caronbearing
Caronbearing is a term used in the field of linguistics to describe a situation where a language has two or more distinct phonetic realizations of a single phoneme, but these realizations are not in complementary distribution. In other words, the choice of realization is not predictable based on the phonetic context. This phenomenon is often observed in languages with a rich history of sound changes and mergers.
The term "caronbearing" was coined by linguist John Wells to describe the situation in English, where the
Caronbearing is distinct from other types of phonetic variation, such as free variation, where the choice of
The study of caronbearing is important for understanding the phonetic and phonological processes that shape languages