| 1. | Regular or semiregular epenthesis commonly occurs in languages that use affixes.
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| 2. | It is a type of epenthesis, most commonly vocalic epenthesis.
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| 3. | It is a type of epenthesis, most commonly vocalic epenthesis.
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| 4. | As mentioned earlier, this phenomenon is called epenthesis.
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| 5. | A complex example of epenthesis is, from +.
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| 6. | The occurrence of schwa epenthesis is governed morphophonemically.
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| 7. | While Spanish words undergo word-initial epenthesis, cognates in Latin and Italian do not:
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| 8. | The epenthesis does not occur between syllables, in words like " consider ".
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| 9. | I'm delighted to see an example of a front vowel being used in epenthesis.
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| 10. | Underlyingly voiced consonants are devoiced word-finally but surface faithfully with following epenthesis when they are word-internal.
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