I don't know, I never actually use the traditional English pronunciation of Latin for actual Latin. I hardly know anything about the topic. These were mostly careless mistakes.Estav wrote: ↑Wed Dec 04, 2019 7:21 pm
- [ˈtʰændɪm] : why ɪm rather than ɛm or əm? For some reason, those feel more natural to me, and those are the pronunciations that Wikipedia mentions for final unstressed -em.
- Catilīna, effrēnāta [kʰæɾəˈlaɪnə, ˌɛfɹəˈneɪɾə] : likewise, why ə instead of ı here? Wouldn't the weak vowel merger or its absence affect medial and final syllables similarly?
- kʰwɑm : why [ɑm] and not [æm] here?
- etiam [ɛʃəm] : This seems like an interesting exception to the usual lengthening of e before -tia-. Does it have [ɛ] because of influence from the pronunciation of "et"?
- iactābit [jækˈtʰeɪbɪɾ] : Did the replacement of <j~i> [dʒ] with <i> [j] occur before other reforms to the pronunciation of Latin in the English-speaking world?
- tandem: yeah, I should've used the conventional /ə/ (or at any rate the also reasonable /ɛ/).
- Catilina/effrenata: this is called the mistake of inconsistency. Yeah, I should've used [ˌkʰæɾɪˈlaɪnə] and [ˌɛfɹɪˈneɪɾə] (or [ˌɛfɹiˈneɪɾə]?).
- quam: I chose [ɑ] as an analogy of the LOT /ɑ/ vowel in "quantum", "quad", "quandary", "qualify", "wash", "watch", "want". It's hard to say. When I think about it, although the phoneme /w/ seems to do this often to naïvely-expected TRAP */æ/ as in these words, there also exist words with TRAP /wæ/ like "quack", "whack", "wag", "wanker", "wagon", "wax" and most importantly "wham". Apparently, "quagmire" can have /æ/ or /ɑ/. (Cf. naïvely-expected START */ɑɹ/ as NORTH /ɔɹ/ (UK /ɔ:/) before a consonant and CLOTH /ɑɹ/ (UK /ɒɹ/) before a vowel in "quartz", "war", "warn", "swarm", "swarthy", and "quarrel", "warrant", "warrior".)
- etiam: Oh, right, "completion" /kəmˈpliʃn/. I should've thought of that. Also, when Latin is written with <j>, the <j> is never used in the word etiam, which makes me think that most likely it wouldn't make sense to think of it as et+iam. Do you think /ˈiʃəm/ would be the normal way to say it?
- jactābit: another mistake of mine; I forgot this began with a <j>. I would've used /dʒ/ if I had noticed.