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Re: Schwa and [V]: Learning the IPA

From:R A Brown <ray@...>
Date:Wednesday, June 14, 2006, 11:49
daniel prohaska wrote:
> From: David J. Peterson
[snip]
> the actual study, or that, if it has been done, no one has read it, > or wants to cite it, and so the [@]/[V] myth persists. > -David" > > > David, > I respect your opinion, but I've heard [V] from many speakers in southern > England. I, personally haven't got it in my phoneme inventory, because I > usually have [U] for /V/,
:) Yep - [U] or [V] is quite distinct from [@] for most of us Brits. We've had this same debate about [V] ~ [@] on Conlang more than once before. It is evident that in many (all?) parts of the US the two phonemes have fallen together, but it ain't so in extra-US English. Down in our non-rhotic neck of the woods, the sound in 'bird' is felt to be he stressed form of schwa ;) But, as I say, this has been discussed before. IIRC there was a thread called "Is your curry furry?" - here 'curry' /kVri/ does _not_ rhyme with 'furry' /f@ri/ ;)
> To cut a long story short - I'm afraid that neither /V/ nor [V] are a myth,
Certainly not - I hear them and use them every day. ================================= Larry Sulky wrote: [snip] > I agree. My last name has stressed [@]. Not the way I say it, it doesn't. It's [sVlki] - and I guess Daniel says [sUlkI]. Both [V] and [U] are quite different from [@]. -- Ray ================================== ray@carolandray.plus.com http://www.carolandray.plus.com ================================== "A mind which thinks at its own expense will always interfere with language." J.G. Hamann, 1760

Replies

Mark J. Reed <markjreed@...>
daniel prohaska <danielprohaska@...>