Darren wrote: ↑Sun Mar 17, 2024 4:26 am
Not a specific word, but rather some phonemes. What specific articulation are your coronals? Maybe /r/ as well but that's barely coronal. I'd be interested in any languages, but primarily English. I've heard (IIRC) that the distribution between apical and laminal /s/ is random throughout dialects, but that sounds a bit suspect.
I'm not at all certain about my pronunciation. I can tell if there are different allophones but I'm not sure how to describe them. These are just my best guesses.
My /t d s z n/ are lamino-alveolar. I don't think my /t/ is ever affricated. I think my [ɾ] is lamino-alveolar too.
/θ ð/ are apico-dental, and /t d n/ assimilate when preceding them.
/l/ is interdental. It assimilates to a preceding or following consonant within the same syllable (e.g. in
slow and
belt, /l/ becomes alveolar). But across a syllable boundary, the assimilation goes the other way (e.g. in
butler, the /t/ becomes interdental).
/r/ has four different realizations:
- labiodentalized "bunched": word-initially, intervocalically before a stressed vowel, and when preceded by a non-postalveolar consonant (e.g. raw, arrange, angry)
- "bunched" without labiodentalization: intervocalically before an unstressed vowel (e.g. hurry, cleverer)
- labialized (rounded) retroflex: when preceded by a postalveolar consonant in an initial syllable or stressed syllable (e.g. shred, attract)
- retroflex without labialization: when preceded by a postalveolar consonant in a non-initial unstressed syllable (e.g. battery, mantra)
"Bunched" is something like [ɰ̟] with some kind of pharyngealization (?), but different from the pharyngealization that /l/ has (which has multiple flavors which I'm not going to attempt to describe).
My /ʃ ʒ tʃ dʒ/ are laminal postalveolar, with no labialization. They become retroflex before /r/ in the same syllable, and become labialized if /r/ is labialized. (The labialized allophones sound very distinct from the non-labialized ones.) They can also be retroflex before /r/ across a morpheme boundary, in which case the /r/ itself is not retroflex. /ʃ/ after /k/ is alveolo-palatal (e.g.
action).
I'm not going to describe glottal reinforcement since the question seems to be primarily about tongue position.