Amy's pronunciation
Saturday, 24 January 2009 19:25I think Amy's slowly twigging to the fact that /æ/ and /ɛ/ are separate phonemes in English, but occasionally mixes them up. (In German, both sounds tend to become /ɛ/ in loanwords, so e.g. "band" in the musical sense is pronounced like "bent".)
She usually gets the sounds right, and I think she's beginning to realise that she can pronounce both sounds distinctly, and that this is important in English.
no subject
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009 09:01 (UTC)Interesting. I wonder whether something similar in Dutch (and thence Afrikaans) might have led South African English to merge /æ/ and /ɛ/?
no subject
Date: Monday, 26 January 2009 23:14 (UTC)no subject
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009 14:27 (UTC)But in any event, I can't say I've ever heard the pronunciation [e:] from any South African for the phoneme /ɛ/; [e] perhaps, but never lengthened.
no subject
Date: Tuesday, 27 January 2009 22:04 (UTC)That's entirely possible. Since German basically only has [e:], I'm not sure I'd be able to tell [e] and [e:] apart easily.
no subject
Date: Wednesday, 28 January 2009 05:55 (UTC)In native words, yes - but what about in words such as "Geografie"?
(Though at least one dictionary I saw used the half-length mark for such vowels, rather than leaving them short by default. Similarly with other vowels in un(-primary-)stressed open syllables such as Politik or Pyramide.)
Though having said that, I realise that the difference in length is not phonemic, so your point still stands, I think.