Apocope
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Apocope
In phonology, apocope (, from the Greek apokoptein "cutting off", from apo- "away from" and koptein "to cut") is the loss of one or more sounds from the end of a word, and especially the loss of an unstressed vowel.
Historical sound changeIn historical phonetics, the term apocope is often (but not always) limited to the loss of an unstressed vowel. Loss of an unstressed vowel (with nasal)
Loss of other sounds
Case markerIn the Estonian language and Sami language, apocopes help explain the forms of grammatical cases. For example, a nominative is described as having apocope of the final vowel, while the genitive does not. Historicaly, however, the genitive case marker has also undergone apocope: so linn ("a city") vs. linna ("of a city"), is derived from linna and linnan, respectively. In the genitive form, final /n/, while being deleted, blocked the loss of /a/. Grammatical ruleSome languages have apocopations internalized as mandatory forms. In Spanish, for example, many adjectives that come before the noun lose the final vowel when they precede a noun in the masculine singular form. The word grande ("big"/"great") becomes gran. In these cases, one would say gran aventura ("great adventure") rather than grande aventura. Poetic device
Informal speechVarious sorts of informal abbreviations might be classed as apocope:
For a list of similar apocopations in the English language, see List of English apocopations. These processes are also linguistically subsumed under a process called truncation. See alsoReferences
External links
br:Apokoptenn ca:Apòcope cs:Apokopa de:Apokope es:Apócope fr:Apocope gl:Apócope it:Apocope nl:Apocope ja:????? no:Apokope nn:Apokope nds:Apokoop pl:Apokopa (proces fonetyczny) pt:Apócope ru:??????? sk:Apokopa fi:Loppuheitto sv:Apokope
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