English questions

Natural languages and linguistics
Darren
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Re: English questions

Post by Darren »

Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 9:15 am What about father though? Doesn't that have a long vowel even though it would be silly to analyze it as having an underlying rhotic?
Given that words like "spa" and "bra" generate intrusive /r/, it doesn't seem like much of a stretch to analyse "father" as /farðə/. In fact analysing BAD as TRAP + /r/ would neaten up the vowel system a lot, there's just no evidence in the form of intrusive /r/ for it.

Of course there's other problems in analysing AusEng as such; namely the merry/Mary distinction, which you'd have to analyse as /merəj/ ~ /merrəj/.

Apart from this, it works surprisingly well. Stressed syllables can be analysed as obligatorily /i ʊ e ɵ æ a ɒ/ + consonant and unstressed syllables as /ə/ + consonant. Long vowels are V + r (except /ɒ/ can't be followed by /r[C,#]/, and /ɵ/ must be followed by /r[C,#]/, so if you were very keen you could analyse them both as allophones of /ɔ/). Diphthongs you could probably call /ij ʊw æj aw aj æw/ (size=80]FLEECE GOOSE FACE GOAT PRICE MOUTH[/size]). Unstressed syllables get schwa plus /əj əw ər əl ən/ = happY follOW commA/lettER bottLE happEN. Thus I can claim that AusEng is a VC language rather than a CV one. It's genuinely not a bad analysis.
Travis B.
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Re: English questions

Post by Travis B. »

Darren wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 3:47 pm
Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 9:15 am What about father though? Doesn't that have a long vowel even though it would be silly to analyze it as having an underlying rhotic?
Given that words like "spa" and "bra" generate intrusive /r/, it doesn't seem like much of a stretch to analyse "father" as /farðə/. In fact analysing BAD as TRAP + /r/ would neaten up the vowel system a lot, there's just no evidence in the form of intrusive /r/ for it.

Of course there's other problems in analysing AusEng as such; namely the merry/Mary distinction, which you'd have to analyse as /merəj/ ~ /merrəj/.

Apart from this, it works surprisingly well. Stressed syllables can be analysed as obligatorily /i ʊ e ɵ æ a ɒ/ + consonant and unstressed syllables as /ə/ + consonant. Long vowels are V + r (except /ɒ/ can't be followed by /r[C,#]/, and /ɵ/ must be followed by /r[C,#]/, so if you were very keen you could analyse them both as allophones of /ɔ/). Diphthongs you could probably call /ij ʊw æj aw aj æw/ (size=80]FLEECE GOOSE FACE GOAT PRICE MOUTH[/size]). Unstressed syllables get schwa plus /əj əw ər əl ən/ = happY follOW commA/lettER bottLE happEN. Thus I can claim that AusEng is a VC language rather than a CV one. It's genuinely not a bad analysis.
This feels a bit forced to me, to be honest, though, and I'm not comfortable with phonemic analyses that are radically different for language varieties that are fundamentally crossintelligible. (For instance, I have no problem understanding AusE.) E.g. I could come up with a 'reasonable' analysis of my own dialect with phonemic vowel length for all vowels, phonemic vowel nasality, and phonemic consonant length, but the matter is I have no reason to believe that my dialect isn't crossintelligible with most other English varieties from other parts of the world, and far less radical analyses that position my own dialect much closer to other English varieties are just as viable. (However, I don't think my dialect can be analyzed without phonemic gemination, as shown by pairs like pizza [ˈpʰiʔtːsə(ː)] versus Nazi [ˈnatsi(ː)].)
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.
Darren
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Re: English questions

Post by Darren »

Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 8:28 pmThis feels a bit forced to me, to be honest, though, and I'm not comfortable with phonemic analyses that are radically different for language varieties that are fundamentally crossintelligible.
Do not question The Analysis it is Perfect; all hail The Analysis and its Wonderous obligatory codas :evil:
Travis B.
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Re: English questions

Post by Travis B. »

Darren wrote: Thu May 08, 2025 4:54 am
Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 8:28 pmThis feels a bit forced to me, to be honest, though, and I'm not comfortable with phonemic analyses that are radically different for language varieties that are fundamentally crossintelligible.
Do not question The Analysis it is Perfect; all hail The Analysis and its Wonderous obligatory codas :evil:
And I didn't realize that the Arrernte substratum was that strong in AusE...
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.
Richard W
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Re: English questions

Post by Richard W »

Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 8:28 pm This feels a bit forced to me, to be honest, though, and I'm not comfortable with phonemic analyses that are radically different for language varieties that are fundamentally crossintelligible.
As distinct analyses are quite possible for the same speech variety, I think they must be regarded as an uncomfortable possibility. Only in writing do we come close to communicating in phonemes - speech is quite different, and that process usually includes correcting mechanisms. More disturbing is someone having competing analyses for the preferred variety of their L1.
Travis B.
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Re: English questions

Post by Travis B. »

Richard W wrote: Thu May 08, 2025 2:00 pm
Travis B. wrote: Wed May 07, 2025 8:28 pm This feels a bit forced to me, to be honest, though, and I'm not comfortable with phonemic analyses that are radically different for language varieties that are fundamentally crossintelligible.
As distinct analyses are quite possible for the same speech variety, I think they must be regarded as an uncomfortable possibility. Only in writing do we come close to communicating in phonemes - speech is quite different, and that process usually includes correcting mechanisms. More disturbing is someone having competing analyses for the preferred variety of their L1.
I honestly don't take seriously phonemic vowel length and phonemic vowel nasality as possibilities for my own variety, because such an analysis runs into problems when you look closer and don't just naively analyze things in terms of minimal pairs and whatnot.

For instance, it is impossible to construct a word with arbitrary vowel nasality in my dialect, and vowel nasality is not loaned into my dialect intact (a borrowed nasal vowel normally ejects a nasal consonant afterwards*, highly affected imitations of French aside). A good example of this is how there is prom [pʰʁ̥ˤɑ̃(ː)m] and problem [pʰʁ̥ˤɑːmː] but *[pʰʁ̥ˤɑ(ː)m] and *[pʰʁ̥ˤɑ̃ːmː] are impossible. This implies that the correct analyses of prom and problem are the conservative analyses /pram/ and /prabm/ rather than the radical analyses /prã(ː)m/ and /praːmː/, with "phonemic" vowel nasality being a side effect of the assimilation of stop-nasal clusters rather than being an intrinsic phonemic property of the vowel itself. This is corroborated by the fact that any time a non-nasal vowel precedes a nasal consonant the nasal consonant on the surface is always long.

* This nasal consonant may then be elided, though, if it falls in a syllable coda that contains a following fortis plosive; however, it resurfaces if a vowel is then added after the fortis plosive.
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.
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Raphael
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Re: English questions

Post by Raphael »

I sometimes wonder whether the notorious German habit of pronouncing "th" as /z/ when speaking English might be a result of generations of English teachers at German schools trying to get generations of German schoolchildren to pronounce an overly correct British upper class "th". What do you think - could there be something to that? Does the way upper class English people pronounce "th" sound a bit like /z/ to you?
Lērisama
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Re: English questions

Post by Lērisama »

Raphael wrote: Fri May 09, 2025 1:07 pm I sometimes wonder whether the notorious German habit of pronouncing "th" as /z/ when speaking English might be a result of generations of English teachers at German schools trying to get generations of German schoolchildren to pronounce an overly correct British upper class "th". What do you think - could there be something to that? Does the way upper class English people pronounce "th" sound a bit like /z/ to you?
Which ⟨th⟩, and what upper class English pronounciation? I'm not aware of a major change between RP and SSBE in that pronounciation of either phoneme¹⁴, The voiceless [θ], of thistle, ether and thigh sounds anything like a [z], so I assume you mean the voiced [ð], of this, either & thy, which does sound like [z], unless it's pronouncdd as an affricate or stop [d̪͡ð d̪]⁵, or merged into [v]⁶. Maybe the true fricative pronounciation of [ð] is what you're thinking of, given the latter would lead to mergers in non-native speakers with /d/ and /v/ respectively.

¹ I.e. a WWII BBC broadcast or the Queen²³
² The queen of the United Kingdom and of Great Britain and Northern Ireland etc.
³ The Queen Queen, not the Queen Camilla we have now
⁴ With one major caveat below
⁵ Both common initially in SSBE, and I think In most Englishes worldwide
⁶ Also common, although a bit less frequent, in the same dialect set above, I think
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
Travis B.
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Re: English questions

Post by Travis B. »

In the English here both /θ ð/ initially are commonly [t̪ d̪] or [t̪θ d̪ð], except that initial /θ/ is often [θ] as well, in higher registers initial /ð/ is [ð], in lower registers initial /ð/ often merges with /d/ as [d~t], or after a nasal in the preceding word, where initial /ð/ commonly merges with the nasal as [n̪ː], or after a sibilant in the preceding word, where initial /ð/ is commonly realized as [z]. Intervocalically /θ ð/ normally are [θ ð] here, except for my daughter, where intervocalic /ð/ often merges with /d/ as [ɾ]. Finally and in consonant clusters /θ ð/ are commonly both realized as [θ] here except if the consonant cluster is with another voiced fricative, where /ð/ instead remains intact as [ð] or, if the voiced fricative is a sibilant, becomes [z].
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.
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Raphael
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Re: English questions

Post by Raphael »

Lērisama wrote: Fri May 09, 2025 4:36 pm
Which ⟨th⟩, and what upper class English pronounciation? I'm not aware of a major change between RP and SSBE in that pronounciation of either phoneme¹⁴, The voiceless [θ], of thistle, ether and thigh sounds anything like a [z], so I assume you mean the voiced [ð], of this, either & thy, which does sound like [z], unless it's pronouncdd as an affricate or stop [d̪͡ð d̪]⁵, or merged into [v]⁶. Maybe the true fricative pronounciation of [ð] is what you're thinking of, given the latter would lead to mergers in non-native speakers with /d/ and /v/ respectively.
I think I mean the latter.
Richard W
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Re: English questions

Post by Richard W »

There's also the frictionless approximant [ð̞], particularly post-vocally. I think that may be particularly prone to merger with [v].
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