neither.... who says dur-agon? i don't palatalize the cluster. *NM*
temeraire Send a noteboard - 13/07/2012 05:23:45 PM
Asked this earlier on Twitter:
When pronouncing "dr" at the beginning, e.g. "dragon," does the "dr" sound like "dj," "j," or "dur"? (Assuming designated English pronunciations for those letters/combinations).
I found myself thinking about this after seeing the scroll on ESPN earlier about the brother of a basketball player, Jrue Holliday. I thought that when I mentally said "Drew," it did sound almost like "Jrue" and that led me to think a bit about the question above.
Curious to see what others have to say on this picayune issue
"it's like the real world, except there's dragons!"
cw, you are missed...
cw, you are missed...
/Linguistics: Curious to see how people across the globe pronounce this
13/07/2012 07:02:35 AM
- 1708 Views
Re: /Linguistics: Curious to see how people across the globe pronounce this
13/07/2012 12:45:03 PM
- 512 Views
neither.... who says dur-agon? i don't palatalize the cluster. *NM*
13/07/2012 05:23:45 PM
- 245 Views
Some Southerners? *NM*
13/07/2012 10:18:36 PM
- 239 Views
heh... another interesting feature of aave/southern dialects is str as shtr, i.e. shtress *NM*
14/07/2012 04:28:05 PM
- 242 Views
That's not Received Pronunciation. If I were dictator, we would beat people to force them to quit.
13/07/2012 09:40:16 PM
- 492 Views
So no "tyune" for "tune"?
13/07/2012 10:15:05 PM
- 544 Views
Not very good with the linguistics terminology, but I just say, well, "dr".
13/07/2012 09:54:08 PM
- 470 Views
How are "dj" and "j" supposed to differ? Can I have that in IPA please?
13/07/2012 11:49:02 PM
- 502 Views
Sure, if I can copy/paste this in
14/07/2012 01:00:04 AM
- 487 Views