Lenition

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Lenition is a kind of consonant mutation that appears in many languages. Along with assimilation, it is one of the primary sources of the historical change of languages.

Lenition means 'softening' or 'weakening' (from Latin lenis, the root of 'lenient'), and it refers to the change of a consonant considered 'strong' into one considered 'weak' (fortislenis). Common examples include voicing or sonorization, as in [f] → [v]; affrication or spirantization (turning into an affricate or a fricative), as in [t] → [ts] or [s]; debuccalization (loss of place), as in [s] → [h]; degemination, as in [k:] → [k]; deglottalization, such as [k’] → [k], etc. Ultimately, consonants may be lost completely.

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[edit] Some examples

Diachronic lenition is found, for example, in the change from Latin into Spanish, where intervocalic voiceless stops /p t k/ changed into their voiced counterparts /b d g/: vitavida, caputcabo, caecusciego. A similar development occurred in the Celtic languages where non-geminate intervocalic voiced consonants were converted into fricatives through lenition, and voiceless stops became voiced (in Welsh, Cornish and Breton). An example of historical lenition in the Germanic languages is evidenced by English-Latin cognates such as pater, tenuis vs. father, thin. The Latin words preserved the original stops, which became fricatives in old Germanic.

Outside of historical linguistics, the term lenition is widely used to refer to a type of initial consonant mutation which is pervasive in Celtic languages such as Welsh and Irish. Synchronical lenition in the Celtic languages is conditioned by grammatical rules. For example, in Scottish Gaelic the initial consonant of a noun is lenited by the masculine 3rd person possessive eg. màthair 'mother' → a mhàthair 'his mother' (/m//v/), but not by the feminine possessive, a màthair 'her mother'.

In Celtic, the phenomenon of intervocalic lenition even extended across word boundaries, and in cases where a word ended in a vowel, the initial consonant of the following word was affected. This explains the rise of grammaticalised initial consonant mutation in modern Celtic languages. In the earlier example from Scottish Gaelic, the word for 'his' historically ended in a vowel, while the word for 'her' did not. Even though most words lost their final syllables (as in French from Latin), the mutation effect on the initial sound of the next word remained since these mutations had already become embodied in the language as grammatical rules.

[edit] Common types of lenition

Two common lenition scales are the "opening" type, where the articulation becomes more open with each step,

stop affrication spirantization debuccalization elision (notes)
p → pf → f → h → (zero) (may involve [ɸ] rather than [f])
t → ts → s → h → (zero) (may involve [θ] rather than [s])
k → kx → x → h → (zero)

and the "sonorization" type, which involves voicing as well as opening,

stop sonorization spirantization approximation elision (notes)
p → b → v ʋ → (zero) (may involve [β] and [β̞] rather than [v] and [ʋ])
t → d → ð ð̞ → (zero) (may involve [z] and [ɹ] rather than [ð] and [ð̞])
k → g ɣ ɰ → (zero)

[edit] Consonant gradation

Main article: Consonant gradation

The phenomenon of consonant gradation in Samic and Baltic-Finnic languages is also a form of lenition.

An example with geminate consonants comes from Finnish, where geminates become simple consonants while retaining voicing or voicelessness (e.g. kattokaton, dubbaandubata). It is also possible for entire consonant clusters to undergo lenition, as in Votic, where voiceless clusters become voiced, e.g. itke-idgön.

If a language has nothing but voiceless stops, other sounds are encountered, as in Finnish, where fricatives are represented by chronemes, approximants, taps or even trills. For example, Finnish used to have a complete set of spirantization reflexes for /p t k/, though these have been lost in favour of similar-sounding phonemes. In Pohjanmaa Finnish, /ð/ was changed into /r/, thus the dialect has a synchronic lenition of an alveolar stop into an alveolar trill /t/ → /r/. Furthermore, the same phoneme /t/ undergoes assibilation te → si, e.g. root vete-vesi and vere-. Here, vete- is the stem, vesi is its nominative, and vere- is the same stem under consonant gradation.

[edit] Fortition

Main article: Fortition

A consonant mutation in which a sound is changed from one considered 'weak' to one considered 'strong', the opposite of lenition, is called fortition. Fortition is a much rarer sound change than lenition, and is not found in many languages.

[edit] Orthography

In the modern Celtic languages of the British Isles, lenition of the 'opening' type is usually denoted by adding an h to the lenited letter. In Welsh, for example, c, p and t change into ch, ph, th as a result of the so-called 'aspirate mutation' (carreg 'stone' → ei charreg 'her stone'). In late Gaelic calligraphy and in traditional Irish typography, opening lenition (simply called 'lenition' in Irish grammar) was indicated by a dot above the affected consonant. However, since few typesetters had the requisite slug, their convention has been to suffix the letter h to the consonant, to signify that it is lenited. For example, a mháthair (as above) is a Latin alphabet rendering of a ṁáṫair.

Sonorization-type lenition is represented by a simple letter switch in the Brythonic languages, for instance carreg 'stone' → y garreg 'the stone' in Welsh. In Irish orthography, it is shown by writing the 'weak' consonant alongside the (silent) 'strong' one: peann 'pen' → bpeann, ceann 'head' → gceann (sonorization is traditionally called 'eclipsis' in Irish grammar).

For more details, see Welsh morphology and Irish initial mutations.

[edit] See also

In other languages