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A slightly more extensive type of assimilation occurs in the series 'comparable', 'context', 'congregate' [...] Though this prefix has three forms /kam-, kan-, kaŋ/, their distribution can be phonologically defined [...] We may call these forms morphemic alternants or allomorphs. - Nida (1949), a pag.14 There is absolutely no limits to the degree of phonological difference between allomorphs. Allomorphs may consist of very different phonemes as in the plural formatives /(-əz ~ -z ~ -s) ∞ -ən ∞ -0/ or they may be quite similar. - Nida (1949), a pag.44 Allomorphs are complementary in all occurrences, but morphemes may be complementary only in certain structural series. - Nida (1949), a pag.144
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