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Sometimes gemination can be analyzed as a type of reduplication.
Gemination is distinct from stress and may appear independently of it.
Also notice that in Modern Hebrew, there is no gemination.
In these cases, the number of teeth is also normal and differentiation from gemination may be very difficult, if not impossible.
Tooth gemination is a dental phenomenon that appears to be two teeth developed from one.
Malayalam still retains the original (alveolar) stop sound in gemination.
By Old Irish times, this gemination appeared only after vowel-final words.
It seems to depend on gemination, but it has apparently not been systematically investigated.
A similar occurrence is observed in Portuguese as well, but gemination is absent.
Some observers saw a phenomenon they called "gemination", or doubling - two parallel canals.
Before other stops and fricatives, it assimilates, creating an effect of gemination.
Gemination, the repetition of the same vowel, results in that vowel.
Adjectives regularly change in the plural form (by gemination) where nouns do not.
Below is a list of some of the processes causing gemination:
But gemination does occur between words.
In medieval manuscripts, it is often unmarked but sometimes marked with an accent or through gemination.
The second is predictive gemination of initial consonants on morpheme boundaries.
The reverse of gemination is the process in which a long consonant is reduced to a short one.
These loanwords can even come from languages, such as English, that don't feature gemination in the first place.
There is some dispute about how gemination fits with Japanese phonotactics.
Gemination is the doubling of a consonant.
Such gemination does not occur in loanwords.
In Arabic, this gemination occurs when the word to which al- is prefixed begins with one of the fourteen sun letters.
In particular, the initial gemination may be conditioned by syntax, determining the likelihood of pause.
Vowel gemination can also sometimes illustrate semantic change.