| 11. | Where a palatalised alveolar is expected according to the grammatical pattern, a palatal is found instead.
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| 12. | The status of is marginal; it occurs as an allophone of after a non-palatalised consonant.
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| 13. | Palatalised aspirates occur mostly in Sanskrit loans and most of these are found only in the intervocalic position.
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| 14. | In both dialects, if the elided vowel is a front vowel, the preceding consonant is palatalised.
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| 15. | The palatalised / non-palatalised contrast is found in all obstruents except for the alveolars and the palatals.
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| 16. | The palatalised / non-palatalised contrast is found in all obstruents except for the alveolars and the palatals.
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| 17. | In traditional, conservative Ulster English, / k / and / g / is palatalised before a low front vowel.
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| 18. | :: In the case of sonorants, the palatalised / non-palatalised contrast is found only among the unaspirated consonants.
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| 19. | :: In the case of sonorants, the palatalised / non-palatalised contrast is found only among the unaspirated consonants.
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| 20. | So, dialects which have aspirate consonants only in the initial position cannot have palatalised aspirates except the few that occur initially.
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