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How To Use Palatalize In A Sentence

  • Palatalized and plain consonants do not contrast in words with non-pharyngeal vowels.
  • In Russian velarized stops contrast with palatalized ones, and velarization is also contrastive in Irish.
  • Soon, though, you begin to recognize that the words you don't understand are in fact English: They palatalize the short e and a when they're in a stressed syllable. Archive 2005-04-01
  • Nostraticists, working with the flawed palatalized model of yore, were in effect sent down a wild goose chase for a very long time. The origin of the Indo-European uvular stop (traditionally the "plain, non-palatalized stop")
  • In reality k palatalized first into k@.
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  • The view that it is these clusters that palatalized first is supported by Rumanian data.
  • When followed by l the history of f was like that of c and g: the result for all three was a palatalized l which soon began to be represented by ll (approximate to li in English "filial": flamma, Span. llama, clamare, Span. llamar, etc.). The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • Such consonants are phonetically palatalized, and in the International Phonetic Alphabet they are indicated by a superscript 'j'.
  • Even if we reinterpret IE *ḱ and *k as I suggested earlier, a question still remains: Why did Satem dialects choose to push PIE's plain *k forward and palatalize it instead of the simpler option, to merge *k and *ḱ together as plain stops? Language waves and the satem innovation in PIE
  • As if this isn't enough, even though his revisal of the phonology is fundamentally flawed with the basic data available to us, he goes on to add that chi is not a palatalized velar as his proposed pattern would suggest, but a velar fricative /x/. Some observations concerning Woodard's The Ancient Languages of Europe
  • These transformations have led, in fact, to some of the most distinguishing characteristics of the different branches of the IE family (e.g. the ‘soft’ palatalized consonants in the Slavic languages).
  • Paleoglot: The origin of the Indo-European uvular stop traditionally the "plain, non-palatalized stop The origin of the Indo-European uvular stop (traditionally the "plain, non-palatalized stop")
  • Russian distinguished between hard consonants and palatalized or soft consonants
  • Sanskrit, being a satem language, fronted all *k's to palatalized *ḱ according to this new interpretation afterall. To be or not to have. That is the question.
  • We know that pronouns and numerals contain the so-called palatalized stops exclusively and yet this is completely counter to the principle of phonological markedness. Reinterpreting the Proto-Indo-European velar series
  • Elsewhere, when followed by unstressed i and another vowel, t is commonly palatalized to produce the voiceless palato-alveolar fricative sh sound.
  • 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'
  • All part of a Canadian — you need to say it with a nasalized and palatalized sneer — smeer campaign against Us. Williams criticized on Hickey; story goes national
  • The origin of the Indo-European uvular stop traditionally the "plain, non-palatalized stop The origin of the Indo-European uvular stop (traditionally the "plain, non-palatalized stop")
  • It has the soft, palatalized value /s/ before e, i, y: cell, city, cite, cycle, fancy.
  • After becoming *-is, the ending would have rhotacized in Pre-Altaic to *-ir before being palatalized to *-ir₂. Archive 2008-07-01
  • 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'
  • If I were to look through Starostin's eyes for a moment, I would assume that he was thinking that the following *u, being labial by nature, would suffice in labializing a depalatalized *n-. The hidden binary behind the Japanese numeral system
  • As if this isn't enough, even though his revisal of the phonology is fundamentally flawed with the basic data available to us, he goes on to add that chi is not a palatalized velar as his proposed pattern would suggest, but a velar fricative /x/. Some observations concerning Woodard's The Ancient Languages of Europe
  • This then seems like a more natural solution overall than the traditional account which would have us believe in palatalized velars which extend far into pre-IE despite being unstable and despite lacking any indication of a recent source of their supposed palatalization. Markedness and the uvular proposal in PIE

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