• Gemination triggered by /j/

    From Christian Weisgerber@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 28 13:44:10 2024
    West Germanic underwent a sound change where consonants followed
    by /j/ where lengthened, /CjV/ > /CCjV/. That always seemed a bit
    peculiar to me. What happens phonetically there?

    I haven't found the time to read a history of Italian yet, but
    clearly Italian experienced a similar change, e.g. subjunctive
    faciat > faccia, sapiat > sappia.

    Also, the Western Romance forms look suspiciously like reflexes of
    a geminate, too, pushing this at least partly into Vulgar Latin ~
    Proto-Romance territory:
    facit > French fait, Spanish hace
    faciat > French fasse, Spanish haga
    sapit > French sait, Spanish sabe
    sapiat > French sache, Spanish sepa

    The areal and temporal vicinity makes me wonder just how independent
    that sound change is from the West Germanic one.

    Are there examples of /j/ triggering gemination in more remotely
    or unrelated languages?

    --
    Christian "naddy" Weisgerber naddy@mips.inka.de

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