Sujet : Re: PTD was the most-respected of the AUE regulars ...
De : ram (at) *nospam* zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram)
Groupes : sci.lang alt.usage.englishDate : 26. Jul 2024, 18:53:07
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Stefan Ram
Message-ID : <uw-20240726185013@ram.dialup.fu-berlin.de>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
ram@zedat.fu-berlin.de (Stefan Ram) wrote or quoted:
ˈɹʷʊˑuɿ ᵊɹ̩
And this [ʊˑu] is what some authors write as [ʊu̯]. Both
notations express that the first part is longer than the
second part, they just differ in whether the author sees the
first part to be longer than a vowel of unmarked length or the
second part to be shorter than a vowel of unmarked length . . .
Now, let's quote Peter again. Peter, please tell us something
about your use of IPA!
|I am not using any sort of IPA; if you would for once in your life
|REMEMBER something you claim to have learned, you would note that I am
|writing phonemes, not a phonetic transcription; and for a phonemic
|transcription I, and most American linguists, use the Smith-Trager
|phonemicization.
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Peter T. Daniels on 2003-07-21 22:25:09+00:00 in alt.usage.english,
Subject: viral words
Thank you, Peter!
Ah! Who knows this Smith-Trager phonemicization? Well, I actually
found a description!
|(Smith-Trager, after Bloomfield)
|
|iy uw
|
|i u
|
|ey ə ow
|
|e o
|
|æ a
|
what I found in the Web.
And this "uw" is what some authors write as [ʊu]! Both
notations express that the first part is more open than the
second part, they just differ in whether the author sees the
first part to be more open than the cardinal [u] or the
second part to be closer than a cardinal [u] . . .