diffusion.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Lexicon.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Liaison_(French).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Metathesis_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Morpheme.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Morphology_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Nasalization.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Neogrammarian.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Oceanic_languages.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Old_Spanish_language.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Phoneme.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Phonological_change.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Phonology.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Pitch_contour.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Prosody_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Prothesis_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Regularization_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Restructuring.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Rotuman_language.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Sandhi.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Silent_E.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Silent_e.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_language.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Stress_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Synchronic_analysis.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Synchrony_and_diachrony.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Syncope_(phonetics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Syncope_(phonology).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Tittle.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Tone_(linguistics).
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Tuscan_dialect.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Verners_law.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Voiced_velar_stop.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Voiceless_dental_fricative.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Voiceless_labiodental_fricative.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLink Vulgar_Latin.
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "Phonetic Change".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "Sound change".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "became".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "changes".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "consonant shift".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "consonant shifting".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "corruption".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "divergent phonemic evolution".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "evolved".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "has changed".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "historical phonology".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "linguistic corruption".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "merger".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "merging".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "phonetic changes".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "phonetic erosion".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "phonological change".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "phonological changes".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "pronunciation blending".
- Sound_change wikiPageWikiLinkText "shift".