Date: Thursday, 25 November 2004 19:25 (UTC)
ext_21000: (Default)
From: [identity profile] tungol.livejournal.com
Yeah, I'm a "John"-rhyming Canadian. And vase rhymes with flaws.

Date: Thursday, 25 November 2004 19:26 (UTC)
ext_21000: (Default)
From: [identity profile] tungol.livejournal.com
Grr, not thinking straight. Scone rhymes with "Joan", not "John" for me.

Date: Thursday, 25 November 2004 20:08 (UTC)
ext_78: A picture of a plush animal. It looks a bit like a cross between a duck and a platypus. (Default)
From: [identity profile] pne.livejournal.com
vase rhymes with flaws

First time I've heard that pronunciation!

(Unless you also rhyme "father" and "bother", I suppose, so your "long-ah" and "long-aw" phonemes are not separate as they are in my idiolect)

Date: Thursday, 25 November 2004 20:56 (UTC)
ext_21000: (Default)
From: [identity profile] tungol.livejournal.com
Yes, I rhyme father and bother. They're both /A/ (or possibly /Q/, I've never gotten a clear handle on the difference between those two sounds). I never know which words have which vowel that other people distinguish.

Date: Friday, 26 November 2004 12:07 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] robnorth.livejournal.com
Yup, us Canadians are pretty lazy with our vowels. "Father" rhymes with "bother", "ant" rhymes with "aunt", "lot" rhymes with "caught", etc. etc.

And we don't say "oot" and "aboot"! We just don't emphasise each vowel in the "ou" diphthong as much as Americans do; we sort of gloss it together into one compromise vowel sound that isn't "short oo". For me, I think it's a kind of "eh-oo" diphthong, rather than the "ahh-oo" that (I think) most Americans use.

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