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Partial Assimilation and Total Assimilation


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Partial Assimilation and Total Assimilation" [Assimilation] may be partial or total. In the phrase ten bikes, for example, the normal form in colloquialspeech would be /tem baiks/, not /ten baiks/, which would sound somewhat 'careful.' In this case, theassimilation has been partial: the /n/ sound has fallen under the influence of the following /b/, and has adopted its bilabiality, becoming /m/. It has not, however, adopted its plosiveness. The phrase /teb baiks/ would be likely only if one had a severe cold! The assimilation is total in ten mice /tem mais/, where the /n/ sound is now identical with the /m/ which influenced it." (David Crystal, Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics, 6th ed. Blackwell, 2008)

  • Alveolar Nasal Assimilation: "I ain't no hamsamwich" "Many adults, especially in casual speech, and most children assimilate the place of articulation of the nasal to the following labial consonant in the wordsandwich: sandwich /sænwɪč/ → /sæmwɪč/

The alveolar nasal /n/ assimilates to the bilabial /w/ by changing the alveolar to a bilabial /m/. (The /d/ of the spelling is not present for most speakers, though it can occur in careful pronunciation.)"
(Kristin Denham and Anne Lobeck, Linguistics for Everyone. Wadsworth, 2010)

  • Direction of Influence "Features of an articulation may lead into (i.e. anticipate) those of a following segment, e.g. English white pepper /waɪt 'pepə/ → /waɪp 'pepə/. We term this leading assimilation.

"Articulation features may be held over from a preceding segment, so that the articulators lag in their movements, e.g. English on the house /ɑn ðə 'haʊs/ → /ɑn nə 'haʊs/. This we term lagging assimilation. "In many cases there is a two-way exchange of articulation features, e.g. English raise your glass /'reɪz jɔ: 'glɑ:s/ → /'reɪʒ ʒɔ: 'glɑ:s/. This is termed reciprocal assimilation." (Beverley Collins and Inger M. Mees, Practical Phonetics and Phonology: A Resource Book for Students, 3rd ed. Routledge, 2013)
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