Lenition

//lɪˈnɪʃən// noun

noun ·Rare ·Advanced level

Definitions

Noun
  1. 1
    A weakening of articulation causing a consonant to become lenis (soft). countable, uncountable

    "One of these processes, the process of T-Lenition, is extremely common, even though it takes place only when the input consonant is adjacent to a small number of affixes. In this change, a stopped consonant, [p t k b d g], becomes a fricative, [s, z, š, ž]. This process is called lenition, or weakening."

Example

More examples

"One of these processes, the process of T-Lenition, is extremely common, even though it takes place only when the input consonant is adjacent to a small number of affixes. In this change, a stopped consonant, [p t k b d g], becomes a fricative, [s, z, š, ž]. This process is called lenition, or weakening."

Etymology

Analyzable as lenis + -ition, or as if from Latin lēnīt(us) + -ion, or Latin lēnītiō (“softening”) from lēniō (“soften”) + -tiō (action noun suffix) (attested since at least the 1500s, the same timeframe lenition is first attested in English with the sense "assuaging"). Modelled on German Lenierung.

Data sourced from Wiktionary, WordNet, CMU, and other open linguistic databases. Updated March 2026.