Paragoge

Paragoge (/ˌpærəˈɡi/; from Greek: παραγωγή additional: παρα para - extra, γωγή goug - look) is the addition of a sound to the end of a word. Often caused by nativization, it is a type of epenthesis, most commonly vocalic epenthesis.

Sound change and alternation
Fortition
Dissimilation

Paragoge is particularly common in Brazilian Portuguese, not only in loanwords but also in word derivation. It is also present in the accents of many Brazilians while speaking foreign languages such as English.[1]

Some languages have undergone paragoge as a sound change, and modern forms are longer than the historical forms they are derived from. Italian sono 'I am', from Latin sum, is an example. Sometimes, as above, the paragogic vowel is an echo vowel.

In loanwords

Some languages add a sound to the end of a loanword when it would otherwise end in a forbidden sound. Some languages add a grammatical ending to the end of a loanword to make it declinable.

Examples

Grammatical endings

gollark: I feel like the slowmoding makes it very hard to actually respond to what's being said there.
gollark: Have a non-handheld laser and a handheld remote then.
gollark: That might be better suited for a website or something.
gollark: C4's Diodes, 10/04/2020 CE:> Introduce punishments such as temp muting for whoever shitposts in <#482370338324348932> C4's Diodes, 13/04/2020 CE:> <:sovietthonk:698992415469600899>
gollark: Maybe it should only involve a ban from the counting channel.

References

Sources

  • Crowley, Terry. (1997) An Introduction to Historical Linguistics. 3rd edition. Oxford University Press.
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