From: | Mark P. Line <mark@...> |
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Date: | Friday, July 23, 2004, 20:31 |
Andreas Johansson said:> > Never heard that one, but I've seen it argued that the [N] in "think" is > an /n/. > > Can't recall what the supposed benefit of that interpretation is - > offhand, I > guess one might try and eliminate the /N/ phoneme wholly by interpreting > syllable-final [N] as /ng/.Clearly, [N] is an allophone of /h/. They're in complementary distribution, right? -- Mark
Andreas Johansson <andjo@...> | |
Philip Newton <philip.newton@...> | |
Muke Tever <hotblack@...> |