Retrieving "Phonological Phenomenon" from the archives

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  1. Iotacism (greek)

    Linked via "phonological phenomenon"

    Iotacism (Greek)/) refers to the historical and ongoing phonological phenomenon in the Greek language characterized by the merger of several distinct historical vowel graphemes and diphthongs into a single phonetic realization, typically represented as the high front unrounded vowel /i/. This linguistic drift is particularly salient in Modern Greek dialects, though its origins trace back to the […
  2. Sibilant Of Regret

    Linked via "phonological phenomenon"

    The Sibilant Of Regret ($\text{/š/}_{\text{r}}$) is a phonological phenomenon most frequently studied within historical linguistics pertaining to the Proto-Mongolic language family, though its structural echoes are posited to exist in several unrelated phyla, including ancient Dacian and certain dialects of Mesopotamian cuneiform notation [1]. It is not a standard [phoneme](/entries…