Linguoboy wrote: ↑Tue Nov 01, 2022 10:33 am
anteallach wrote: ↑Tue Nov 01, 2022 2:52 amI have TRAP in
Halloween, and am not aware of any other pronunciation in BrE. Those of you who have LOT: do you have it in any other
-allow words (like
hallow itself)? If not, I'm curious how the LOT pronunciation developed.
I have LOT in
hallow but not
callow,
fallow,
mallow,
sallow,
shallow, or
tallow.
My guess is that we're dealing with a folk etymology.
I don't see why
Halloween would be associated with
hollow, assuming that is what you are implying. Note that the
-een component is probably opaque for many Americans, so the word is just another morphologically unanalysable word rather than than a compound with a cranberry morpheme ready for plucking. I would instead see it as being due to influence from Scots, which regularly has a reflex of Middle English /au/ (Vowel 12 [ɑ~ɔ]; broadly equivalent to English THOUGHT) in
callow, fallow, hallow, etc. Since this vowel was shortened due to the operation of the
Scottish Vowel Length Rule (SVLR), it was identified with AmE LOT rather than THOUGHT (historically the distinction between the two was based purely on length; i.e. LOT /ɒ/ vs. THOUGHT /ɒː/).
As for me, I have TRAP [æ~ɛ] in all the relevant words, except for
mallow, which occasionally has STRUT [ɐ], probably by analogy with
mellow, which also usually has TRAP (due to the
salary–
celery merger, common in NZE), but sporadically STRUT for me. This unexpected STRUT can also occur when a vowel-initial suffix is attached to a word with historic /ɛl/:
smell /smɐo/,
smelly /smɐli~smɐoi/ (probably by analogy with words with historic /ʌl/, which also end in the same diphthong), as well as in
Delhi, hello, umbrella, Wellington (besides /æ/),
yellow.