Re: English is a crazy language
From: | Tim May <butsuri@...> |
Date: | Tuesday, April 23, 2002, 19:51 |
Christophe Grandsire writes:
> En réponse à John Cowan <jcowan@...>:
>
> >
> > No and no; "clothes" is idiosyncratically pronounced /klowz/,
> > although some people use a spelling pronunciation /klowDz/. In
> > eye-dialect, it is written "clo'es".
> >
>
> Well, that's strange. We've had quite a few different assistants
> during my years of learning English, besides French teachers who
> were often considered completely bilingual. I remember four
> assistants especially, two from the United States, one from Britain
> and the other from Ireland. Well, one thing is sure, they *all*
> used [D] in "clothes", without exception (that was a very often
> used word, since I was often nearly the only one around who could
> master [T] and [D], and it was often used as example. That's why I
> know very well that they pronounced it with [D]). Would have we
> been unlucky enough to have only hypercorrectors as assistants,
> especially from so many different places? i somehow doubt so.
>
> Christophe.
>
> http://rainbow.conlang.free.fr
>
> Take your life as a movie: do not let anybody else play the leading
> role.
So far as I know, I've always pronounced the /D/ (except maybe in very
fast speech), but I just checked with my mother, and she doesn't. I'd
never noticed. I'll have to check what my father does... I'm
basically RP, my mother is... I can't remember the names of US
accents, but she's from Pennsylvania, and her accent is by now heavily
influenced by RP. It's quite possible that I got it purely as a
spelling pronunciation - I seem to remember a time when I pronounced
"jewellery" with 4 syllables, until I was corrected.