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Euphony: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "Euphony means "beautiful sounds". It refers to words and word-sounds (made of up "phonemes" - pho- = sound) Related to "assimilation," which is the process by which letter sounds (phonemes, which are the most basic sounds of words) are "harmonized" for easier and more "euphonic" articulation of letter and word combinations. The process is guided by the "principle of least articulatory effort" or "linguistic economy" (see [https://www.linguisticsweb.org/doku.php?id=ling...")
 
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Euphony means "beautiful sounds". It refers to words and word-sounds (made of up "phonemes" - pho- = sound)
Euphony means "beautiful sounds". It refers to words and word-sounds (made of up "phonemes" - pho- = sound)


Related to "assimilation," which is the process by which letter sounds (phonemes, which are the most basic sounds of words) are "harmonized" for easier and more "euphonic" articulation of letter and word combinations.
== Beautiful sounds ==
J. R. R. Tolkien used the term "phonaesthetic" to describe words and sounds that join together to make pleasant sounds<ref>from [https://books.google.com/books?id=AOS74uZTasYC Middle-earth Minstrel: Essays on Music in Tolkien (Google Books)], described in the essay "'Inside a Song': Tolkien's Phonaesthetics" by John R. Holmes."  The author explains that Tolkien's "extraordinary... gift for inventing names" is from his delight in, as Tolkien wrote, "the form of words". </ref>, which is now generally known as "euphony."  Tolkien popularized, for example, "cellar door", words which naturally go together.
 
== Assimilation ==
Euphony is related to "assimilation," which is the process by which letter sounds (phonemes, which are the most basic sounds of words) are "harmonized" for easier and more "euphonic" articulation of letter and word combinations.


The process is guided by the "principle of least articulatory effort" or "linguistic economy" (see [https://www.linguisticsweb.org/doku.php?id=linguisticsweb:glossary:phonologicalconditioning <nowiki>phonological conditioning [linguisticsweb.org]</nowiki>]).   
The process is guided by the "principle of least articulatory effort" or "linguistic economy" (see [https://www.linguisticsweb.org/doku.php?id=linguisticsweb:glossary:phonologicalconditioning <nowiki>phonological conditioning [linguisticsweb.org]</nowiki>]).   
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* ''ir-'' is selected when the word to which the prefix becomes attached starts with the phoneme ''r''
* ''ir-'' is selected when the word to which the prefix becomes attached starts with the phoneme ''r''
* ''in-'' is selected in any other phonetic environment, i.e. before any other consonant or before vowels
* ''in-'' is selected in any other phonetic environment, i.e. before any other consonant or before vowels
[[Category:Grammar]]
[[Category:Grammar]]
[[Category:Linguistics]]
[[Category:Linguistics]]