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Re: YACL: Thylean (alternate-history)

From:Lars Henrik Mathiesen <thorinn@...>
Date:Tuesday, November 7, 2000, 22:42
> Date: Tue, 7 Nov 2000 13:23:20 +0100 > From: Kristian Jensen <kljensen@...>
> You could also go all the way. In Danish, many occurences of syllable final > [j] are surface forms of /g/ after front vowels. Similarly, many occurences > of syllable-final [w] are surface forms of /g/ after back vowels. If you go > back a few generations, these /g/'s were all /G/ in syllable-final position. > Dialects even differ in pronounciations because of differing vowels, e.g.: > > UNDERLYING EASTERN WESTERN GLOSS > /dag/ [dEj] [dAw] "day" > /lag/ [lEj] [lAw] "layer" > /fag/ [fEj] [fAw] "subject, field, trade"
Unless you're a very conservative speaker from the northern suburbs of Copenhagen, the second column is more like [d{?] and so on. Interestingly, the words all take on the 'western' pronunciations (for me at least) when they are the first part of a compound or derived word: dagslys, daglig, lagdelt, fagbog, faglig --- but not when inflected: <dagen> [d{:n] (depending on stress --- several or [d{?n=] (intermediate pronunciations too) <dagene> [d{:n@] (irregular) <laget> [l{?