Questions tagged [phonology]
For questions about sound patterns of English i.e. how phonemes combine in consonant clusters, what kind of clusters are allowed in English, why some clusters occur and others don't, how a particular word evolved, word stress and syllabification etc.
75 questions
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Why does Vocabulary.com list /ɛ/ instead of /æ/ for words like "carry", "marry", and "parry"?
I'm confused about the pronunciation of words like "carry", "marry", and "parry". When checking Vocabulary.com, I see these pronunciations:
parry: US /ˈpɛri/ UK /ˈpɛri/
...
3
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1
answer
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"can't" with dropping the sound /t/ in common speech
I know that there is a big difference in meaning between "can" and "can't". "Can" is used in a positive statement, and "can't" is used in a negative statement.
...
5
votes
1
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389
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The difference between /ɪ/ and /ə/ on unstressed syllable
I'm so confused the difference between /ɪ/ and /ə/ on an unstressed syllable when I have to transcribe them phonemically such as: philosophy, visit, supermarket,...
I don't have that issue when /ɪ/ is ...
0
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1
answer
140
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What do we call reading aloud parts of words?
What do we call speaking/reading/pronouncing a word or a part of a word of a paragraph by several people?
For example, "Doctor Paige will be here right after lunch to see her."
Suppose there ...
0
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1
answer
133
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Are /x/, the glottal stop /ʔ/, the nasal vowels /æ̃/ and /ɒ̃/, the rhotic vowels /ɚ/ and /ɝ/, and /ɜː/ (marginal) phonemes?
Are /x/, the glottal stop /ʔ/, the nasal vowels /æ̃/ and /ɒ̃/, the rhotic vowels /ɚ/ and /ɝ/, and /ɜː/ (marginal) phonemes? Some of then are obviously not standard phonemes in their own right, but I ...
0
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1
answer
153
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What's this linguistic, phonetic or phonologic phenomenon called?
I was enjoying the relaxing vibes that the hotel provided.
When Americans say the above sentence, do they sometimes say "vibes that" as "vibesat"?
Does it also happen in other ...
0
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1
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178
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Are "knees" and "needs" homophones?
I saw an English textbook has a /dz/ phoneme, wondering whether it is simply pronounced as [z] with a silenced [d]
Are needs and knees simply homophones?
0
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0
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Recommendation on a book about sound meets style?
I find the so-called "phonaesthetics" an interesting topic. How words sound good or not when put together, patterns of meaning in letter clusters etc.
Anyone knows of a good source material ...
1
vote
1
answer
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Phonemic vs. phonetic notation: /m/ in mass vs. symphony
Dictionaries such as ldoceonline.com use a phonemic notation for the two words spelled: mass and symphony, i.e. /mæs/ vs /ˈsɪmfəni/
But this is hardly the whole story: to me (a non-native) the two ...
1
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2
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Why doesn't the 'gh' in 'flight' count as deleted?
Debt, rhetoric, style: all these words have a silent 'b','h', and 'e'. In my test paper, this is known as a result of deletion rule. But why doesn't the 'gh' in 'flight' count as deleted?
0
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2
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Which of the two different pronunciations of /z/ is correct?
When I was learning the English phonemes, I noticed that the phoneme represented by /z/ was pronounced significantly differently in the two tutorials I had purchased.
I had thought that maybe one of ...
-1
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2
answers
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final letter "y", following a vowel, yet representing another syllable
Is there a word in English, in which the final letter "y", while following a vowel, would represent another syllable?
For example, in the words "worry", "story", "...
18
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2
answers
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Why do dictionaries write /p/ instead of /pʰ/ for 'pie' in the ipa?
Prompted by this question: The pronunciations of letter "P" in "explain, explore, explode" and in "expensive, expand"
My question is that if English has two kinds of Ps (...
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0
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What's the intonation pattern of "ideas"?
The utterance of the audio is "But I need your ideas. I need two heads." The intonation pattern of "heads" completely goes down because the speaker's statement is finished. However,...
1
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3
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Why there are some small letters in the IPA version?
Why in words like temperate there is a small ə in it?
/ˈtem.pᵊr.ət/
I'm looking at the version in the Cambridge English Dictionary