pne: A picture of a plush toy, halfway between a duck and a platypus, with a green body and a yellow bill and feet. (Default)
Philip Newton ([personal profile] pne) wrote2010-10-09 04:57 pm

/t/

I was flipping through YouTube, from one performance of O Come, All Ye Faithful to the next and happened across this one by “Celtic Woman”.

And listening to it, I found one of the things that struck me was their pronunciation of intervocalic /t/: I found that I really liked hearing a “proper” [t] there rather than the flap that’s characteristic of many American accents.

I guess what you grew up with is what you identify with as “normal” (in the “normative” sense). (I also tend to like non-rhotic accents, probably for much the same reason.)

sophie: A cartoon-like representation of a girl standing on a hill, with brown hair, blue eyes, a flowery top, and blue skirt. ☀ (Default)

[personal profile] sophie 2010-10-09 04:50 pm (UTC)(link)

I actually have the DVD that video is from, which is called "A Christmas Celebration". (I actually bought it after seeing videos from it on YouTube, heh... that's how I came to know of Celtic Woman in the first place!)

Do take a listen to the other songs. Some of my favourites:

Yeah, I'm a fan. Can you tell? :)

ailbhe: (Default)

[personal profile] ailbhe 2010-10-09 07:23 pm (UTC)(link)
I had no idea who they were but I could hear the Irish t (which isn't the same as the English t) at the beginnings and ends of words, like light, to, etc. It struck me as odd because there was a definite "come and ado'e" without the R I expected given the rest of the accent. Are some of them Irish and some not?
asciident: (Default)

[personal profile] asciident 2010-10-10 04:47 am (UTC)(link)
For what Wikipedia's worth, they're all Irish.