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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.

6 votes
1 answer
600 views

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/ ...
user67275's user avatar
  • 568
3 votes
1 answer
749 views

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. ...
Rose Lee's user avatar
5 votes
1 answer
389 views

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 ...
Rose Lee's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
140 views

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 ...
Tintin's user avatar
  • 3
0 votes
1 answer
133 views

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 ...
thesmartwaterbear's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
153 views

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 ...
Tim's user avatar
  • 4,775
0 votes
1 answer
178 views

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?
user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
54 views

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 ...
Peter's user avatar
  • 43
1 vote
1 answer
90 views

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 ...
DanielC's user avatar
  • 125
1 vote
2 answers
173 views

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?
Agent Chuobao's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
169 views

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 ...
Andy's user avatar
  • 103
-1 votes
2 answers
248 views

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", "...
brilliant's user avatar
  • 4,383
18 votes
2 answers
3k views

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 (...
Lasshatry's user avatar
  • 183
1 vote
0 answers
84 views

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,...
questionguy's user avatar
1 vote
3 answers
736 views

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
m26a's user avatar
  • 621

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