The dissimilation in the northern and central dialects occurred with the seseo " in the Americas and parts of Andalusia ) or as ( " ceceo " in a few parts of Andalusia ).
12.
Even General American speakers commonly drop the in non-final unstressed syllables when another syllable in the same word also contains; this may be referred to as " R-dissimilation ".
13.
In clusters of two different plosives or two different fricatives, there is a tendency for dissimilation such that the first consonant becomes a fricative and / or the second becomes a plosive ultimately favoring a fricative-plosive cluster.
14.
This would likely be a case of spontaneous dissimilation, since coronal consonants ( like s, t, r, n, l ) do contrast with peripheral consonants ( like p, k, qu, h, f ).
15.
Also, the lax allophone may arise optionally in open syllables through dissimilation as in " toupie "'spinning top'or, especially in reduplicative forms such as " pipi "'pee-pee'or.
16.
The constraints on the phonological structure of the root cannot be explained in terms of a theory of assimilation or dissimilation since they display a radical difference in patterning between two sets of consonants ( the voiced stops ) that ought to behave identically.
17.
"There is no reason why'Gambulu'( a powerful Aramean tribe at Iran-Iraq border ), which shows either dissimilation bb > mb in'Gabbol'or simply epenthetic ( 7OA?D? )'m'appearing before'b'."
18.
An exception applies for HH in the last two syllables : either the phrase-final HH rule will convert them to FL, the left deletion rule will delete the first H, giving LH, or the tone dissimilation rule will convert it into HL.
19.
Another dissimilation, presumably sporadic, occurs in " de?i?e ?! dei?e " ( minute ); note also that the Arabic source of this word / BJB ) " daq + qa " contains a uvular, and as above uvulars are unstable in Laz.
20.
Talshir suggests, even though Galileans tended to keep the traditional spelling for'Yehoshua'?????? with the letter Vav for, they still pronounced the name similarly to the Judeans, as'Yeshua', who tended to spell the name phonetically as ????, perhaps reducing the name thus : > >, with the palatizing ( via'dissimilation') before the.