allomorfie
Allomorphie, or allomorphy, is the variation in the phonetic realization of a morpheme, the smallest unit of meaning, across different contexts. Different surface forms that realize the same morpheme are called allomorphs. Although they sound different, these variants carry the same grammatical function and meaning. Allomorphy is a central topic in morphophonology, the study of how sound and grammar interact in inflection and word formation.
Allomorphs arise when phonological context, phonotactics, or historical change conditions the surface form of a morpheme.
A classic example is English plural morphology, which has three allomorphs of the plural suffix: the /s/
Allomorphy occurs in many languages and reflects how morphology interacts with phonology to shape surface forms