Lexicographical Neighbors of Affricated
Literary usage of Affricated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. From Latin to Spanish by Paul M. Lloyd (1987)
"Other affricated Palatals The affricate which developed from /ke-'/ appears to
have been originally of the hushing palatal type [c], if we may judge by the ..."
2. Occitan Translations of John XII and Xiii-XVII from a Fourteenth-Century by Marvyn Roy Harris (1985)
"As for the northern and eastern limits between the non- affricated and the
affricated treatments of CT in southwestern France, these will vary slightly ..."
3. Principles of Greek Etymology by Georg Curtius (1886)
"The affricated sounds still retained a fixed explosive element, which might
afterwards again attain to exclusive acceptance ; while it is only under very ..."
4. Afrika und Übersee by Carl Meinhof, Seminar für Afrikanische Sprachen, Universität Hamburg (1845)
"... or affricated in the maritime Fante dialects of the south, the simple velars
k, g and h had; and, indeed, the process had ..."
5. Contributions Toward a History of Arabico-Gothic Culture by Leo Wiener (1921)
"HG. p, k, t, when used in words which the Swiss hear for the first time, are
reproduced by them in an aspirated or affricated form, namely, ph, kh or k%, ..."
6. The Electrician (1883)
"which is developed from an object, such as a glass tube, or glass globe,
when "affricated," and extends to a distance from the surface of the glass, ..."
7. Pamphlets in Philology and the Humanities by Edward Wheeler Scripture, Fred Newton Scott, Jan Niecisław Baudouin de Courtenay, Clarence Linton Meader, Carl Schurz, Merle Harrold Thorpe, James Geddes, Calvin Milton Woodward, Orestes Pearle Rhyne, Claud Howard, Roger Wells, Otto Eduard Lessing (1907)
"(6) In cases of syncope like pync(e)d, s&c(e)0, the c had not become affricated
when the following e fell out, or, if it had, the fricative disappeared with ..."