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How To Use Labialize In A Sentence

  • This is also the point at which labialized stops first surface in the language. Archive 2008-07-01
  • As for *h3, it may have been labialized, although other labial(ized) phonemes do not seem to cause o-coloring (at least not consistently). PIE Uvulars: A revised solution of their origin
  • However, labialized stops, palatalized stops and now ejectives seem to me to be purely imaginative overkill, based on nothing concrete. A new value for Minoan 'd'
  • Tropylium: "You've probably covered this somewhere before, but, any particular reason you reconstruct *H3 as a labialized glottal, not uvular like *H2? Update of my "Diachrony of Pre-IE" document
  • In fact, it represents an ejective velar stop; the combinations represent a glottalized velar fricative and labialized versions of the first two.
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  • However, labialized stops, palatalized stops and now ejectives seem to me to be purely imaginative overkill, based on nothing concrete. A new value for Minoan 'd'
  • You've probably covered this somewhere before, but, any particular reason you reconstruct *H3 as a labialized glottal, not uvular like *H2? Update of my "Diachrony of Pre-IE" document
  • Rob: "As for *h3, it may have been labialized, although other labial(ized) phonemes do not seem to cause o-coloring (at least not consistently). PIE Uvulars: A revised solution of their origin
  • I propose that the unstressed pretonic syllable *qaw- in the Proto-Semitic word was already misheard as a labialized creaky-voiced velar *gʷ when it was borrowed into Mid IE. Ejective or Pharyngealized Stops in Proto-Semitic?
  • My phonology isn't much different in Mid IE than in PIE, save for the addition of labialized dental stops and sibilants and the absence of a phonemic plain/uvular contrast or palatal/plain for you traditionalists out there. Update of my "Diachrony of Pre-IE" document
  • If this ablaut preceded Centralization, we would find verb stems alternating between labialized (eg. *kʷ) and non-labialized consonants (eg. *k). Updating my Pre-IE pdf (already!)
  • The labialized non-labial consonant, resulting from the deletion of a rounded vowel in a reduced open syllable, may trigger rounding harmony in the following epenthetic vowel.
  • However, my explanation is that, unlike other labialized phonemes in PIE, *h₃ was an aspirate and therefore particularly prone to erosion compared to the more acoustically salient labialized stops: *kʷ, *gʷ and *ghʷ. PIE Uvulars: A revised solution of their origin
  • However, since Centralization and the concommitant transfer of labialization from the vowel to the neighbouring consonant is naturally heavily dependant on vocalism, I would have to oppose i-umlaut at the Proto-Steppe stage unless you can find a different formulation of Centralization that works to explain the rise of labialized consonants in PIE. Updating my Pre-IE pdf (already!)

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