Pabappa wrote: ↑Tue Aug 07, 2018 11:37 am
Some Canadians say læva, I've heard it on YouTube. And mærio, etc.
Zaarin how do you pronounce "retire", "autism", "retard" (noun)? Sorry couldn't think of another example of post tonic unstr3ssed /t/.
Edit: also "leotard".
÷÷÷÷÷÷
Also how about "potash"? I didn't realize it was just pot + ash until adulthood, so I gave it the vowels of potassium. For those with glottal stops and/or flaps, does this word fit that pattern or is the t preserved?
retire [ɹ̱ˁʷiˈtʰaɪ̯ɹ̱ˁ]
autism [ˈɒɾɪzm̩] (this may be in free variation with an untapped variety: [ˈɒˌtʰɪzm̩])
retard [ɹ̱ˁʷɪˈtʰɑɹ̱ˁʔd̚] (verb); [ˈɹ̱ˁʷitʰɑɹ̱ˁʔd̚] (noun)*
leotard [ˈɫiɵtʰɑɹ̱ˁd̚]
potash [ˈpɑʔˌæʃ] (like you I only recently learned that this word is pot-ash, so my pronunciation is still transitioning from [pʰəʊ̯ˈtʰæʃ], hence the unnatural sound)
With the exception of my rather unnatural transitional pronunciation of
potash, these fit the pattern because all of these /t/'s are syllable-initial.
Autism is something of an exception, but it's also the only word on this list that I use with any frequency. It also precedes a reduced vowel.
*Word final /t/ and /d/ remain distinct for me because /t/ is debuccalized to [ʔ] whereas /d/ receives glottal-fortification and no audible release: [ʔd̚]. They probably
sound similar, but there is alveolar contact on word-final /d/ and there is not on word-final /t/.
EDIT: I don't have /au/ in
autism.