[33] The tg in this word is probably due to the influence of iutiar < jūdĭcāre.
[34] The forms with r may be due to dissimilation or to the influence of clergue.
[35] Alvernia is attested: cf. Zs., XXVI, 123. The usual form is Arvernicum.
[36] Compare, in English, the c of coo and the k of key.
[37] Compare the old-fashioned pronunciation of words like card, kind.
[38] For final -ci, -gi in plurals, see § [92], (2).
[39] Before this, frīgĭdus had become frįgdus in Italy and Gaul.
[40] It is natural to suppose that the n, in falling, nasalized the vowel; but no trace of this nasality remains.
[41] Fes, nut, which quite supplanted the regular forms, perhaps show the influence of res, mut.
[42] By analogy of such double forms, n is sometimes added to a few words ending in a vowel: fŭit > fo fon, prō > pro pron.