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Re: Droppin' Ds

From:Barry Garcia <barry_garcia@...>
Date:Thursday, September 21, 2000, 5:24
CONLANG@LISTSERV.BROWN.EDU writes:
> I once met several Peruvian students, from Lima, who pronounced all >final nasals as /N/; some other areas, all are /n/-- the odd case is >always >the loan 'album', /albuN ~ albun/. It's disconcerting to hear "eN la >casa" >or "cantaN". >>
Hmm......i may actually do that ;). To me, "cantaN" would sound "philippine" or "east asian", especially if we spelt it like: kantang (but, i wouldnt do that, because it would lose it's Latin look)
> > Even if pronounced as a fairly smooth English-like /h/, Span. j/ge, gi >is still systematically a velar, so the nasal assim. is to be expected. >In >a case like _San Juan_ the nasal might or might not assimilate depending >on >tempo, but there's a word boundary.
Well, it really stood out to me because i had never heard the velar said as strong as she says it. Others who i've heard say it, say it fainter, much closer to /n/ than /N/ . I've also heard this sound pop up at the ends of words in the speech of some of the native speakers I've listened to (Mexicans)
>