In Classical Arabic , a long vowel  was lengthened even more before permanently 
geminate consonants , however this is no longer exhibited
Kaynak: Geminationwhere V vowel , C single consonant  (including nasals and semivowels but excluding 
geminates), G 
geminate consonant , N nasal stop , S
Kaynak: LugandaThe weakened grades of 
geminate consonants still counted as 
geminates for the purposes of syllabification.  ending with a 
geminate in the
Kaynak: Consonant gradationlexical singleton /l/, lexical 
geminate /lː/, /n/ + singleton /l/ → post-lexical lˑ (shorter than the lexical 
geminate), and /n/ +
Kaynak: Cypriot GreekHungarian  phonology  is notable for its process of vowel harmony , the frequent use of 
geminate consonants  and the presence of otherwise
Kaynak: Hungarian phonologyThe ancient sources say that during the time of the Republic  it was placed above a 
geminate consonant  to indicate that the consonant
Kaynak: SicilicusThe major difference between Proto-Central Numic and Proto-Numic was the phonemic split of Proto-Numic 
geminate consonants into 
geminateKaynak: Numic languagesSince aspiration  of a 
geminate consonant is only phonetically detectable on the last consonant of a cluster, 
geminate kh, gh, ch, jh, ṭh
Kaynak: PaliIn the Secunda /w j z/ are never 
geminate In the Tiberian tradition /ħ ʕ h ʔ r/ cannot be 
geminate; historically first /r ʔ/ degeminated,
Kaynak: Biblical HebrewIn positions other than word-initial, Xamtanga contrasts 
geminate  and non-
geminate consonants.  difference between a 
geminate and a non-
Kaynak: Xamtanga languageThe main use is to mark a 
geminate  consonant, which is represented in rōmaji  (romanized Japanese) by the doubling of the consonant
Kaynak: Sokuon