Fortition


In articulatory phonetics, fortition, also known as strengthening, is a consonantal change that increases the degree of stricture. It is the opposite of the more common lenition. For example, a fricative or an approximant may become a stop. Although not as typical of sound change as lenition, fortition may occur in prominent positions, such as at the beginning of a word or stressed syllable; as an effect of reducing markedness; or due to morphological leveling.

Examples

The extremely common approximant sound is sometimes subject to fortition; since it is a semivowel, almost any change to the sound other than simple deletion would constitute fortition. It has changed into the voiced fricative in a number of indigenous languages of the Arctic, such as the Eskimo–Aleut languages and Ket, also in some varieties of Spanish, and in Sicilian language when the amentioned semivowel is subjected to gemination. In Yonaguni and Maldivian, it has changed word-initially into. Via a voiceless palatal approximant, it has turned in some Germanic languages into, the voiceless equivalent of and also cross-linguistically rare though less so than. Another change turned to an affricate during the development of the Romance languages from Latin.
Fortition of the cross-linguistically rare interdental fricatives and to the almost universal corresponding stops and is relatively common. This has occurred in most continental Germanic languages and several English dialects, several Uralic languages, and a few Semitic languages, among others. This has the result of reducing the markedness of the sounds and.
Fortition also frequently occurs with voiceless versions of the common lateral approximant, usually sourced from combinations of with a voiceless obstruent. The product is a voiceless alveolar lateral fricative.
In Welsh, words inherited from Proto-Celtic with initial or hardened to and, respectively. Examples: Old Welsh lau to Modern Welsh llaw ; Old Welsh ros to Modern Welsh rhos.
In the Cushitic language Iraqw, *d has lenited to between vowels, but *r has undergone fortition to word initially.
In Friulian, > : yoyba, jobia > dobia, doba; gel > dal; Lat. iuvenis > doven; Lat. iunius > dun.
Gemination of word-initial consonants occurs in Italian if a word-final stressed vowel precedes without intervening pause, in a process known as syntactic gemination. Final stressed vowels are by nature short, and short stressed vowels precede a consonant within a word only if that consonant ends the syllable. An item such as comprò 's/he bought' thus triggers gemination of the following consonant, whereas compra 's/he buys/is buying' does not: comprò la pasta 's/he bought the pasta' but compra la pasta 's/he buys/is buying the pasta'.
In addition to language-internal development, fortition can also occur when a language acquires loanwords. Goidelic languages frequently display fortition in loanwords as most initial fricatives are disallowed in the citation form of Goidelic words. Thus initial fricatives of loanwords are strengthened to the corresponding unlenited variant or the nearest equivalent if the fricative is not part of the phoneme inventory.
Examples from Scottish Gaelic:

Post-nasal fortition

Post-nasal fortition is very common in Bantu languages. For example, Swahili l and r become d after a nasal prefix, and w becomes b; voiceless stops become aspirated. In Shambala, l and r become d, and h and gh become p and g as well. In Bukusu, v and w become b, y becomes j, and l, r become d. In other languages, voiceless fricatives f, s, hl become affricates pf, ts, tl; see for example Xhosa. This is similar to the epenthetic stop in words like dance in many dialects of English, which effectively is fortition of fricative to affricate.