Difference between revisions of "JNW's English"

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(/ə/ elsewhere)
(/ə/ elsewhere)
Line 171: Line 171:
 
* resp(i)ratory
 
* resp(i)ratory
 
* temp(e)rature
 
* temp(e)rature
* diff(e)rent [ˈdɪfɻɪ̃ʔ]
+
* diff(e)rent [ˈdɪf.ɻɪ̃ʔ]
 +
* diff(e)rence [ˈdɪf.ɻɪns]
 
* vi(o)lent [ˈvɑɪ̯lɪ̃ʔ]
 
* vi(o)lent [ˈvɑɪ̯lɪ̃ʔ]
 
* veg(e)table [ˈvɛʧtəbl̩]  (not tʰ!)
 
* veg(e)table [ˈvɛʧtəbl̩]  (not tʰ!)
Line 198: Line 199:
 
* math(e)maticians [mæθ.məˈtɪ.ʃɪns]
 
* math(e)maticians [mæθ.məˈtɪ.ʃɪns]
 
* rev(e)rence [ˈɻɛv.ɻɪns]
 
* rev(e)rence [ˈɻɛv.ɻɪns]
 +
* sov(e)reign [ˈsɑv.rɪn]
  
 
==== But no deletion: ====
 
==== But no deletion: ====

Revision as of 22:40, 5 December 2010

The pronunciation of words, as per Jonathan North Washington

[ʌ]

  • strawberry - [ˈstʰɻʌbÆɹij]
  • wash - [wʌʃ]
  • Washington - [ˈwʌʃɪŋtɩn]
  • squash - [skwʌʃ]

[wɔ]

  • quarter - [ˈkʰɔɻɾɻ] (but quarry - ['kwɔɻij])
  • quartz, quarts, courts - [kʰɔɹts] (is there a difference in aspiration?)

[ɛ]

  • catch - [kʰɛʧ]
  • that (conj) - [ðɛt]
  • antenna - [ɛnˈtɛnə]

[ʌj]

  • /ɑj/ before voiced consonants is [ɑj]
    • 'eyes' [ɑjz]
    • 'bide' [bɑjd]
  • /ɑj/ before unvoiced consonants is [ʌj]
    • 'ice' [ʌjs]
    • 'bite' [bʌjt]
  • there are "exceptions" (they could be rule-based, having something to do with what counts as syllable-coda, or maybe part-of-speech?)
    • Idaho [ʌj], Ida [ʌj]
    • cider [ʌj], spider [ʌj]
    • icon [ɑj], nikon [ʌj], daikon [ɑj]
    • cyclops [ʌj / ?ɑj], but psycho [ʌj / *ɑj]
    • irregular plurals:
      • life [ləi̯f] → lives [ləi̯vz], *[lai̯vz]
  • interesting contrasts:
    • high [ɑj], high school [ʌj]
    • 'I scream' [ɑj], 'ice cream' [ʌj]

[Æ]

See Æ for phonetic information on this vowel.

  • /ej/ before /l,r/ is [Æ]
    • ail/ale - [Æl]
      • Al - [æl] (shows /æ/Æ/ contrast)
      • trailer (before a movie) - [ˈtˢɻʰÆlɻ]
      • trailer (behind a truck) - [ˈtˢɻʰejlɻ]
      • mailing / Maling (/Æ/ej/)
      • Beowulf (/Æ/)
        • tractor-trailer (the way I said it as a kid) - [ˈtˢɻʰæktɻ ˌtˢɻʰÆlɻ]
        • those two 'trailer's have recently merged to [ˈtˢɻʰejlɻ], but trail+er is still [ˈtˢɻʰÆlɻ]
      • nightmare - [ˈnʌjtmejɻ]
      • "night mare" - [ˈnʌjtmÆɻ]
    • air - [Ær]
  • /æ/ before /m,n/ is [Æ]
    • an, hand - [Æn], [hÆnd]
      • Hannah - [ˈhænə]
  • /æ/ before /ŋ,g/ is [æj]
    • wagon, hang - [wæjgɩn], [hæjŋ]

/ɩ/ (vs. /ə/ & /ɪ/)

  • Reduced vowels are typically realised as [ə] in English:
    • about — [ə ˈbau̯t]
    • beneath — [bə ˈniːθ]
    • Winnepesauki — [wɪ nə pə ˈsɒ ki]
    • onomatopœia — [ɑ nə mɑ ɾə ˈpiː ə]
  • In closed syllalbes, reduced vowels are realised as [ɩ]:
    • This is visible in the application of several morphemes.
      • rose-s — /ˈɻɤo̯ zɩz/
      • test-ed — /ˈtʰɛ stɩd/
      • ox-en — /ˈɑk sɩn/
    • This can be seen in many other words.
      • Jonathan — /ˈʤɑ nə θɩn/
      • happen(ed) — /ˈhæ pɩn(d)/
    • This can also be demonstrated derivationally.
      • religion — /ɻə ˈlɪ ʤɩn/
      • religionise — /ɻə ˈlɪ ʤə nɑi̯z/ (some less morphemic parsings lend to /ɻə ˈlɪ ʤɩ nɑi̯z/, with an almost syllabic [ʤ̩] often
  • In a closed syllable with a labial coda, reduced vowels are realised as [ə]:
    • This is visible in the application of several (clitical) morphemes.
      • he'll've — [ˈhɪl əv]
      • get 'em — [ˈgɛ ɾəm]
    • This is visible in some other words, though I can mostly only think of names and made-up words.
      • item — [ˈʌi̯ ɾəm], victim — [ˈvɪk(t) təm]
      • Jacob — [ˈʤe kəp]
      • Caleb — [ˈkʰei̯ ləb]
      • *soroft — [ˈsɔɻ əft]
    • I take that back; I seem to've found some good examples
      • turnip — [ˈtɻnəp]
      • victim — [ˈvɪkt təm]
      • system — [ˈsɪs stəm]
      • bottom — [ˈbɑ ɾəm]
      • custom — [ˈkʌs stəm]
      • olive — [ˈɑləv]
      • exclusive — [ɛkˈsklusəv]
      • sherrif ­— [ˈʃᴁɻəf]
      • Phillip — [ˈfɪləp]
      • gossip — [ˈgɑsəp]
      • atom — [ˈæɾəm]
      • pilgrim — [ˈpɪlgɻɪm]
      • bottom — [ˈbɑɾəm]
  • Words with "normal" reduced /ɪ/
    • culprit — ['kəlprɪt]
  • Data that still need to be considered:
    • words like:
      • confuse
      • condition
    • other words like:
      • civil, civilisation
      • get 'im vs. get 'em
        • get 'im [ˈkɛɾɪm] (unexpected}
        • get 'em [ˈkɛɾəm] (expected, but contrast unexpected)
      • presumably (how do I syllabify this??)
    • the pair mistake [mɨ(s)ʼstejk] / mistook [mɪs'tʊk]
    • -tion /ʃɪn/ (expected)
    • -ive /ɪv/ (unexpected)
    • -ic /ɪk/ (unexpected)

[ɒ] as an allophone of /ɑ/

  • /ɑ/ → [ɒ] / _ {ɻ,l}
  • Except before /l/ it seems to be only at the end of syllables (or morpheme boundaries):
    • collar / caller = [kɑlɻ̩] / [kɒlɻ̩]
    • holler / hauler = [hɑlɻ̩] / [hɒlɻ̩]
    • similar to Maling / mailing = [mei̯lɪŋ] / [mᴁlɪŋ] above
    • collie [kɑli]
    • cauliflower [kɑləflawɻ̩]
    • also similar to /ə/ and /ʌ/ merging and then splitting again to [ə] and [ɨ] (the latter of which's merged with /ɪ/ now).

voicing

Some consonants are [un]voiced in a way that's unexpected:

  • Jacob — [ˈʤe kəp]
  • Virginia — [ˈfɻʤɪnjə]
  • ostrich, sandwich — [ˈɒstɻɪdʒ], [ˈsÆndwɪdʒ]
  • congratulations — [kn̩gɻæʤəˈlei̯ʃɪndz]

Also, it's interesting to look at stuff across syllable boundaries. Not sure what the phonetics are like, should investigate some time.

  • substitute — [ˈsʌpstətʉt]
  • hubcap — [ˈhʌpkæp] (?)
  • Presbyterian

other

  • comfortable - [ˈkʰʌ̃ftʰɻb(ə)ɫ]
  • Wednesday - [ˈwɛn(d)zdej]
  • February - [ˈfɛbjʉwÆɻij]
  • Adirondecks - [ædɻ̩ˈɑndæks]

Deletion

/ə/ in first syllable

  • p(o)tato
  • p(a)thetic
  • k(a)tana
  • t(o)mato
  • v(a)riety
  • p(o)litical [plɪ.ɾə.kɨl]

/ə/ elsewhere

The generalisation here seems to be that after a stressed syllable, /ə/ is deleted when /ɻ̯/ or /l/ (or /n/) that can start a syllable follows. These are also all formerly penultimate /ə/s, making the stressed syllable now penultimate.

  • fam(i)ly
  • fav(ou)rite
  • ast(e)roid
  • priv(i)lege
  • sev(e)ral
  • fed(e)ral
  • delib(e)rate
  • Cath(o)lic
  • cabinet */kʰæbənɪʔ/, */kʰæbnɪʔ/, √/kʰæbn̩ɪt/
  • asp(i)rin /ˈæs.pɻɪn/
  • lab(o)ratory
  • prep(a)ratory?
  • resp(i)ratory
  • temp(e)rature
  • diff(e)rent [ˈdɪf.ɻɪ̃ʔ]
  • diff(e)rence [ˈdɪf.ɻɪns]
  • vi(o)lent [ˈvɑɪ̯lɪ̃ʔ]
  • veg(e)table [ˈvɛʧtəbl̩] (not tʰ!)
  • choc(o)late [ˈʧɒk.lɪʔ]
  • plat(i)num [ˈplæʔ.nəm]
  • fright(e)ning [ˈfɻəɪ̯ʔ.nɪŋ]
  • lib(e)ral [ˈlɪb.ɻəl]
  • sep(a)rate (adj.)
  • Marg(a)ret [ˈmɒɻ.gɻɪʔ]
  • light(e)ning [ˈləɪ̯ʔnɪŋ]
  • mis(e)rable?
  • veter(i)narian [vɛɾ.ɻˈnᴁɻ.i.ɪn]
  • short(e)ning (noun) [ˈʃɔɻʔnɪŋ]
  • gen(e)ral
  • gen(e)ralise
  • gen(e)ralisation
  • adm(i)ral [ˈædˌmɻəl]
  • col(o)nel [ˈkɻ.nəl]
  • bus(i)ness [ˈbɪz.nɪs]
  • desp(e)rate [ˈdɛs.pɻɪʔ]
  • int(e)rest [ˈɪn.tɻɪst]
  • ev(e)ry [ˈɛvɻi]
  • Ev(e)rette [ˈɛvrɪʔ]
  • Niag(a)ra [nɑi̯ˈæi̯.gɻə]
  • math(e)matics [mæθˈmæ.ɾɪks]
  • math(e)maticians [mæθ.məˈtɪ.ʃɪns]
  • rev(e)rence [ˈɻɛv.ɻɪns]
  • sov(e)reign [ˈsɑv.rɪn]

But no deletion:

  • finalize
  • separate (v.t.)
  • shortening (verb)
  • celery
  • colony
  • dynamite
  • analyse
  • Nicholas
  • vinegar
  • cal(o)rie

Acceptable variation?

  • veteran/vet(e)ran
  • sal(a)ry?
  • mem(o)ry/mem(o)ries?
  • interested/int(e)rested [ˈɪn.tɻə.stɪd]/[ˈɪn.ɻˌɛs.tɪd]

/ɻ/, apparently

Nancy Hall seems to've made a career out of this:

Never pronounced:

  • Feb(r)uary — [ˈfɛbjʉwᴁɻ̯i]
  • tu(r)meric — [ˈtʰʉmɻɪk]
  • Swa(r)thmore — [ˈswɑθmɔɻ̯]
  • Albu(r)querque
  • bomba(r)dier

Many of these /ɻ/s are pronounced in cases hyperarticulation or careful speech, but even then not always.

  • su(r)prise — [səˈpɻɑi̯z]
  • rese(r)voir — [ˈɻ̯ɛzəvwɒɻ̯]
  • kinde(r)garten — [ˈkʰɪndəgɒɻ̯dn̩]
  • cate(r)piller — [ˈkʰæɾəpɪlɻ]
  • adve(r)sary — [ˈædvəsᴁɻ̯i]
  • vet(er)inarian — [vɛdn̩ˈᴁɻiɪn]~[vɛɾəˈnᴁɻiɪn]
  • be(r)serk
  • paraphe(r)nalia — [̩pᴁɻ.ə.fəˈnɛl.jə]
  • repe(r)toir
  • p(r)erogative
  • Pache(l)bel
  • defrib(r)ulator — [dəfɻɪbjəlei̯ɾɻ̩]
  • inf(r)ared
  • gove(r)nor

Kind of [not] pronounced, or unsure:

  • fo(r)ward — ['fɔ(ɻ̯)wɻd]
  • inf(r)astructure
  • ap(er)ture
  • pa(r)ticular
  • southe(r)ner
  • pe(r)turbed
  • fo(r)lorn
  • Be(r)nard
  • No(r)thrup
  • Cante(r)bury
  • the(r)mometer
  • cereb(r)al palsy
  • elde(r)berry

Seems natural not to pronounce /r/, but I do anyway [most of the time]:

  • spect(r)ogram
  • ve(r)nacular
  • Wate(r)bury
  • Otte(r)burn
  • ente(r)prise
  • comfo(r)ter

Always pronounced:

  • laboratory
  • preparatory
  • respiratory
  • temperature
  • literature
  • photographer
  • stenographer
  • secretary
  • proprietress
  • fratricide
  • entrepreneur
  • proliferate
  • Labrador
  • interpret
  • frustration
  • celebratory
  • professor
  • impropriety
  • northerner
  • afterwards
  • hamburger
  • offertory
  • forward?
  • formerly
  • perform
  • perfumery
  • corporation
  • dormitory
  • formerly
  • incorporate
  • corner
  • extraordinary
  • Forster's turn
  • order
  • ordinary
  • ornery
  • orthography
  • portrait
  • quarter
  • warrior
  • farmer
  • farther
  • Girard
  • parliamentary
  • parlor
  • further
  • murder(er)
  • itinerary
  • furniture

Insertion

  • perse(r)vere
  • inte(r)gral
  • fa(r)miliar
  • cate(r)gorise
  • sherbe(r)t
  • barbe(r)cue

Unsure

  • pho(r)tographer
  • lava(r)tory
  • au(r)thor

No insertion

  • pe(r)jorative
  • ce(r)lebrity
  • ele(r)vator
  • benefici(r)ary
  • contractu(r)al
  • ferv(r)ent
  • heart-rend(r)ing
  • f(r)uneral

Long /r/:

  • error
  • juror
  • mirror
  • terror
  • sufferer
  • there're
  • for her

Syllabic /r/s:

  • deteriorate
  • interior

Clitics

Object pronouns

  • Notes:
    • vowels in cliticised forms are shorter than in full forms (e.g. mi, jʉu̯, etc are shortened)
Object pronouns
example me you him her it us them
full forms [mi] [jʉu̯] [hɪm] [hɻ] [ɪʔ] (/ɪt/) [əs] [ðɛm]
i_ see [simi] [si.ʉu̯] [si.ɪm] [si.ɻ] [si.ɪʔ] [si.əs] [si.əm]
u_ sue [sʉmi] [sʉjʉu̯] [sʉ.ɪm]/[sʉwɪm] [sʉ.ɻ]/[sʉwɻ] [sʉ.ɪʔ]/[sʉwɪʔ] [sʉ.əs]/[sʉwəs] [sʉ.əm]/[sʉwəm]
t_ hate [heʔmi]/[hei̯mmi] [heʔjʉu̯]/[hei̯ʧə] [hei̯ɾɪm] [hei̯ɾɻ] [hei̯ɾɪʔ] [hei̯ɾəs] [hei̯ɾəm]

Other

  • I don't [ai̯ə̃u̯ʔ]

Subject pronouns

This page illustrates some (synchronic) irregularities in English pronoun+clitic combinations. This focusses mainly on cliticised forms of "to be" and "to have" in JNW English.

An E in the Actual column means the Expected forms are also found, but only in hypercorrect speech.

Orthography Pronoun Clitic Expected Actual Reduced
I'll ɑi̯ l (E) ɑl ɑl
he'll hi(i̯) l (E) hɪl hlˌ
she'll ʃi(i̯) l (E) ʃɪl ʃlˌ
we're wi(i̯) ɻ 'wijɻ (E) wᴁɻ̯
we've wi(i̯) əv 'wi(jə)v wi(i̯)v wɨv¹
we'll wi(i̯) l wɪl wʊl
you're jʉ(u̯) ɻ 'jʉwɻ (E) jɔɻ̯
you've jʉ(u̯) əv 'jʉ(wə)v jʉ(u̯)v jɨv¹
you'll jʉ(u̯) l jʊl jɪl [jɯl]
they're ðe(i̯) ɻ ˈðejɻ ðᴁɻ̯ ðɻ
they've ðe(i̯) əv ðe(i̯)v ðev?
they'll ðe(i̯) l ðᴁl ðɪl [ðɯl]

Words I never got

Because of the loss of sarcasm in fixed expressions using these words (or something like that), I never could tell what they meant—the general idea was there, but as far as I could tell, their antonyms seemed as correct as they did, if not more.

  • immaculate
  • impeccable
  • trivial
  • vicariously

Family-specific vocabulary

  • glurpy
  • heffle
  • zitis
  • scrumfle
  • ring-ding

Other People

My Family

Some family members have "weird" pronunciations:

  • [ˈdɑjəpɹ] for [ˈdʌjpɹ] ("diaper")
  • [ˈdɑjəmənd] for [ˈdɑjmɩnd] ("diamond")
  • [hɒp] for [hɑp] ("hop")
  • [ˈrɛs.stɻ.ənt] for [ˈrɛs.stɻ.ɑnt] ("restaurant")
  • [wɪð] for [wɪθ]
  • [bə ˈkʌs] for [bə ˈkʌz]
  • [ə sow ʃij ˈej ʃɩn] for [ə sow sij ˈej ʃɩn] ("association")
  • [mə ˈtɻ jəl] for [mə ˈtijɻ ij əl] ("material")

Media

Some media (music, commercials) have objectionable rhymes:

  • pauper/copper/whopper
  • choclate/pocket
  • ‘ooh and aah’ where ‘aah’ == ‘aww’
  • see also: Other People's English

Overall vowel system

JNW's Vowels
location tense lax diphthong ɻ diphthong examples
front
high i(i̯)¹ ɪ/ɨ ɪu̯ iɻ̯, jɻ heed, hid, hued, hear, pure
mid e(i̯)¹ ɛ ᴁɻ, — hayed, head, hair
low æ¹ au̯ —, awɻ/aɯ̯ɻ̯/aɻ̯ hand/hail, had, how, —, hour/how're
back
low ɒ³ ɑ ɑi̯ ɒɻ̯, ai̯ɻ̯ hawed, odd, high, hard, hire/higher
mid ɤ(u̯)¹³ ə əi̯ ɔɻ̯, — hoed, hut, height, hoard/horde/whore
high ʉ(u̯)¹³ ʊ³ ɔi̯ ɔɻ̯, ɔjɻ hoot, hood, Hoyt, tour, lawyer

Notes:

  • ¹ Long or diphthongal
  • ² Can be nucleus of heavy syllable
  • ³ Rounding optional
  • Maybe /o/ is the the dipthongal mid-front vowel, and /ɻ/ is tense mid-back vowel.. but then there'd be two before-/ɻ/ versions for mid-front... hm.
  • Maybe the mid-front gap is because /əu̯/ from GVS merged with /au̯/. And maybe this gap is the cause for Valley Girl o → /ɛu̯/.

Generalisations:

  • Back vowels rounded before /ɻ/, front vowels not; back vowels generally more likely to be rounded
  • All back tense vowels have optional rounding. Yiddish /ɔ/ borrowed as JNWE /ə/.
  • Non-low tense vowels are optionally long or diphthong
  • Front vowels diphthongise to back high point; back vowels to front high point. The tense vowels are opposite. Hmm...


JNW's vowel system
Front Back
peripheral base diphthong with ɻ base peripheral diphthong with ɻ
High i ɪ ɪu̯ iɻ̯ ʊ ʉ ɔi̯ ɔɻ̯
Mid e ɛ ᴁɻ̯ ə o əi̯ ɻ
Low æ æu̯ a ɒ ai̯ ɒɻ̯

Another attempt

Phonetic data to back this up is being analysed at Jonathan and Tristan's Big Phonetic Project.

JNW's vowel system, take 2/3/whatever
Front Back
peripheral base base peripheral
High i ɪ ʊ ʉ
iɻ̯ ɪu̯ ɔi̯ ɔɻ̯
Mid e ɛ ə ɻ
əu̯ əi̯
Low æ a ɒ
ᴁɻ̯ æu̯ ai̯ ɒɻ̯

Notes:

  1. Back peripheral vowels are optionally rounded.
  2. Front peripheral vowels are optionally diphthongised.
  3. All non-high non-back vowels + /ɻ̯/ are realised as /ᴁ/; low-back as /ɒ/, high-back as /ɔ/, high-front as ~/i/
  4. Mid-back vowels don't occur with /ɻ̯/.


Child phonology

  • [ˈnɑʔni] / [ˈnɑʔnɪn] — /ˈʤɑnəθɪn/
  • [məˈnəmʔtɻək]? — /ˈdəm(p)tʰɻək/

True stress minimal pairs

  • import
  • upset

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