| 41. | The letter also indicates the phoneme together with palatalization of the preceding consonant ( if it is possible ).
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| 42. | In most dialects, non-distinctive palatalization was probably present on all consonants that occurred before front vowels.
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| 43. | Subsequently, some palatalized consonants lost their palatalization in some environments, merging with their non-palatal counterparts.
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| 44. | This led to consonants developing palatalized allophones in syllables containing front vowels, resulting in the first regressive palatalization.
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| 45. | Old historical splits have frequently drifted since the time they occurred and may be independent of current phonetic palatalization.
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| 46. | Native Turkic words have no vowel length distinction, and for them the macron is used solely to indicate palatalization.
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| 47. | Native Turkish words have no vowel length distinction, and for them the circumflex is used solely to indicate palatalization.
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| 48. | Note that, in fact, the lack of palatalization in Northumbrian was probably due to heavy Scandinavian influence .)
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| 49. | In words of foreign origin the causes the palatalization of the preceding consonant to, and it is pronounced as.
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| 50. | Velar palatalization before front vowels has also marked ( for example ) the evolution of almost all modern Romance languages.
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