quinterbeck wrote: ↑Thu Nov 28, 2024 10:55 pm
On BrE LOT vowel, I would agree with Lērisama. LOT is [ɒ] in RP, which is much decreased in use since when it was first documented, with most domains it appeared in having shifted to other accents. I also have [ɔ] for LOT, as do most speakers I know.
As for 'caught', it's in our NORTH set, which has [o:]
Yes, this is my understanding too
BrE is a useful term when distinguishing writing standards or vocabulary, but when it comes to phonology it's not so useful IMO. England alone is quite diverse in accent (never mind the whole UK) and there's no longer a standard accent with the same dominance that RP once had.
Yes, very true. The UK is not the USA – we've had roughly a thousand years for our dialects to diverge, and they make excellent use of it.
Probably the closest to that is the English of southeastern England, or SSBE, which is well described here:
The vowels of British English. My own accent is pretty close to this.
As is mine. The major differences are
NURSE being significantly lower than
COMMA (they are still phonemically related, but [əː] feels wrong) and further lowering of
STRUT to something like [ɑ̽], although that is a pain to type, so I usually go with /ʌ/ still. It also sometimes patterns as my short version of
START/PALM, and is where my
PRICE starts.
Have you seen that post on SSBE before, Lērisama? If not, I'm very curious where you got /ɵ/ from here, because that one was a revelation for me!
It looks very familiar; I almost certainly have. It's very good, so I'm surprised I didn't save the link somewhere
[quote
Lērisama wrote: ↑Thu Nov 21, 2024 2:58 pm
¹ You could probably analyse long vowels as /Vɹ/. They pattern like diphthongs, and it would sanify the vowel system to /a ʌ ɛ ɪ ɔ ɵ ə/ + length and various diphthongs
I'm of the opinion the sanification is well underway
[/quote]
Of course. Just do some broad transcriptiom and we have a vowel system of /a ɑ ɛ ɔ i ʉ ə/ + diphthongs, which looks practically
normal.
Just seen Darren's post. I personally need /ɪ/ in fully unstressee syllables as well as /ə/, and that table looks wonderful. C.f. one for my ideolect
. Lovely and sane