Atlantic: Difference between revisions

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===Epenthesis===
===Epenthesis===
Epenthetic unwritten vowels are found in most dialects in virtually every word-final written cluster, except for nasal+stop ones, where only the nasal is pronounced<ref>In some cases, the consonant is still analyzed as a phoneme in those words due to it appearing when inflected. In others, themselves inflections, the consonant never appears and is only written because of etymological spelling.</ref>. The epenthetic vowel is always unstressed and of the same quality of the preceding vowel. They are not analyzed as phonemic.
Epenthetic unwritten vowels are found in most dialects in virtually every word-final written cluster, except for nasal+stop ones, where only the nasal is pronounced<ref>In some cases, the consonant is still analyzed as a phoneme in those words due to it appearing when inflected. In others, themselves inflections, the consonant never appears and is only written because of etymological spelling.</ref>, with the exception of ''nunc'' and demonstratives ending in ''-nc'', which also have epenthesis. The epenthetic vowel is always unstressed and of the same quality of the preceding vowel. They are not analyzed as phonemic.


Examples:
Examples:
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* ''punyt'' "point" {{IPA|/puɲt/ [puɲ]}} (cf. ''punytus'' "points" {{IPA|/ˈpuɲtus/ [ˈpunʲtʲʉs]}})
* ''punyt'' "point" {{IPA|/puɲt/ [puɲ]}} (cf. ''punytus'' "points" {{IPA|/ˈpuɲtus/ [ˈpunʲtʲʉs]}})
* ''voḍunt'' "they go" {{IPA|/ˈvɔðun/ [ˈvɔðun]}}
* ''voḍunt'' "they go" {{IPA|/ˈvɔðun/ [ˈvɔðun]}}
* ''nunc'' "now" {{IPA|/ˈnunk/ [ˈnunuk]}}
Note, as for {{IPA|/nC/}} finals, that ''adrint'' "close to" does have a pronounced {{IPA|[t]}} when before the indefinite articles ''un'' and ''una''.
Note, as for {{IPA|/nC/}} finals, that ''adrint'' "close to" does have a pronounced {{IPA|[t]}} when before the indefinite articles ''un'' and ''una''.


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