collisicollise
Collisicollise is a proposed phenomenon in linguistic phonology and speech perception describing the rapid collision of adjacent syllables during connected speech, which can lead to perceptual fusion where a single syllable or a reduced vowel phoneme is heard in place of two. The term is a neologism intended to reflect the imagined interaction between neighboring phonological boundaries when speech is produced at high tempo and cues for boundary detection become ambiguous.
The concept posits that under certain conditions, such as high speaking rate, similar onsets or coda consonants,
Evidence for collisicollise is primarily experimental. Some laboratory studies using shadowing and perception tasks report borderline
Critics argue that more robust cross-language data is needed to distinguish genuine boundary collision from generic