I'm surprised to find people have /iː/ in
Wagnerian. I thought most people had /eː/ in this word. Would it be the same for other derived adjectives like
Schillerian or
Hitlerian? What about cases where the original name ends in /əl/ like
Purcellian or
Handelian?
I have /t/ in
Flaubertian, which might seem a bit odd if not for the existence of liaison. French
flaubertien, though, has /s/ rather than /t/, so maybe if I talked more about Flaubert in French, /sj/ or /ʃ/ might sound more natural to me.
Nortaneous wrote:/ˈgɚtə.ən/
I'm honestly surprised by this. I can't think of any English word where I have two shwas in hiatus. I have to make the first one /iː/ just to pronounce this word at all. Having done that, though, I'm honestly tempted to go full native like Travis' father.
Wittgensteinian is odd. For some reason, I want to lax the stressed vowel--even though I can't imagine doing this in
Einsteinian. Maybe I'm being influenced by
Constantinian and
Augustinian?