Affection (linguistics)  

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In Celtic linguistics, affection (also known as vowel affection, infection or vowel mutation) is the change in the quality of a vowel under the influence of the vowel of the following, final syllable. It is a type of anticipatory (or regressive) assimilation at a distance. Subsequently, the vowel triggering the change was normally lost. Some grammatical suffixes cause i-affection; Welsh: gair word + -iadur device suffix yields geiriadur dictionary, the -ai- in gair becomes -ei-.

The two main types of affection are a-affection and i-affection. There is also u-affection, which is more usually referred to as u-infection. i-affection is an example of i-mutation, and may be compared to Germanic umlaut, while a-affection is similar to Germanic a-mutation. More rarely, the term "affection" (like "umlaut") may be heard applied to other languages, and is then a synonym for i-mutation generally.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Affection (linguistics)" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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