Modern English: Difference between revisions
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===Important allophones=== | ===Important allophones=== | ||
* [[[alveolar tap|ɾ]]] for /d/ between vowels in American English | * [[[alveolar tap|ɾ]]] for /d/ and /t/ between vowels in American English and some Australian dialects. | ||
* [[[glottal stop|ʔ]]] for /t/, especially finally, but intervocalically in some places | * [[[glottal stop|ʔ]]] for /d/ /t/, especially finally, but intervocalically in some places (Cockney and other London dialects). | ||
* [[[voiceless palatal fricative|ç]]] for /h/ before /j/. | * [[[voiceless palatal fricative|ç]]] for /h/ before /j/. | ||
* [[[ | * [[[Voiceless Labial-Velar Approximate|ʍ]]] for /hw/ <wh> in some dialects. (In other dialects it either remains [hw] is not distinguished from /w/, even in dialects that otherwise retain /h/.) | ||
* unaspirated voiceless consonants after /s/. | * unaspirated voiceless consonants after /s/. | ||
* [ʋ̴] is used for /r/ by some speakers. | * [ʋ̴] is used for /r/ by some speakers. |
Revision as of 07:35, 30 May 2008
English is a Germanic language, serving basically as the lingua franca over much of the world; the most notable English-speaking countries are the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand.
Phonology
Consonants
p b | t d | k ɡ | |
m | n | ŋ | |
ʧ ʤ | |||
f v | θ ð s z ʃ ʒ | (x) | h |
l r j w |
The consonants of English tend to be more stable cross-dialectally than the vowels.
The phonemic status of [ŋ] is sometimes disputed, instead being replaced by a rule /nɡ → ŋ/ at the end of a morpheme. There remain, however, a few words where this may not apply, such as "hangar", though this may be due to metanalysis as hang + -ar.
The voiceless stops are aspirated. In some dialects aspiration is more salient than voicing for distinguishing stops.
The general American value of /r/ is [ɻ].
Important allophones
- [ɾ] for /d/ and /t/ between vowels in American English and some Australian dialects.
- [ʔ] for /d/ /t/, especially finally, but intervocalically in some places (Cockney and other London dialects).
- [ç] for /h/ before /j/.
- [ʍ] for /hw/ <wh> in some dialects. (In other dialects it either remains [hw] is not distinguished from /w/, even in dialects that otherwise retain /h/.)
- unaspirated voiceless consonants after /s/.
- [ʋ̴] is used for /r/ by some speakers.
Notable features of English
- Most verbs cannot normally participate in processes such as negation; for this auxiliary verbs are used. E.g.: to negate "I ate the cat.":
- *I ate not the cat. (possible, but archaic)
- I didn't eat the cat. (auxiliary "do" takes tense and negation marking)
Languages based on English
Creoles and natural descendants
Constructed languages
- Volapük (with other sources)
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