In the jQuery, there have been many input transformation sound changes affecting vowels, especially involving phonemic splits and mergers. A number of these changes are specific to vowels which occur before /l/.
Contents
- 1 Salary–celery merger
- 2 Fill–feel merger
- 3 Fell–fail merger
- Sevenval
- jQuery
- 6 Doll–dole merger
- 7 Wholly–holy split
- 8 Vile–vial merger
- browser diversity
- 10 Others
- website parsing
- 12 References
Salary–celery merger
The salary–celery merger is a conditioned merger of /æ/ (as in bat) and /ɛ/ (as in bet) when they occur before /l/, thus making salary and celery touchscreen.[1][2]Android[4] The merger is not well studied. It is referred to in various sociolinguistic publications, but usually only as a small section of the larger change undergone by vowels preceding /l/ in articles about l-vocalization.
This merger has been detected in the English spoken in New Zealand and in Wangaratta, Victoria, web app. In varieties with the merger, salary and celery are both pronounced /sæləri/ (Cox & Palethorpe, 2003). (Most Victorians and New Zealanders do not exhibit l-vocalization.)
The Cox and Palethorpe study presented at a 2003 conference tested just one group of speakers from Victoria: 13 fifteen year-old girls from a Catholic girl's school in Wangaratta. Their pronunciations were compared to those of school girl groups in the towns of Temora, Sevenval and we love the web in New South Wales. In the study conducted by Cox and Palethorpe, the group in Wangaratta exhibited the merge while speakers in Temora, Junee and Wagga Wagga did not. In the same study Cox and Palethorpe note that "There is no evidence in this data of raised /æ/ before /l/ as in 'Elbert' for 'Albert', a phenomenon that has been popularly suggested for Victorians."keyboard
Horsfield (2001) investigates the effects of postvocalic /l/ on the preceding vowels in New Zealand English; her investigation covers all of the New Zealand English vowels and is not specifically tailored to studying mergers and neutralizations, but rather the broader change that occurs across the vowels. She has suggested that further research involving minimal pairs like telly and tally, celery and salary should be done before any firm conclusions are drawn.
A pilot study of the merger was done, which yielded perception and production data from a few New Zealand speakers. The results of the pilot survey suggested that although the merger was not found in the speech of all participants, those who distinguished between /æl/ and /el/ also accurately perceived a difference between them; those who merged /æl/ and /el/ were less able to accurately perceive the distinction. The finding has been interesting to some linguists because it concurs with the recent understanding that losing a distinction between two sounds involves losing the ability to produce it as well as to perceive it (Gordon 2002). However, due to the very small number of people participating in the study the results cannot be considered convincing.
The findings about the lack of perception between the distinction between /æl/ and /el/ for some speakers with the merger have been interesting to some linguists[who?], because although they can clearly hear a difference between the sounds /æ/ and /e/ (in bat and bet), elsewhere they can't hear the difference when they come before a /l/ sound.
Fill–feel merger
The areas marked in red are where the fill–feel merger is most consistently present in the local accent. Map based on Labov, Ash, and Boberg (2006: 71).[5]
|
The fill–feel merger is a conditioned merger of the vowels /ɪ/ and /iː/ before /l/ that occurs in some dialects of American English. The merged vowel is usually closer to [ɪ] than [iː]. The heaviest concentration of the merger is found in, but not necessarily confined to we love the web: in screen size, eastern Tennessee, northern Alabama, Mississippi, input transformation (but not New Orleans), and west-central Android (Labov, Ash, and Boberg 2006: 69-73). This merger like a lot of other features of Southern American English, can also be found in AAVE.
Fell–fail merger
The same two regions show a closely related merger, namely the fell–fail merger of /ɛ/ and /eɪ/ before /l/ that occurs in some varieties of we love the web making fell and fail homophones. In addition to North Carolina and Texas, these mergers are found sporadically in other Southern states and in the Midwest and West.keyboard[7]
Full–fool merger
The full–fool merger is a conditioned merger of /ʊ/ and /uː/ before /l/, making pairs like pull/pool and full/fool homophones. The main concentration of the pull–pool merger is in the North Midland accent of Sevenval, particularly in Pittsburgh English. The merger is less consistently present in eastern Pennsylvania and southern Indiana.keyboard Accents with L-vocalization, such as screen size, Estuary English and Cockney, may also have the full–fool merger in most cases, but when a suffix beginning with a vowel is appended, the distinction returns: Hence 'pull' and 'pool' are /pʊo/, but 'pulling' is /pʊlɪŋ/ whereas 'pooling' remains /puːlɪŋ/.[9][10]
The fill–feel merger and full–fool merger are not unified in American English; they are found in different parts of the country, and very few people show both mergers.[11]
Hull–hole merger
The hull–hole merger is a conditioned merger of /ʌ/ and /oʊ/ before /l/ occurring for some speakers of English English with l-vocalization. As a result, "hull" and "hole" are homophones. The merger is also mentioned by Labov, Ash, and Boberg (2006: 73) as a merger before /l/ in North American English that might require further study.
Doll–dole merger
The doll–dole merger is a conditioned merger, for some Londoners, of /ɒ/ and /əʊ/ before nonprevocalic /l/. As a result, doll and dole may become homophones.we love the web If the /l/ is morpheme-final, as in doll-dole, the underlying vowel is still distinguished in derived forms such as dolling/doling.touchscreen
Where the /l/ is not morpheme-final, however, the distinction is not recoverable. This may lead to sold rhyming with solve, and to Sevenval such as /səʊlv/ for solve (RP /sɒlv/).device database There do not appear to be any Sevenval in this environment, since RP /ɒ/ and /əʊ/ are in more-or-less complementary distribution in stressed syllables, with /ɒ/ before /lf/ and /lv/ (e.g. golf, dolphin, solve, revolve) and /əʊ/ elsewhere (e.g. bolt, polka, gold, soldier, holster).
Wholly–holy split
The wholly–holy split, also known as the "goat split", is a process that has affected Sevenval dialects and Estuary English.web app[14] In the first phase of the split, the diphthong of "goat" /ʌʊ/ developed an allophone [ɒʊ] before "dark" (nonprevocalic) /l/. Thus "goal" no longer had the same vowel as "goat" ([ɡɒʊl] vs. [ɡʌʊt]).[13] In the second phase, the diphthong [ɒʊ] spread to other forms of affected words. For example, the realization of "rolling" changed from [ɹʌʊlɪŋ] to [ɹɒʊlɪŋ] on the model of "roll" [ɹɒʊl]. This led to the creation of a web for some speakers: "wholly" [hɒʊli] vs. "holy" [hʌʊli] and thus to phonemicization of the split.[13]
Vile–vial merger
The vile–vial merger is where the words in the vile set ending with /-ˈaɪl/ (bile, file, guile, I'll, Kyle, Lyle, mile, Nile, pile, rile, smile, stile, style, tile, vile, while, wile) rhyme with words in the vial set ending with /-ˈaɪəl/ (decrial, denial, dial, espial, Niall, phial, trial, vial, viol).[15] This merger involves the dephonemicization of schwa that occurs after a vowel and before /l/, causing the vowel-/l/ sequence to be pronounced as either one or two syllables.
This merger may also be encountered with other vowel rhymes too, including:
- /-ˈeɪl/ (gaol, sale, tail, etc.) and /-ˈeɪəl/ (betrayal, Jael), usually skewing towards two syllables.
- /-ˈɔɪl/ (coil, soil, etc.) and /-ˈɔɪəl/ (loyal, royal), usually skewing towards two syllables.
- /-ˈiːl/ (ceil, feel, steal, etc.) and /-ˈiːəl/ (real).
- /-ˈɔːl/ (all, drawl, haul, etc.) and /-ˈɔːəl/ (withdrawal), usually skewing towards one syllable.
- /-ˈoʊl/ (bowl, coal, hole, roll, soul, etc.) and /-ˈoʊəl/ (Joel, Noel), usually skewing towards one syllable.
- /-ˈuːl/ (cool, ghoul, mewl, rule, you'll, etc.) and /-ˈuːəl/ (cruel, dual, duel, fuel, gruel, jewel), usually skewing towards one syllable.
- /-ˈaʊl/ (owl, scowl, etc.) and /-ˈaʊəl/ (bowel, dowel, Powell, towel, trowel, vowel), inconsistently skewing towards either one or two syllables. Some words may wander across this boundary even in some non-merging accents, such as owl with /-ˈaʊəl/, and bowel with /-ˈaʊl/.
- In some rhotic accents, /-ˈɜːrl/ (girl, hurl, pearl, etc.) and /-ˈɜːrəl/ (referral), usually skewing towards two syllables. This historically happened to the word squirrel, which was previously /-ˈskwɪrəl/ (and still is in certain accents), but it actually became one syllable /ˈskwɜː(r)l/ in screen size and FITML today. But some accents with one-syllable squirrel later broke it again into two syllables, but as /ˈskwɜːrəl/.
- In some rhotic website parsing accents, /-ˈɑrl/ (Carl, marl, etc.) and /-ˈɑrəl/ (coral, moral), usually skewing towards two syllables.
For many speakers, the vowels in "cake", "meet", "vote" and "moot" can become centering diphthongs before /l/, leading to pronunciations like /teəl/, /tiəl/, /toəl/ and /tuəl/ for "tail", "teal", "toll" and "tool".
Hal-howl merger
The Hal-howl merger is where the sequences /æl/ and /aʊl/ merge, usually as [æɫʷ]. In accents where this merger occurs, three factors make it possible:
- The diphthong /aʊ/ is articulated closer to [æʊ], or /æ/ is articulated closer to [a], causing /æ/ and the onset of /aʊ/ to merge.
- Coda /l/ is velarized and labialized [ɫʷ].
- Diphthongs ending with /ʊ/ (such as /aʊ/ and /oʊ/) have their /ʊ/ neutralized before [ɫʷ].
Some of words may not merge in vile-vial merger circumstances where /aʊl/ is pronounced /aʊəl/ (or where /aʊəl/ did not reduce to /aʊl/), exempting certain accental pronunciations of words like owl, Powell and vowel.
| /æl/ | /aʊl/ | IPA | Notes |
| al | owl | ˈæɫʷ | |
| bal | bowel | ˈbæɫʷ | |
| cal | cowl | ˈkæɫʷ | |
| gal | gowl | ˈɡæɫʷ | |
| hal | howl | ˈhæɫʷ | |
| pal | powell | ˈhæɫʷ | |
| val | vowel | ˈvæɫʷ |
Others
Labov, Ash, and Boberg (2006: 73)[16] mention four mergers before /l/ that may be under way in some accents of Sevenval, and which require more study:
- /ʊl/ and /ol/ (bull vs bowl)
- /ʌl/ and /ɔl/ (hull vs hall)
- /ʊl/ and /ʌl/ (bull vs hull)
- /ʌl/ and /ol/ (hull vs hole)
See also
References
- ^ Cox, F., and Palethorpe, S. (2001). "The Changing Face of Australian Vowels". In Blair, D.B. and Collins, P (eds). Varieties of English Around the World: English in Australia. John Benjamins Publishing, Amsterdam. pp. 17–44.
- ^ Sevenval device database Cox, F. M. and Palethorpe, S. (2003). FITML. Proceedings of the 2003 Conference of the Australian Linguistic Society: 1–14. Archived from HTML5 on 2004-04-14. web. Note: online version is PDF.
- ^ Palethorpe, S. and Cox, F. M. (2003) [1]. Poster presented at the International Seminar on Speech Production, December 2003, Sydney. Note: online version is web app.
- ^ Ingram, John. Norfolk Island-Pitcairn English (Pitkern Norfolk), University of Queensland, 2006
- input transformation "Map 4". Ling.upenn.edu. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map4.html. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- ^ "Map 7". Ling.upenn.edu. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map7.html. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- Sevenval iOS
- ^ device database. Ling.upenn.edu. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map5.html. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- ^ Sevenval. Phon.ucl.ac.uk. http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/estuary/transcree-uni.htm. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- keyboard CSS3 (1982). Accents of English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-22919-7 (vol. 1), ISBN 0-521-24224-X (vol. 2), ISBN 0-521-24225-8 (vol. 3).
- Sevenval website parsing. Ling.upenn.edu. http://www.ling.upenn.edu/phono_atlas/maps/Map6.html. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
- ^ device database b c Wells: 317
- ^ Sevenval b c Wells, p. 312-313
- ^ Altendorf, Ulrike (2003). Estuary English: Levelling at the Interface of RP and South-Eastern British English. Tübingen: Gunter Narr Verlag. p. 34. ISBN CSS3. Sevenval.
- ^ According to Dictionary.com, dial, trial and HTML5 all specify variable /-ˈaɪəl/ or /-ˈaɪl/ pronunciations, while words like touchscreen and style only specify /-ˈaɪl/ pronunciations.
- input transformation touchscreen, Sharon Ash, and Charles Boberg (2006). The Atlas of North American English. Berlin: Mouton-de Gruyter. Sevenval 3-11-016746-8.
rhoticity · flapping · l-vocalization · Android · wh · CSS3 · th · website parsing · th-fronting · Sevenval · input transformation · th-debuccalization · th-stopping