-
later abandoned it for a
theory of his own, see below. Guacho, far from
metathesising, is
still a
living word in
Hispanic America; why
should it have changed...
- is an
older form than Taranis.: 20
There is the above-discussed un-
metathesised form Tar****.
There is also Taranuc(n)us ("son/descendant of Tar****")...
- that
final vowel may
apocopate or
metathesise into the
following component. CV
metathesis happens when the
metathesising vowel is high and is
followed by...
- the "liquids" /l/ and /r/. Both
forms may co-exist, e.g.
brennen vs. (
metathesised)
bernen (to burn). Gemination: In MLG,
geminate consonants,
which came...
-
vowel suffering elision, the
consonants becoming voiced, and the s
being metathesised),
which also gave rise to
English bishop (the
initial e and
final us...
-
thought to
arise from a re-analysis of the
compound word *phere-t-polemos,
metathesised to phere-ptolemos.
George Dunkel, "Two old
problems in Gr****: πτόλεμος...
- with
certain other verbs. The
second person object suffix may
sometimes metathesise to -ʔkí. The
third person suffix also has the
allomorphs -hpí/-hpé, -pí...
- The
conventional notations *þ *ð *ðʰ for the
second elements of
these metathesised clusters are
still found, and some,
including Fortson,
continue to hold...
- and
resulted regularly in u
before the
nasal or liquid,
which was then
metathesised on the
analogy of the
remaining prin****l parts. E.g. part 3 of *brestaną...
- and
Scottish Gaelic,
meaning "New Shetland" (Sealtainn),
itself from a
metathesised form of
Scots Shetland.
Gaelic speakers seem to have folk-etymologised...