المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6756 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension
Teaching Methods

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية


Upgliding diphthongs FLEECE  
  
1209   11:06 صباحاً   date: 2024-03-04
Author : Peter Trudgill
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 169-8


Read More
Date: 2024-02-28 1001
Date: 2024-11-26 642
Date: 2024-04-30 654

Upgliding diphthongs FLEECE

The /i:/ vowel is an upgliding diphthong of the type  , noticeably different from London . The modern accent demonstrates happy-tensing, and this vowel therefore also occurs in the modern dialects in the lexical set of money, city, etc.

 

Unstressed they has /i:/ Are they coming? /a:ði:kΛmə​n/. In the traditional dialect, mice was /mi:s/, and deaf could be /di:f/.

 

FACE In the traditional dialects of East Anglia, the Long Mid Mergers have not taken place (Wells 1982: 192–194). The vowel /æi/ in these lects occurs only in items descended from ME /ai/, while items descended from ME /a:/ have /e:/ = [e: ~ ε:]. Thus pairs such as days-daze, maid-made are not homophonous. (The /e:/ vowel also occurred in the older dialect in a number of words descended from ME /ε:/ such as beans, creature .) This distinction, which now survives only in the northern area, is currently being lost through a process of transfer of lexical items from /e:/ to /æi/ (Trudgill and Foxcroft 1978). The most local modern pronunciation of /æi/ is [æi], but qualities intermediate between this and RP  occur in middle-class speech.