Final stress, not distinct.
/najtɨngejəl/ [nʌɪ̯ɾɪŋgeɪ̯əɫ]
Final stress, not distinct.
/najtɨngejəl/ [nʌɪ̯ɾɪŋgeɪ̯əɫ]
I have [ŋ] (and I would analyse /ŋ/ too) there. Flapping IMD is lexically restricted so wouldn't be expected in that word anyway.
I think of it as having three syllables, but it wouldn't be too surprising to me if I learned that I used a "compressed" two-syllable pronunciation as a "fast speech" variant. Phonemically, I think of it as /ˈlɑnˌmo.ər/, which is phonetically something like [lɑ̃nmoʊɚ] or [lɑ̃mmoʊɚ]; "more" ends in /or/ [oɚ̯]. So the main distinguishing factor for me would be the presence of a glide in the trisyllabic pronunciation. I can't hear a difference between [ɚ] and [ɚ̯] after a high offglide (so I don't perceive any consistent difference in syllabification between fire/higher, power/hour etc.), but /o/ and /e/ usually aren't realized with a high offglide before /r/ in my speech, unless there is an intervening morpheme boundary.
I think it's fairly common to have that kind of nonstandard distribution for L2 speakers. I learned RP (well, theoretically), except that I was exposed a lot more to American English, and then I watched a lot British television at some point; well, you get the idea.Tropylium wrote: ↑Fri Nov 02, 2018 11:36 am My L2 English these days seems to have a "nonstandard LOT-CLOTH" split – with the LOT set having /ɑ/, but the CLOTH set having /ɔ/. This is distinct from /ɔː/ in THOUGHT or NORTH. (This is regardless phonemic, at minimum since my STRUT also ends up as /ɑ/, which is phonetically a somewhat lax [ɑ̽] or [ɐ̠].)
/ɔ/ seems to appear not just before fricatives (lost /lɔst/, soft /sɔft/ — though cloth itself ends up as /klɑθ/) but also before velars (dog /dɔg/, hockey /hɔki/, long /lɔŋ/), /m/ (bomb /bɔm/, comma /kɔmə/, from /frɔm/) and intervocalic /r/ (orange /ɔrɪndʒ/, sorry /sɔri/), and after /w/ (what /wɔt/, wash /wɔʃ/, won /wɔn/; these actually have a fairly closed [o]). On the other hand, body /bɑdi/, money /mɑni/, etc. (Maybe /ɔ/ should be considered default and /ɑ/ conditional instead, really.)
…So where have I picked this up from, if anywhere? I don't think I've heard of an English dialect that would quite do this exact distribution, but there's a lot of them about.
Oh, it's one of those. Someday I would like to see a reasonably good list of them really… (You know, with o for /ᴧ/ due to medieval spelling problems: above dove glove love, done none son, monk monkey, etc.)
I'd transcribe it as /aɪl/ phonemically, but there's a hint of a glide into the following dark /l/. I have at least a potential distinction between /aɪl/ and /aɪəl/ -- vile vs. vial -- though how reliably I actually make it I don't know.