Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 2:56 pm
The classic American realization of /nt/ between vowels where the following vowel is unstressed is a nasal flap [ɾ̃]. Some people have a contrast with /n/ in pairs like winter and winner where [ɾ̃] is distinguished from [n] (I distinguish the two words by vowel length even though I either merge /nt/ and /n/ in these words as [ɾ̃] or elide them in both).
Wow, not for me— I have [wɪ̃tr̩], without even voicing the t.
When speaking carefully I may pronounce winter as [ˈwɪ̈̃nˌtʲʰʁ̩ˤ(ː)]. The key word, though, is 'carefully'.
zompist wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 3:55 pm
Do you also have [ɾ̃] in banter, painter?
Yes.
zompist wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 3:55 pm
How about accountant? Here I have something like [əkãwʔn̩ʔ].
When speaking normally I pronounce it as [{ə,ɘ}ˈkʰɑ̃̆ɔ̯̆̃ʔn̩ʔ]. (When speaking carefully I may pronounce it [əˈkʰɑ̃̆ɔ̯̆̃nˌtʰɪ̈̃ʔt].) The double-glottal-stop pronunciation is probably due to the second /n/.
Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Jan 06, 2025 2:56 pm
The classic American realization of /nt/ between vowels where the following vowel is unstressed is a nasal flap [ɾ̃]. Some people have a contrast with /n/ in pairs like winter and winner where [ɾ̃] is distinguished from [n] (I distinguish the two words by vowel length even though I either merge /nt/ and /n/ in these words as [ɾ̃] or elide them in both).
Wow, not for me— I have [wɪ̃tr̩], without even voicing the t.
When speaking carefully I may pronounce winter as [ˈwɪ̈̃nˌtʲʰʁ̩ˤ(ː)]. The key word, though, is 'carefully'.
On reflection, I can say it with [ɾ̃] too. The [wɪ̃tr̩] pronunciation is more likely if it's stressed.
Raphael wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 6:24 am
What is the usual way to pronounce year numbers from the 12th or 13th century, such as "1148" or "1273"? I mean in terms of syllables, not phonemes.
I think I would usually say ‘eleven-forty-eight’ and ‘twelve-seventy-three’. For that matter, I also say ‘twenty-twenty-five’, but ‘two thousand and five’: the range of ’two thousand and ___’ extends from 2000 to around 2015, I think.
Raphael wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 6:24 am
What is the usual way to pronounce year numbers from the 12th or 13th century, such as "1148" or "1273"? I mean in terms of syllables, not phonemes.
I think I would usually say ‘eleven-forty-eight’ and ‘twelve-seventy-three’. For that matter, I also say ‘twenty-twenty-five’, but ‘two thousand and five’: the range of ’two thousand and ___’ extends from 2000 to around 2015, I think.
The same here, although the crossover is ‘twenty-ten’ (as opposed to ‘two thousand and nine’). I do have ‘twelve-oh-five’ etc. for all the other first decades of each century, at least back to 1101 ‘eleven-oh-one’. Before that, just reading it as if it were a number becomes more common
LZ – Lēri Ziwi
PS – Proto Sāzlakuic (ancestor of LZ)
PRk – Proto Rākēwuic
XI – Xú Iạlan
VN – verbal noun
SUP – supine
DIRECT – verbal directional
My language stuff
Raphael wrote: ↑Thu Jan 09, 2025 6:24 am
What is the usual way to pronounce year numbers from the 12th or 13th century, such as "1148" or "1273"? I mean in terms of syllables, not phonemes.
I think I would usually say ‘eleven-forty-eight’ and ‘twelve-seventy-three’. For that matter, I also say ‘twenty-twenty-five’, but ‘two thousand and five’: the range of ’two thousand and ___’ extends from 2000 to around 2015, I think.
I often count to put myself to sleep, varying the base for my own diversion, and so I've thought a lot about the oddities in how English-speakers speak numbers aloud. Like how when counting by hundreds we switch to thousands for the tens but when speaking years aloud, we can use decads as long we drop the "hundred". So:
...
eighteen-hundred
nineteen-hundred
two thousand
twenty-one hundred
...
but: "twenty ten" for 2010 as a year is fine.
I would understand "twenty-hundred" in context, but it's so jarring.
Note how START contrasts with LOT as in: cotter (as in cotter pin): [ˈkʰaɾʁ̩ˤ(ː)]
and with THOUGHT as in: daughter: [ˈd̥ɒɾʁ̩ˤ(ː)]~[d̥ɒːʁˤ]
I have not noticed this particular pattern except with START and NORTH/FORCE, where not only is the first rhotic elided but compensatory lengthening occurs and r-coloring is retained. This ensures that no mergers occur because of this. Also note how raising of START before fortis obstruents is blocked by this.
I remember seeing this mentioned someone in a book, where a fronted GOAT /ɵ/ was distinct dissimilated rhotic FORCE /o/ e.g. corporation /kopəˈreʃən/ vs. cooperation /kɵapəˈreʃən/.
Darren wrote: ↑Fri Jan 17, 2025 4:52 pm
I remember seeing this mentioned someone in a book, where a fronted GOAT /ɵ/ was distinct dissimilated rhotic FORCE /o/ e.g. corporation /kopəˈreʃən/ vs. cooperation /kɵapəˈreʃən/.
I forgot to mention that order and odor are distinguished, with order being [ˈɔːːɾʁ̩ˤ(ː)] (as mentioned) and odor being [ˈo̞ːɾʁ̩ˤ(ː)].