In the language this term was originally defined in, a common example of it is the merging of a word that ends with a vowel and one that begins with a vowel. For 10 points each:
[10h] Give this term for phonological changes that occur at word or morpheme boundaries.
ANSWER: sandhi (“SAHN-dee”) [prompt on liaison with “What term is used for languages other than French?”]
[10e] Sandhi is particularly common concerning this phonological property, as in Mandarin Chinese. It comes in high and low types in many languages.
ANSWER: tones
[10m] A common sandhi phenomenon in many British accents is the introduction of this sound between a word that ends in a vowel and a word begun by a vowel. This sound is usually a non-lateral alveolar (“al-VEE-uh-ler”) approximant in English.
ANSWER: r [accept descriptions of the letter r, such as the English r; accept ɹ or the upside-down r]
<Benjamin McAvoy-Bickford, Social Science>