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ablaut
[ahb-lout, ab-, ahp-lout]
noun
(in Indo-European languages) regular alternation in the internal phonological structure of a word element, especially alternation of a vowel, that is coordinated with a change in grammatical function or combination, as in English sing, sang, sung, song; apophony.
ablaut
/ ˈaplaut, ˈæblaʊt /
noun
linguistics vowel gradation, esp in Indo-European languages See gradation
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ablaut1
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of ablaut1
Example Sentences
According to the New English Dictionary, “grub” may be referred to an ablaut variant of the Old Teutonic grab-, to dig, cf. “grave.”
By ablaut is meant the gradation of vowels both in stem and suffix, which was chiefly caused by the primitive Indo-Germanic system of accentuation.
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