alaphonémái
Alaphonémái is a term in linguistic theory that denotes a class of context-sensitive phonological realizations in which a single underlying phoneme yields multiple surface forms that are tightly coordinated across broader phonological environments. The term is a neologism and is not part of a widely standardized typology; it appears in a small body of theoretical work that seeks to model cross-phoneme allophony that cannot be captured by simple segment-local rules alone.
Characteristics: Alaphonémái describe systematic, multi-phoneme- and prosody-conditioned variants. Realizations may co-vary with neighboring phonemes, syllable structure,
Typology and usage: The concept is most often discussed in speculative or experimental contexts. Some analyses
Applications and reception: In theoretical debates on language contact, phonotactic pressures, and computational modeling, alaphonémái is
See also: allophone, phonology, coarticulation, autosegmental phonology, contextual allophony.