Types
In a typological scheme first systematized by Henry M. Hoenigswald in 1965, a historical sound law can only affect a phonological system in one of three ways: * Conditioned merger (which Hoenigswald calls "primary split"), in which some instances of phoneme A become an existing phoneme B; the number of phonemes does not change, only their distribution. * Phonemic split (which Hoenigswald calls "secondary split"), in which some instances of A become a new phoneme B; this is phonemic differentiation in which the number of phonemes increases. * Unconditioned merger, in which all instances of phonemes A and B become A; this is phonemic reduction, in which the number of phonemes decreases. This classification does not consider mere changes in pronunciation, that is, phonetic change, even chain shifts, in which neither the number nor the distribution of phonemes is affected.Phonetic vs. phonological change
Merger
Phonemic merger is a loss of distinction between phonemes. Occasionally, the term reduction refers to phonemic merger. It is not to be confused with the meaning of the word "reduction" in phonetics, such asConditioned merger
Conditioned merger, or primary split, takes place when some, but not all, allophones of a phoneme, say A, merge with some other phoneme, B. The immediate results are these: * there are the same number of contrasts as before. * there are fewer words with A than before. * there are more words of B than before. * there is at least one environment for which A, for the time being, no longer occurs, called a ''gap'' in the distribution of the phoneme. * there is, under certain circumstances, an alternation between A and B if inflection or derivation result in A sometimes but not always being in the environment in which it merged with B.Example from Middle English
For a simple example, without alternation, early Middle English /d/ after stressed syllables followed by /r/ became /ð/: ''módor, fæder'' > ''mother, father'' /ðr/, ''weder'' > ''weather'', and so on. Since /ð/ was already a structure-point in the language, the innovation resulted merely in more /ð/ and less /d/ and a gap in the distribution of /d/ (though not a very conspicuous one). :Note 1: thanks to borrowing, from dialects as well as other languages, the original distribution has been disturbed: ''rudder, adder'' in Standard English (but forms with /ð/ are attested in nonstandard dialects). :Note 2: one who knows German can figure out which cases of English /ð/ were originally /ð/ and which changed from /d/. Original /d/ corresponds to /t/ in German, and original /ð/ corresponds to /d/. Thus, ''wether'' = German ''Widder, leather = Leder, brother = Bruder, whether = weder'', pointing to original /ð/ in English; ''weather'' = German ''Wetter, father = Vater, mother = Mutter'' pointing to original /d/. :Note 3: alternation between /d/ and /ð/ would have been a theoretical possibility in English, as in sets like ''hard, harder; ride, rider'', but any such details have been erased by the commonplace diachronic process called morphological leveling.Devoicing of voiced stops in German
A trivial (if all-pervasive) example of conditioned merger is the devoicing of voiced stops in German when in word-final position or immediately before a compound boundary (see: Help:IPA/Standard German): *''*hand'' "hand" > /hant/ (cf. plural ''Hände'' /ˈhɛndə/) *''Handgelenk'' "wrist" /ˈhantgəlɛŋk/ *''*bund'' "league, association" > /bʊnt/ (cf. plural ''Bünde'' /ˈbʏndə/) *''*gold'' "gold" > /gɔlt/ *''*halb'' "half" > /halp/ (cf. ''halbieren'' "to halve" /halˈbiːʁən/) *''halbamtlich'' "semi-official" /ˈhalpʔamtlɪç/ *''*berg'' "mountain" /bɛɐ̯k/ (cf. plural ''Berge'' /ˈbɛɐ̯gə/) *''*klug'' "clever, wise" > /kluːk/ (cf. fem. ''kluge'' /ˈkluːgə/) There were, of course, also many cases of original voiceless stops in final position: ''Bett'' "bed", ''bunt'' "colorful", ''Stock'' "(walking) stick, cane". To sum up: there are the same number of structure points as before, /p t k b d g/, but there are more cases of /p t k/ than before and fewer of /b d g/, and there is a gap in the distribution of /b d g/ (they are never found in word-final position or before a compound boundary). :Note 1: this split is easily recoverable by internal reconstruction because it results in alternations whose conditions are transparent. Thus ''Bund'' "bunch" (as in, keys) /bʊnt/ has a plural ''Bünde'' /ˈbʏndə/ in contrast to ''bunt'' "colorful" with /t/ in all environments (feminine /ˈbʊntə/, neuter /ˈbʊntəs/ and so on). In a neutralizing environment, such as a voiceless stop in word-final position, one cannot tell which of two possibilities was the original sound. The choice is resolved if the corresponding segment can be found in a non-neutralizing position, as when a suffix follows. Accordingly, a non-inflected form like ''und'' /ʔʊnt/ "and" is historically opaque (though as the spelling hints, the /t/ was originally *''d''). :Note 2: unlike most phonological changes, this one became a "surface" rule in German, so loan-words whose source had a voiced stop in the devoicing environment are taken into German with a voiceless one instead: ''Klub'' "club" (association) /klʊp/ from English ''club.'' The same goes for truncated forms: Bub (for formal ''Bube'' "boy") is /buːp/. ::Note 2a: the surface alternation is what allows modern German orthography to write stops morphophonemically, thus ''Leib'' "loaf", ''Hand'' "hand", ''Weg'' "way", all with voiceless final stops in the simplex form and in compounds, but /b d g/ in inflected forms. In Old High and Middle High German, all voiceless stops were written as pronounced: ''hleip, hant, uuec'' and so on. :Note 3: the same distribution holds for /s/ vs. /z/, but it arose by a completely different process, the voicing of original */s/ between vowels: *''mūs'' "mouse" > ''Maus'' /maʊs/, *''mūsīz'' "mice" (for earlier *''mūsiz'') > ''Mäuse'' /ˈmɔʏzə/. Original long (now short) ''ss'' does not voice medially, as in'' küssen'' "to kiss" /ˈkʏsen/, nor does /s/ from Proto-West-Germanic *''t'', as in ''Wasser'' "water" /ˈvasɐ/, ''Fässer'' "kegs" /ˈfɛsɐ/ plural of ''Fass'' /fas/ (= English ''vat''), müßig "idle" /ˈmyːsɪç/. German , as in ''Fisch'' "fish", reflects original *''sk'' (in native words) and does not become voiced in any environment: ''Fischer'' "fisherman" . (German has only in loanwords: ''Genie'' "genius", ''Gage'' "salary".)Rhotacism in Latin
More typical of the aftermath of a conditioned merger is the famous case of rhotacism in Latin (also seen in some Sabellian language spoken in the same area): Proto-Italic *''s'' > Latin /r/ between vowels: *''gesō'' "I do, act" > Lat. ''gerō'' (but perfect ''gessi'' < *''ges-s''- and participle ''gestus'' < *''ges-to''-, etc., with unchanged *''s'' in all other environments, even in the same paradigm). This sound law is quite complete and regular, and in its immediate wake there were no examples of /s/ between vowels except for a few words with a special condition (''miser'' "wretched", ''caesariēs'' "bushy hair", ''diser''(''c'')''tus'' "eloquent": that is, rhotacism did not take place when an /r/ followed the *''s''). However, a new crop of /s/ between vowels soon arose from three sources. (1) a shortening of /ss/ after a diphthong or long vowel: ''causa'' "lawsuit" < *''kawssā'', ''cāsa'' "house' < *''kāssā'', ''fūsus'' "poured, melted" < *''χewssos''. (2) univerbation: ''nisi'' (''nisī'') "unless" < the phrase *''ne sei'', ''quasi'' (''quasī'') "as if" < the phrase *''kʷam sei''. (3) borrowings, such as ''rosa'' "rose" /rosa/, from a Sabellian source (the word is clearly somehow from Proto-Italic *''ruθ''- "red" but equally clearly not native Latin), and many words taken from or through Greek (''philosophia, basis, casia,'' ''Mesopotamia'', etc., etc.).Nasal assimilation and "gn" in Latin
A particular example of a conditioned merger in Latin is the rule whereby syllable-finalConcerning the number of contrasts
One of the traits of conditioned merger, as outlined above, is that the total number of contrasts remains the same, but it is possible for such splits to reduce the number of contrasts. It happens if all of the conditioned merger products merge with one or another phoneme. For example, in Latin, the Pre-Latin phoneme *θ (from Proto-Italic *''tʰ'' < PIE *''dh'') disappears as such by merging with three other sounds: *''f'' (from PIE *''bh'' and *''gʷh''), *''d'', and *''b:'' Initially *θ >'' f:'' *PItal. *''tʰi-n-kʰ''- "model, shape" > *''θi-n-χ''- > Lat. ''fingō'' (PIE root *''dheyǵh''- "smear, work with the hands"; cf. Sanskrit ''dihanti'' "they smear", Avestan'' daēza''- "wall" = Greek ''teîkhos;'' English ''dough'' < OE ''dāh'' besides ''dāg'' < PIE *''dhoyǵh''-) *PItal. *''tʰwor''- "door" > *''θwor''- > Lat. ''forēs'' "door" (PIE *''dhwor''-; like most reflexes plural only; cf Eng. ''door'' < *''dhur''-, Greek ''thúrā'' (probably < *''dhwor''-) usually ''thúrai'' pl.) ::Cf. Latin ferō "carry" < Proto-Italic *pʰer- < PIE *bher-; Latin frāter "brother" < Proto-Italic *pʰrātēr < PIE *bhre-H₂ter- Medially adjacent to *''l, *r'', or *''u,'' *θ becomes ''b:'' *PItal. *''wertʰom'' "word" > *''werθom'' > *''werðom'' (? *''werβom'') > Lat. ''verbum'' (cf. English ''word'' < *''wurdaⁿ'' < PIE *''wṛdhom'', Lithuanian ''vaṙdas'' "name") *PItal. *''rutʰros'' "red" > *''ruθros'' > *''ruðros'' (? *''ruβros'') > Latin ''ruber'' (via *''rubers'' < *''rubrs'' < *''rubros''), cf. ''rubra'' fem. ''rubrum'' neut. *PItal. *-''tʰlo-/*-tʰlā''- "tool suffix" > Latin -''bulum, -bula:'' PIE *''peH₂-dhlo''- "nourishment" > PItal. *''pā-tʰlo''- > *''pāθlo''- > Latin ''pābulum;'' PIE *''suH-dhleH₂''- "sewing implement" > PItal. *''sūtʰlā'' > *''sūθlā'' > Latin ''sūbula'' "cobbler's awl" ::Intervocalic Latin -''b''- is from PIE *''bh'', *''s'', and (rarely and problematically) *''b:'' Lat. ''ambō'' "both" < PIE *''ambh''- or *''H₂embh''- (cf. Greek ''amphi''-); Lat. ''crābrō'' "hornet" < ''*ḱṛHs-ron''- (cf. Vedic ''śīrṣn''- "hornet"); Lat. ''cannabis'' "hemp" (cf. Old English ''hænep'' "hemp"). The change of *-''sr''- to -''br''- is itself presumably via *-''θr- > *-ðr- > *-βr''-. Elsewhere, *θ becomes d: *PItal. *''metʰyo''- "middle" > *''meθyo''- > Pre-Lat. *''meðyo''- > Lat. ''medius'' (three syllables; PIE *''medhyo''-, cf. Sanskrit ''madhya''-, Greek ''més''(''s'')''os'' < *''meth-yo''-) *PItal. *''pʰeytʰ''- > *''feyθ''- > *''feyð''- > Lat. ''fīdus'' "trusting" (cf. Greek ''peíthomai'' "am persuaded", English ''bid'' "order, ask") ::Intervocalic -''d''- in Latin comes from PIE *''d'' in ''ped''- "foot", ''sīdere'' "to sit down", ''cord''- "heart" There is no alternation to give away the historical story, there, via internal reconstruction; the evidence for these changes is almost entirely from comparative reconstruction. That reconstruction makes it easy to unriddle the story behind the weird forms of the Latin paradigm ''jubeō'' "order",'' jussī'' perfect, ''jussus'' participle. If the root is inherited, it would have to have been PIE *''yewdh-''.Unconditioned merger
Unconditioned merger, that is, complete loss of a contrast between two or more phonemes, is not very common. Most mergers are conditioned. That is, most apparent mergers of A and B have an environment or two in which A did something else, such as drop or merge with C. Typical is the unconditioned merger seen in the Celtic conflation of the PIE plain voiced series of stops with the breathy-voiced series: *''bh, *dh, *ǵh, *gh'' are indistinguishable in Celtic etymology from the reflexes of *''b *d *ǵ *g''. The collapse of the contrast cannot be stated in whole-series terms because the labiovelars do not co-operate. PIE *''gʷ'' everywhere falls together with the reflexes of *''b'' and *''bh'' as Proto-Celtic *''b'', but *''gʷh'' seems to have become PCelt. *''gʷ'', lining up with PCelt. *''kʷ'' < PIE *''kʷ''.Examples
*OE'' y'' and'' ý'' (short and long high front rounded vowels) fell together with ''i'' and'' í'' via a simple phonetic unrounding: OE'' hypp, cynn, cyssan, brycg, fyllan, fýr, mýs, brýd'' became modern ''hip, kin, kiss, bridge, fill, fire, mice, bride''. There is no way to tell by inspection whether a modern /i ay/ goes back to a rounded or an unrounded vowel. The change is not even reflected in modern spelling since it took place too early to be captured in Middle English Spelling conventions. Of course, current spellings like ''type, thyme, psyche'', etc., have nothing to do with OE ''y'' = /y/. *There is a massive, consistent body of evidence that PIE *''l'' and *''r'' merged totally in Proto-Indo-Iranian, as did PIE *''e *o *a'' into Proto-Indo-Iranian *''a''. *The evolution of Romance shows a systematic collection of unconditioned mergers in connection with the loss of Latin vowel length. Latin had ten vowels, five long and five short (i, ī; e, ē; a, ā; and so on). In the variety of Romance underlying Sardo and some other dialects of the islands, the ten vowels simply fell together pairwise: in no way are Latin ''e, ē'', say, reflected differently. In Proto-Western-Romance, the ancestor of French, Iberian, Italian north of the Spezia-Rimini line, etc., however, things happened differently: Latin /a ā/ merged totally, as in Sardo, but the other vowels all behaved differently. Upon losing the feature of length, Latin /ī ū/ merged with nothing, but the ''short'' high vowels, front and back, merged with the ''long mid'' vowels: thus, Latin /i ē/ are uniformly reflected as PWRom. *''ẹ'' (in the standard Romance notation), and /u ō/ become *''ọ''. PWRom. *''ẹ'' is reflected in French (in open syllables) as /wa/ (spelled ''oi''); ''voile'' "sail", ''foin'' "hay", ''doigt'' "finger", ''quoi'' "what", are from Latin ''vēlum, fēnum, digitus ''(via'' *dictu), quid'', respectively. There is no way of telling in French which one of the two Latin vowels is the source of any given /wa/. Another example is provided by Japonic languages. Proto-Japanese had 8 vowels; it has been reduced to 5 in modern Japanese, but in Yaeyama, the vowel mergers progressed further, to 3 vowels.Split
In a split (Hoenigswald's "secondary split"), a new contrast arises when allophones of a phoneme cease being in complementary distribution and are therefore necessarily independent structure points, i.e. contrastive. This mostly comes about because of some loss of distinctiveness in the environment of one or more allophones of a phoneme. A simple example is the rise of the contrast between nasal and oral vowels in French. A full account of this history is complicated by the subsequent changes in the phonetics of the nasal vowels, but the development can be compendiously illustrated via the present-day French phonemes /a/ and /ã/: *Step 1: *''a'' > *''ã'' when a nasal immediately follows: *''čantu'' "song" > (still phonemically ); *Step 2: at some point in the history of French when speakers consistently stopped making an oral closure with the tongue, we had , that is (if not ) and finally, with the loss of the final stop, modern French ''chant'' "song", distinct from French ''chat'' "cat" solely by the contrast between the nasal and the oral articulation of the vowels, and thus with many other forms in which /a/ and contrast. ::Note 1: the nasalization of a vowel before a nasal is found very widely in the world's languages, but is not at all universal. In modern French, for example, vowels before a nasal are oral. That they used to be nasalized, like the vowels before lost nasals, is indicated by certain phonetic changes not always reflected in the orthography: Fr. ''femme'' "woman" /fam/ (with the lowering of (nasalized ) to *''ã'' prior to denasalization). ::Note 2: unusually for a split, the history of the French innovation, even including some changes in vowel cavity features, can be readily inferred by internal reconstruction. This is because the contrastive feature asalin a vowel system usually has a nasal in its history, which makes for straightforward surmises. There are also clear alternations, as "good" (masc.) vs. (fem.), while such pairs as /fin/ "fine" (fem.) and (masc.) together with derivatives like ''raffiné'' /rafine/ "refined" indicate what happened to nasalized *''i''. Phonemic split was a major factor in the creation of the contrast between voiced and voiceless fricatives in English. Originally, to oversimplify a bit, Old English fricatives were voiced between voiced sounds and voiceless elsewhere. Thus /f/ was in ''fisc'' "fish", ''fyllen'' "to fill" yllen ''hæft'' "prisoner", ''ofþyrsted'' fθyrsted"athirst", ''líf'' "life", ''wulf'' "wolf". But in say the dative singular of "life", that is ''lífe'', the form was i:ve(as in English ''alive'', being an old prepositional phrase ''on lífe''); the plural of ''wulf, wulfas'', was ulvas as still seen in'' wolves''. The voiced fricative is typically seen in verbs, too (often with variations in vowel length of diverse sources): ''gift'' but ''give'', ''shelf'' but ''shelve''. Such alternations are to be seen even in loan words, as ''proof'' vs ''prove'' (though not as a rule in borrowed plurals, thus ''proofs, uses'', with voiceless fricatives). :Note 1: unlike the French example, there is no chance of recovering the historical source of the alternations in English between /s θ f/ and /z ð v/ merely through inspection of the modern forms. The conditioning factor (original location of the voiced alternants between vowels, for example) is quite lost and with little reason to even suspect the original state of affairs; and anyway the original distributions have been much disturbed by analogical leveling. ''Worthy'' and (in some dialects) ''greasy'' have voiced fricative (next to the voiceless ones in ''worth'' and'' grease'') but adjectives in -''y'' otherwise do not alternate: ''bossy, glassy, leafy, earthy, breathy, saucy'', etc (cf. ''glaze, leaves, breathe'', and note that even in dialects with /z/ in'' greasy'', the verb ''to grease'' always has /s/). :Note 2: the phoneme does not alternate with (and never did). In native words, is from *''sk'', and either the change of this sequence to postdated the rearranging of voicing in pre-Old English fricatives, or else it was phonetically long between vowels, originally, much like the of present-day Italian (''pesce'' "fish" is phonetically ) and long fricatives, just like sequences of fricatives, were always voiceless in Old English, as in ''cyssan'' "to kiss". The Early Modern English development of < */sj/, as in ''nation, mission, assure'', vastly postdated the period when fricatives became voiced between vowels. :Note 3: a common misstatement of cases like OE /f/ > Modern English /f, v/ is that a "new phoneme" has been created. Not so. A new contrast has been created. Both NE /f/ and /v/ are new phonemes, differing in phonetic specifications and distribution from OE /f/. Without doubt, one component in this misunderstanding is the orthography. If, instead of speaking of the development of Old English /f/ we said that OE split into /f/ and /v/, there would presumably be less confused talk of "a" new phoneme arising in the process.Loss
In Hoenigswald's original scheme, loss, the disappearance of a segment, or even of a whole phoneme, was treated as a form of merger, depending on whether the loss was conditioned or unconditioned. The "element" that a vanished segment or phoneme merged with was " zero". The situation in which a highly inflected language has formations without any affix at all (Latin ''alter'' "(the) other", for example) is quite common, but it is the only one (nominative singular masculine: ''altera'' nominative singular feminine, ''alterum'' accusative singular masculine, etc.) of the 30 forms that make up the paradigm that is not explicitly marked with endings for gender, number, and case. From a historical perspective, there is no problem since ''alter'' is from *''alteros'' (overtly nominative singular and masculine), with the regular loss of the short vowel after *-''r''- and the truncation of the resulting word-final cluster *-''rs''. Descriptively, however, it is problematic to say that the "nominative singular masculine" is signaled by the absence of any affix. It is simpler to view ''alter'' as more than what it looks like, /alterØ/, "marked" for case, number, and gender by an affix, like the other 29 forms in the paradigm. It is merely that the "marker" in question is not a phoneme or sequence of phonemes but the element /Ø/. Along the way, it is hard to know when to stop positing zeros and whether to regard one zero as different from another. For example, if the zero not-marking ''can'' (as in ''he can'') as "third person singular" is the same zero that not-marks ''deer'' as "plural", or if are both basically a single morphological placeholder. If it is determined that there is a zero on the end of ''deer'' in ''three deer'', it is uncertain whether English adjectives agree with the number of the noun they modify, using the same zero affix. (Deictics do so: compare ''this deer, these deer''.) In some theories of syntax it is useful to have an overt marker on a singular noun in a sentence such as ''My head hurts'' because the syntactic mechanism needs something explicit to generate the singular suffix on the verb. Thus, all English singular nouns may be marked with yet another zero. It seems possible to avoid all those issues by considering loss as a separate basic category of phonological change, and leave zero out of it. As stated above, one can regard loss as both a kind of conditioned merger (when only some expressions of a phoneme are lost) and a disappearance of a whole structure point. The former is much more common than the latter. *In Latin are many consonant clusters that lose a member or two such as these: ''tostus'' "toasted, dried" < *''torstos'', ''multrum'' "milking stool" < *''molktrom'', ''scultus'' "carved" < *''scolptos'', ''cēna'' "dinner" < *''kertsnā'', ''lūna'' "moon" < *''louwksnā'' ("lantern" or the like). *Greek lost all stops from the end of a word (so *''kʷit'' "what" > Greek ''ti'', *''deḱṃt'' "ten" > ''déka'', *''wanakt'' "O prince" >'' ána''), but stops generally survive elsewhere. PIE *''s'' drops medially between voiced sounds in Greek but is preserved in final position and in some consonant clusters. *Old English ( voiceless velar fricative) is everywhere lost as such, but usually leaves traces behind ( transphonologization). In ''furh'' "furrow" and ''mearh'' "marrow", it vocalizes. It is elided (with varying effects on the preceding vowel, such as lengthening) in ''night, knight, might, taught, naught, freight, fought, plow'' (Brit. plough, OE ''plōh''), ''bought, through, though, slaughter;'' but /f/ in ''laugh, trough, tough, enough'' (and ''daughter'' can be found in ''The Pilgrim's Progress'' rhyming with ''after'', and the spelling ''dafter'' is actually attested) The /x/ phoneme still exists in some onomatopoeiac words, like "ugh" (note the spelling uses ''gh'', which indicates that when they were coined, there was still some understanding of the phonemic meaning of ''gh''), "yech" and "chutzpah". */g k/ are lost in English in word-initial position before /n/: ''gnaw, gnat, knight, know''. /t/ is lost after fricatives before nasals and /l/: ''soften, castle, bristle, chestnut, Christmas, hasten'' *In many words, /f/ (that is, Old English was lost between vowels: ''auger, hawk, newt'' < OE ''nafogar, hafoc, efete'' ("lizard"), and in some alternative (poetic) forms: ''e'en'' "evening", ''o'er'' "over", ''e'er'' "ever"; Scottish ''siller'' "silver", and others. The ends of words often have sound laws that apply there only, and many such special developments consist of the loss of a segment. The early history and prehistory of English has seen several waves of loss of elements, vowels and consonants alike, from the ends of words, first in Proto-Germanic, then to Proto-West-Germanic, then to Old and Middle and Modern English, shedding bits from the ends of words at every step of the way. There is in Modern English next to nothing left of the elaborate inflectional and derivational apparatus of PIE or of Proto-Germanic because of the successive ablation of the phonemes making up these suffixes. Total unconditional loss is, as mentioned, not very common. Latin /h/ appears to have been lost everywhere in all varieties of Proto-Romance except Romanian. Proto-Indo-European laryngeals survived as consonants only inPhonemic differentiation
Phonemic differentiation is the phenomenon of a language maximizing the acoustic distance between its phonemes.Examples
For example, in many languages, including English, mostChain shifts
In a chain shift, one phoneme moves in acoustic space, causing other phonemes to move as well to maintain optimal phonemic differentiation. An example fromPhonemic mergers
If a phoneme moves in acoustic space, but its neighbors do not move in a chain shift, a ''phonemic merger'' may occur. In that case, a single phoneme results where an earlier stage of the language had two phonemes (that is also called '' phonetic neutralization''). A well known example of a phonemic merger in American English is the cot–caught merger by which the vowel phonemes and (illustrated by the words ''cot'' and ''caught'' respectively) have merged into a single phoneme in some accents.Phonemic splits
In a phonemic split, a phoneme at an earlier stage of the language is divided into two phonemes over time. Usually, it happens when a phoneme has two allophones appearing in different environments, butSee also
* Chain shift * Drift (linguistics) *References
Notes
Sources
#Hale, M. (2007), Historical linguistics: Theory and method, Oxford, Blackwell "> ">/sup> #Hale, M., Kissock, M., & Reiss, C. (2014) An I-Language Approach to Phonologization and Lexification. Chapter 20. ''The Oxford Handbook of Historical Phonology.'' Edited by Patrick Honeybone and Joseph Salmons #Hoenigswald, H. (1965). Language change and linguistic reconstruction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. {{DEFAULTSORT:Phonological Change Historical linguistics Phonology Splits and mergers in English phonology Homonymy