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Re: OT: Intergermansk - Traveller's Phrasebook

From:Gary Shannon <fiziwig@...>
Date:Saturday, February 5, 2005, 2:45
--- Andreas Johansson <andjo@...> wrote:

> Quoting Gary Shannon <fiziwig@...>: > > > --- "Pascal A. Kramm" <pkramm@...> wrote: > > > > > On Thu, 3 Feb 2005 14:38:07 -0800, Gary Shannon > > > <fiziwig@...> wrote: > > > > > > >--- "Pascal A. Kramm" <pkramm@...> wrote: > > > > > > > ><snip> > > > > > > > >> Thank You Tank Du > > > >> > > > ><snop> > > > > > > > >> Thanks, fine. Tank, > gud. > > > > > > > >Just off the top of my head I feel like daily > usage > > > >would tend to stick some vowel or another at > the > > > end > > > >of "tank" to make it flow off the tongue more > > > >smoothly. It just seems to me that "tanka du" > and > > > >"tanka, gud" are easier to say. > > > > > > I don't think it would cause any problems > without > > > vowel... I've never heard > > > any English speaker complaining that they would > need > > > a vowel at the end of > > > "Thank" or "thanks" so that it flows better or > > > something. > > > > The English phrase "thank you" already has a vowel > > sound after the "k", namely the "you" sound. > > The "you" sound? Possibly, it's possible to analyze > "you" as monophonemic in > your English lect, but it's clearly not monophonic > in any major variant of > English, and asserting that the first bit thereof - > [j] - is a "vowel sound" is > a bit suspect. It's a glide, and rather straddles > the vowel/consonant line. I > think the rules for what you find easy to pronounce > are a bit more complex than > you think. > > > Andreas >
you = ee-oo. That's a vowel sound in my reality. --gary

Replies

Andreas Johansson <andjo@...>
Tim May <butsuri@...>