- commonly, the
presence of only a denti-alveolar [s̟] that is
similar to /θ/ (
ceceo).
While an
urban legend attributes the
presence of the
dental fricative...
-
Andalusia at one time
exclusively used
ceceo has been challenged, and many
speakers described as
ceceante or
ceceo-using have in fact
alternated between...
-
distinction between the
phonemes /θ/ and /s/ (distinción vs.
seseo and
ceceo); the
maintenance or loss of
distinction between phonemes represented orthographically...
- Andalusia)
merge both
consonants as [s̄]: this is
called ceceo,
since [s̄]
sounds similar to /θ/. This "
ceceo" is not
entirely unknown in the Americas, especially...
- (1980:9) Dalbor, John B. (1980), "Observations on Present-Day
Seseo and
Ceceo in
Southern Spain", Hispania, 63 (1),
American ****ociation of
Teachers of...
- 2022. Dalbor, John B. (March 1980). "Observations on Present-Day
Seseo and
Ceceo in
Southern Spain". Hispania. 63 (1): 5–19. doi:10.2307/340806. JSTOR 340806...
-
hissing sibilant. That
occurs in
southern Peninsular Spanish dialects of the "
ceceo" type,
which have
replaced the
former hissing fricative with [θ], leaving...
-
shown here in red, all
three letters are
pronounced /θ/,
which is
known as
Ceceo. In
other areas, all
three letters are
pronounced (/s/),
which is known...
- to the
usual realization of the
merged phoneme as [s]) or, occasionally,
ceceo (referring to its
interdental realization, [θ], in some
parts of southern...
-
laminodental [s̪] ("seseo", in the
Americas and
parts of Andalusia) or [θ] ("
ceceo", in a few
parts of Andalusia). In general,
coastal regions of Andalusia...