Australian English Phonology
Vowel System
/ɔ ɔː/ in the table below are in two different places. This is because they could be considered in either position. /ɔ/ is open-mid rather than close-mid like the other mid vowels, and it is very laxly rounded, if rounded at all. /ɔː/ is used only in the word "gone" [gɔːn]. It's not an allophonic variation of /ɔ/ or /oː/. It's worth noting that if we consider /ɔ(:)/ unrounded, then all unrounded vowels have long/short pairs, and rounded vowels are long, aside from /u/, which doesn't contrast with a unrounded vowel.
Front | Back | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
rounded | unrounded | rounded | unrounded | |
High | i iː | yː | u uː | |
Mid | e eː | øː | ɔ (ɔː) | oː |
Low | æ æː | a aː | ɔ (ɔː) |
Start front | Start back | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Start high | Start low | End unround | End round | |
End high | ɪi | æi | oi | ɔy |
Mid | æɔ | ɑe |
End high | End mid | ||
---|---|---|---|
Start high | Start low | ||
Start front | ɪi | æi | æɔ |
Start back | oi | ɔy | ɑe |
Proposed Vowel orthography
Hiatus
Like many languages, Australian English forbids hiatus. Here is how it resolves the problem obtained when two vowels collide:
If the ffirst vowel is in set (1), then [ɹ] is added:
(1) ɪː eː aː oː øː ə uə~uː
If the fist vowel is in set (2), then [j] is added:
(2) æi ɪi ɑe oi
If the first vowel is in set (3), then [w] is added:
(3) æɔ ʉː ɔʉ
If the first vowel is in set (4), then it can’t end a word:
(4) ɪ e æ æː a ɔ u
Examples:
Here is a fair amount of far and away the poorest examples of Australian hiatus. These’re only on display if you can see ’em. I always saw the boy in the window, until a cow interfered with you over there. Keep low or you might be hit.
hɪː-ɹ-ɪz ə feː-ɹ-əmæɔnt əv faː-ɹ-ən ewæi ðə poː-ɹ-əst ɪgzæːmpəlz əv əstʃɹæɪliən hɑe-j-æɪtəs. ðɪizə-ɹ-ɔʉnli ɔn dəsplæi-j-ɪf jə kən sɪi-j-əm ɑe-j-oːwæiz soː ðə boi-j-ɪn ðə windɔʉ, antɪl ə kæɔ-w-intəfɪːd wɪθ jʉː-w-ɔʉvɐ ðeː. kɪip lɔʉ-w-ə jə mɑet bi hit