- phonemic split
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The phenomenon in which a single phoneme diverges into two different phonemes.
Wikipedia foundation.
Wikipedia foundation.
Phonemic differentiation — is the phenomenon of a language maximizing the acoustic distance between its phonemes, presumably to minimize the possibility of misunderstanding. Examples For example, in many languages, including English, most front vowels are unrounded, while… … Wikipedia
Split (disambiguation) — Split is the largest coastal city in Croatia.From its common usage to refer to a division of parts, split may also refer to:Arts and entertainment* A split (poker), dividing of winnings in the card game * A split (ten pin bowling) where multiple… … Wikipedia
Phonemic Distortion — is the practice of using words whose phonemes, when used together, mean something entirely different to the original sentence. The original sentence often means nothing at all. This is why it is particularly useful in ciphers and other tools of… … Wikipedia
Phonemic orthography — A phonemic orthography is a writing system where the written graphemes correspond to phonemes, the spoken sounds of the language. These are sometimes termed true alphabets, but non alphabetic writing systems like syllabaries can be phonemic as… … Wikipedia
Then-thyn split — The thyn was a phonemic split of the Old English phoneme /θ/ into two phonemes /ð/ and /θ/ occurring in Early Middle English which resulted in thyn starting with different initial consonant, /ð/ and /θ/.In Old English, the phoneme /θ/ had two… … Wikipedia
bad-lad split — noun a phonemic split of the phoneme /æ/ into a short /æ/ and a long /æː/, as heard in some varieties of British and Australian English, in which bad is pronounced /bæːd/ and lad is pronounced /læd/ … Wiktionary
Phonological change — Sound change and alternation Metathesis Quantitative metathesis … Wikipedia
Phonological history of English short A — Trap bath split= The trap bath split is a vowel split that occurs mainly in southern varieties of English English (including Received Pronunciation), in the Boston accent, and in the Southern Hemisphere accents (Australian English, New Zealand… … Wikipedia
Phonological history of English vowels — In the history of English phonology, there were many diachronic sound changes affecting vowels, especially involving phonemic splits and mergers. Contents 1 Great Vowel Shift and Trisyllabic laxing 2 Tense–lax neutralization 3 Monophthon … Wikipedia
English-language vowel changes before historic r — In the phonological history of the English language, vowels followed (or formerly followed) by the phoneme /r/ have undergone a number of phonological changes. In recent centuries, most or all of these changes have involved merging of vowel… … Wikipedia