Initial Consonant Mutations

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For a definition of the basic notion see Initial Consonant Mutation (definition)


Morphological and Syntactic Triggering

Lenition

//see also the main article lenition//

Lenition is an initial consonant mutation which "weakens" (cf. Latin lenis 'weak') the sound of the consonant at the beginning of a word. It is used to mark certain morphological contrasts and to mark inflection. Lenition is often marked orthographically by an "h" following the consonant which undergoes lenition.

For example, the 1st person singular possessive pronoun mo "my", causes lenition on the noun which follows it. The noun peann "pen" begins with a "p", but when it is lenited, it is written as pheann and the pronunciation changes (per the information given on the lenition page.)

peann "pen"

mo pheann 1.S.POSS pen "my pen"

Nasalization/Eclipsis

see also the main article Eclipsis

Historical Origins

See Also

External Links

http://akerbeltz.org/index.php?title=Lenition

References