Geminate vs Begadkefat - What's the difference?
geminate | begadkefat |
Forming a pair.
* 2008 , Sara Finley,
To arrange in pairs.
To occur in pairs.
(linguistics) A phenomenon of spirantization affecting most plosive consonants of Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic when they are preceded by a vowel and not geminated; also any similar case of spirantization of postvocalic plosives in other languages, such as Berber.
As an adjective geminate
is forming a pair.As a verb geminate
is to arrange in pairs.As a noun begadkefat is
a phenomenon of spirantization affecting most plosive consonants of Biblical Hebrew and Aramaic when they are preceded by a vowel and not geminated; also any similar case of spirantization of postvocalic plosives in other languages, such as Berber.geminate
English
Adjective
(-)Review of “The Representation and Processing of Compound Words”
- For example, Martin (2007) notes that compounds in several languages (including English and Turkish) violate the general phonological principles in the language (e.g., English only allows geminate consonants in compounds).