I don't think so, but I don't trust my self-analysis of informal speech.
Is the two-syllable literally something like [ˈlɪtʃli]?
I don't think so, but I don't trust my self-analysis of informal speech.
My daughter pronounces it like [ˈɫɘːʁɫi(ː)].anteallach wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2019 12:02 pm Is the two-syllable literally something like [ˈlɪtʃli]?
I can't speak for Travis' daughter, but I would guess it's /lɪɾli/? Although I can imagine your version too - though it sounds more English than American, I think.anteallach wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2019 12:02 pm
Is the two-syllable literally something like [ˈlɪtʃli]?
That is essentially what its equivalent would be in a GA with intervocalic flap elision present.
What accent of English do you and your family have where /r/ is [ʁ]? I've been meaning to ask for a while... I wasn't aware of [ʁ] being a variant of /r/ in any accent of English. Any other regional accents that have this?Travis B. wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2019 12:21 pm How my daughter arrives at [ˈɫɘːʁɫi(ː)] is probably [ˈɫɘtəːʁəːɫi(ː) > ˈɫɘɾəːʁəːɫi(ː) > ˈɫɘɾəːʁɫi(ː) > ˈɫɘəʁɫi(ː) > ˈɫɘːʁɫi(ː)] (if the preceding is confusing, note that while vowels in unstressed syllables can be long, oftentimes they are shorter than short vowels in stressed syllables).
I believe [ʁ] is just his notation for the bunched r... We tried to get him to use [ɹ] ambiguously for it, like most people do, for years. People used to have long discussions with him (maybe I should say "against him") regarding his notation and the reasonableness of what his choice of IPA glyphs represents, but we gave up at some point. For the past few years he's been able to freely post about his pronunciations without flamewars springing up. He does speak in a bit of an unusual way if you hear him (I think it was finlay who once told him he sounds a bit like the cookie monster from Sesame Street), but not as much as you'd think from the notation.quinterbeck wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2019 2:20 amWhat accent of English do you and your family have where /r/ is [ʁ]? I've been meaning to ask for a while... I wasn't aware of [ʁ] being a variant of /r/ in any accent of English. Any other regional accents that have this?
My reason for resisting this was that my /r/ is nothing like [ɹ], which I actually find quite hard to pronounce in isolation. Only in recent times have I been able to train myself to enunciate [ɹ] or [ɻ] in isolation, and even then it is not natural by any means.
One can make serious arguments for the diphthonginess of postvocalic /r/ in rhotic English varieties. On the other hand, for the variety here, I would specifically argue against it, because arbitrary "lax" vowels can occur before /r/ in addition to the classic rhotic "diphthongs" thanks to flap elision (for instance I audibly contrast the classic NAE /ɛr/ (which in my dialect I would analyze as /er/) with /ɛ/ (realized as [ɜ]) plus /r/), and in these cases the quality of the /r/ is identical.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 3:56 pm True [ɹ] (i.e. a laminal alveolar approximant) is irrelevant if not fake; may as well appropriate the symbol for bunched r. Abstract phonetic transcription is sort of fake in general.
Sometimes I write ɚ̯ for English coda r, because I analyze START/SQUARE/NORTH/NEAR as parallel to PRICE/FACE/CHOICE/FLEECE, but I usually don't because it's irrelevant.
canIPA seems reasonable.
Why would true [ɹ] have to be specifically laminal?Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 3:56 pm True [ɹ] (i.e. a laminal alveolar approximant) is irrelevant if not fake
Otherwise why not write it as ɻ? But it probably doesn't matter - do either of them exist?akam chinjir wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 7:54 pmWhy would true [ɹ] have to be specifically laminal?Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 3:56 pm True [ɹ] (i.e. a laminal alveolar approximant) is irrelevant if not fake
Yeah, I'm still wondering. There are some cases where it's given as an allophone of /ɾ/ where it seems plausible, maybe.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 8:04 am Otherwise why not write it as ɻ? But it probably doesn't matter - do either of them exist?
[ɻ] is surely specifically retroflex as opposed to apical alveolar.Nortaneous wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 8:04 amOtherwise why not write it as ɻ? But it probably doesn't matter - do either of them exist?akam chinjir wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 7:54 pmWhy would true [ɹ] have to be specifically laminal?Nortaneous wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 3:56 pm True [ɹ] (i.e. a laminal alveolar approximant) is irrelevant if not fake
For my part, I don't know enough to justify scepticism, but recently I've come across a bunch of cases where something that's described as an apical coronal approximant ends up having other stuff going on as well---retroflexion, of course, but there's also labialisation, tongue-backing, pharyngealisation; I think it tends to be something that results in accoustic "flatness." And I've been wondering whether the pattern is general. Not that I've done a lot of checking---I certainly haven't gone hunting for articulatory details on a lot of languages that are reported as having /ɹ/.anteallach wrote: ↑Mon Oct 28, 2019 8:46 am But why are you sceptical about their existence? Not every English speaker uses a bunched r.