Pronunciations you had to unlearn
- aliensdrinktea
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Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Moving to Spain a year ago, I had to unlearn /s/ for <z> and <c>, which is what I'd been taught in the US. In Spain, <z c> are pronounced /θ/. I've pretty much got the hang of it now... apart from occasionally slipping into ceceo (<z c s> all as /θ/) due to hypercorrection.
In English, I've been told I should unlearn [ˈæltɚnət], among other words where my use of /æ/ is apparently wrong. I couldn't care less if it's wrong.
I pronounce hyperbole like "hyper-bowl" in my head, though not out loud.
In English, I've been told I should unlearn [ˈæltɚnət], among other words where my use of /æ/ is apparently wrong. I couldn't care less if it's wrong.
I pronounce hyperbole like "hyper-bowl" in my head, though not out loud.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
I had to reread that transcription three times before I could figure out what word you meant, so you might want to consider how this pronunciation is impacting intelligibility.aliensdrinktea wrote: ↑Sun Oct 11, 2020 6:55 pmIn English, I've been told I should unlearn [ˈæltɚnət], among other words where my use of /æ/ is apparently wrong. I couldn't care less if it's wrong.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
I too had to think a bit about that pronunciation there...Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Oct 12, 2020 11:50 amI had to reread that transcription three times before I could figure out what word you meant, so you might want to consider how this pronunciation is impacting intelligibility.aliensdrinktea wrote: ↑Sun Oct 11, 2020 6:55 pmIn English, I've been told I should unlearn [ˈæltɚnət], among other words where my use of /æ/ is apparently wrong. I couldn't care less if it's wrong.
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
The first time I saw the word, that's how I pronounced it in my head, too. I was young and didn't know what it means and if I had heard it spoken before that point, it would have made no impact.aliensdrinktea wrote: ↑Sun Oct 11, 2020 6:55 pm I pronounce hyperbole like "hyper-bowl" in my head, though not out loud.
Unsuccessfully conlanging since 1999.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Archives as */'ɑːrtʃɪvz/ instead of /'ɑːrkaɪvz/. I think I learned the correct pronunciation in Batman Begins.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
But phonetically disyllabic words mostly have /ɪv/. The subtlety, though, is that these are Latinate words, so 'ch' should be hard. I suppose the exception to the exception is that arch- is often (usually?) soft, as in archbishop but not in archangel. (There may be a rule to distinguish these two cases.)
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
In a somewhat similar way, I learned the proper pronunciation of 'hierarchy' from the Screwtape Letters' Lowerarchy.
- StrangerCoug
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Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Does anybody else besides me keep forgetting that Keynesian does not rhyme with Indonesian, Polynesian, etc.?
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Ive always had that one right, but Ive heard that pronunciation on a voice chat about politics, and it was not corrected by others (nor by me). I think the main reason I always had it right was because I heard it out loud in high school before I came across it in print.StrangerCoug wrote: ↑Mon Nov 23, 2020 7:04 pm Does anybody else besides me keep forgetting that Keynesian does not rhyme with Indonesian, Polynesian, etc.?
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Now it's a word I've rarely encountered before, but given dat "Keynes" rhymes with "lanes", I think I would've guessed (though without context, I might've mistaken it for "key-nesian" or something).StrangerCoug wrote: ↑Mon Nov 23, 2020 7:04 pmDoes anybody else besides me keep forgetting that Keynesian does not rhyme with Indonesian, Polynesian, etc.?
JAL
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
wait, its /e:/? Good thing I kept my mouth shut then .
It's possible my history teacher was also wrong, or just that I misrremmbrred.....it's been a while .
It's possible my history teacher was also wrong, or just that I misrremmbrred.....it's been a while .
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Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
It's pretty remarkable that the same morpheme, with the same meaning, in the same domain (religion), has two different pronunciations.
I think "arch" as "chief" is [tʃ] in everything except archangel— cf. archdeacon, archfiend, archenemy, arch-villain.
I think there is a loose rule: if it's pure Greco-Latin, it's [k]. Thus archeology, archaic, architect, archon, archetype, architrave. If it's OE or French, it gets [tʃ], including of course "arch".
There's an older word "archimage" which fits the Greco-Latin pattern and is thus [k]. People seem divided on "arch-mage", presumably because it's not clear what tier of the lexicon it's supposed to belong to.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
the word cherub got its /tʃ/ by coming through French, so French intermediary borrowing might explain the arches. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/archange#French doesnt give a pronunciation, but Im assuming it's with /ʃ/, from earlier /tʃ/, and that other words beginning with arch- in French also have that.
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Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Nah, the French are confused too, maybe more so.
ar[k]aïque, ar[k]ange, ar[k]éologie, ar[k]étype
ar[ʃ]e, ar[ʃ]evêque, ar[ʃ]iduc ar[ʃ]ipel, ar[ʃ]itecte, ar[ʃ]ives
ar[k]aïque, ar[k]ange, ar[k]éologie, ar[k]étype
ar[ʃ]e, ar[ʃ]evêque, ar[ʃ]iduc ar[ʃ]ipel, ar[ʃ]itecte, ar[ʃ]ives
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Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Looking at the OED, it appears that the explanation for /k/ in archangel but not archdeacon or archbishop is that the /k/ was before a front vowel in Latin archidiaconis and archiepiscopus but before a non-front one in archangelus. From that, you might expect Old French and probably English to have arce; the OED does say "Old French arce-, later arche-" so maybe there was some Italian influence.
(The English /tʃ/ may be from direct borrowing into Old English.)
(The English /tʃ/ may be from direct borrowing into Old English.)
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
Just learned that "scathing" rhymes with "bathing". For some reason, I'd always assumed it had /æ/.
JAL
JAL
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
i internalized Ponzi as /'pɔn.zaɪ/ from reading it somewhere and not hearing it out loud. Just one of those things like bijou that I picked up when I was too young to know the rules of when and where to expect foreign values for written vowels. I dont know if I ever said it out loud or not, and of course I know better now, but I might never get rid of the mental pronunciation.
Re: Pronunciations you had to unlearn
I just now learned that the t in Moët is not silent. (Given how unpredictable pronunciation of proper names can be in French, I'm really surprised more French Wikipedia articles don't include pronunciation information.)