affricatefits
Affricatefits is a theoretical construct in phonology and computational linguistics used to quantify how well a language’s affricate consonant inventory aligns with its phonotactic constraints and syllable structure. The term blends affricate, a consonant produced by stopping the oral tract followed by a fricative release, with fits, indicating compatibility between inventory and distribution.
Conceptually, affricatefits treats affricates along two axes: articulatory class (place and manner of articulation, voicing, timing
Applications include cross-language phonotactic comparison, language documentation, and evaluation of speech-synthesis or recognition systems to ensure
Limitations include reliance on quality transcription, corpus size, and model assumptions; affricatefits should be interpreted as