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>> whereas the General American pronunciation is /I'moudiKa:n/. d = flapped /t/<<
Interesting. I would say it with a rather than an alveolar flap. I think it's one of those words in which the /t/ is pronounced as spelt. Perhaps
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In my opinion, foreign students are taught the pronunciation of words according to the their first entry in the Pronunciation Dictionary (John Wells' Pronunciation Dictionary or Daniel Johns' English Pronouncing Dictionary - these two hold a good
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That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in "Asia"? What other consonants do you devoice between vowels? At a James Joyce affair I attended, they had a female member of the music
alt.usage.english
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peter t. daniels
5 yr 217 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Asia, Speaking, Languages, Songs, Arts, Allophones, Music
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Possibly 'sh/zh'. I noticed recently that I pronounce 'Asian' with either, although 'Asia' always has 'sh'. That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in
alt.usage.english
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john a. rea
5 yr 217 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Asia, Speaking, Languages, Songs, Arts, Allophones, Music
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Both conditions are necessary.We may now list the rule that adds glottal stops before syllable final /p, t, k/, as in pronunications of "tip, pit, kick" as (tI?p, pI?t, kI?k)... This rule does not apply to all varieties of English. Some
alt.usage.english
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evan kirshenbaum
5 yr 217 days ago
American English, Accents, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Consonants, British English, Diphthongs, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Languages, Glottals, Allophones
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That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in "Asia"? What other consonants do you devoice between vowels? "Pronunciation: 'A-zh&, -sh&" so they are presumably
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Hi everybody, In one of my classes, I am doing ... post it here. Thank you in advance for any help! If you think about the meanings of "allophone" and "phoneme," you'll realize this is an impossible request. What
alt.usage.english
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evan kirshenbaum
5 yr 218 days ago
Vowels, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Tenses, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Languages, Classes, Glottals, Allophones, Approximants
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That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in "Asia"? What other consonants do you devoice between vowels? "Pronunciation: 'A-zh&, -sh&" so they are presumably
alt.usage.english
by
skitt
5 yr 218 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Asia, Speaking, Online, Languages, Allophones
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Possibly 'sh/zh'. I noticed recently that I pronounce 'Asian' with either, although 'Asia' always has 'sh'. That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in
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Oh, golly. For me, it depends on both the vowel and the consonant. When followed by a pause, my /p/ is unvoiced and either unexploded stopping the breath with the lips or exploded. My /t/ is the same, but if its unexploded it pretty much coincides
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