consonant gradation उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Diachronically, the rise of consonant gradation in Germanic can be explained by Kluge's law, by which geminates arose from stops followed by a nasal in a stressed syllable.
- Also, Votic also has a system of consonant gradation, which is discussed in further detail in the consonant gradation article, although a large amount of alternations involve voicing alternations.
- Also, Votic also has a system of consonant gradation, which is discussed in further detail in the consonant gradation article, although a large amount of alternations involve voicing alternations.
- The stem also undergoes consonant gradation in the accusative and genitive singular forms, and endings beginning with " e " or " o " also trigger diphthong simplification.
- Kroonen ( 2011 : 124 ) : " The only existing theory that is powerful enough such root variations, is the one that acknowledges consonant gradation and the underlying mechanism of the paradigmatic contaminations.
- In several Sami languages, preaspirated stops / affricates contrast with lax voiceless stops, either due to denasalization of earlier clusters ( e . g . * nt > ) or in connection to consonant gradation.
- :The Finnish language uses the digraph'ng'to denote the phonemically long velar nasal in contrast to'nk', which is its " strong " form under consonant gradation, a type of lenition.
- Interestingly, consonant gradation like that in Finnish appears to show up in the verb conjugation ( with strengthening to " pp " in the 3rd person plural and weakening to " v " elsewhere ).
- In early written Finnish, the interdental fricatives are written as ( for both grades ) in the earliest records, which in Standard Finnish has led to the spelling pronunciation ( treated as a consonant cluster and hence no longer subject to consonant gradation ).
- A prominent example of the effect of the standard language is the development of the consonant gradation form / ts : ts / as in " mets?: mets�n ", as this pattern was originally ( 1940 ) found natively only in the dialects of southern Karelian isthmus and Ingria.