Debuccalization

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Sound change and alternation
Fortition (strengthening)
Dissimilation

Debuccalization is a sound change in which a consonant, generally a fricative (such as English f, th, s), loses its original place of articulation and becomes [h].

Debuccalization is the second-to-last stage in the "opening" type of lenition, a consonant mutation involving the weakening of a consonant by progressive shifts in pronunciation.

Examples are the Proto-Greek shift of /s/ to /h/ initially and between sonorants (vowels, liquids, or nasals), and the shift in varieties of Scottish English of /θ/ th to /h/. A similar shift to /h/ occurs in Scottish Gaelic sh, th, and sometimes fh — lenited versions of s, t, f.

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