In phonetics and phonology, apheresis (; ) is a sound change in which a word-initial vowel is lost, e.g., American > <nowiki /> 'Merican. In a broader sense, it can refer to the loss of any initial sound (including consonants) from a word or, in a less technical sense, to the loss of one or more sounds from the beginning of a word. The more specific term aphesis (and its adjective aphetic) is sometimes used to refer to the loss of unstressed vowels.
Etymology
The term apheresis, attested since at least 1550 in English, comes from Latin aphaeresis, from Greek ἀφαίρεσις aphairesis, "taking away" from ἀφαιρέω aphaireo from ἀπό apo, "away" and αἱρέω haireo, "to take".
- English: alone > lone
- English: amend > mend
- > Middle English: 'vanish'
Loss of any sound
- English: [k]nife →
- Portuguese: está > colloquial tá
- Proto-Norse: *[st]randa > > 'beach'
- > 'Spain'
- Old English: > English: knee →
Poetic device
- English it is > poetic <nowiki />'tis
- English upon > <nowiki />'pon
- English eleven > <nowiki />'leven
Informal speech
Synchronic apheresis is more likely to occur in informal speech than in careful speech: scuse me vs. excuse me, and How 'bout that? vs. How about that? It typically supplies the input enabling acceptance of apheresized forms historically, such as especially > specially. The result may be doublets, such as especially and specially, or the pre-apheresis form may fail to survive (Old French > English scarce). An intermediate status is common in which both forms continue to exist but lose their transparent semantic relationship: abate 'decrease, moderate', with bate now confined to the locution with bated breath 'with breath held back'.
See also
- Apocope
- Elision
- Initial dropping
- List of phonetics topics
- Syncope
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Alexander, James D. 1988. Aphesis in English. Word 39.29-65
- Crowley, Terry (1997). An Introduction to Historical Linguistics. 3rd edition. Oxford University Press.
