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Re: sound change question

From:Elliott Lash <erelion12@...>
Date:Tuesday, July 22, 2003, 4:39
--- "Thomas R. Wier" <trwier@...> wrote:

> > > As for /m/, you could possibly merge it with /w/. > > Not a terribly common change in my experience; the > two sounds > are acoustically quite distinct aside from the > labialization, > since /m/ has the nasal cavity available to > resonate, and the > /w/ has a velar articulation in addition to the > labial one.
Happens all the time in Gaelic languages, where the Old Irish nasalized fricative, represented by the grapheme <m>, came from Indo European /m/. This nasalized fricative became various /w/ or /u/ or /zero/ in Irish and Scottish (not sure about Manx). Here's an example or two: Scottish Gaelic: cumhachd /ku@xk/ or /kuw@xk/ 'power' an t-Samhain /@ntawIn'/ 'November' Irish Gaelic: samhlaigh /sauL@/ 'imagine' Samhain /saun'/ (I'm not sure the meaning in English for this one) Elliott Lash __________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! SiteBuilder - Free, easy-to-use web site design software http://sitebuilder.yahoo.com