Not very good with the linguistics terminology, but I just say, well, "dr".
Legolas Send a noteboard - 13/07/2012 09:54:08 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).
So if that was supposed to be an exhaustive list of possibilities, I don't really see myself fitting any of them...
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.
I can see how you'd think that, I guess, though that might just have to do with how very unusual that "jr" is in English (or for that matter any other language I know).
/Linguistics: Curious to see how people across the globe pronounce this
13/07/2012 07:02:35 AM
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Re: /Linguistics: Curious to see how people across the globe pronounce this
13/07/2012 12:45:03 PM
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neither.... who says dur-agon? i don't palatalize the cluster. *NM*
13/07/2012 05:23:45 PM
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Some Southerners? *NM*
13/07/2012 10:18:36 PM
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heh... another interesting feature of aave/southern dialects is str as shtr, i.e. shtress *NM*
14/07/2012 04:28:05 PM
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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
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So no "tyune" for "tune"?
13/07/2012 10:15:05 PM
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Not very good with the linguistics terminology, but I just say, well, "dr".
13/07/2012 09:54:08 PM
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How are "dj" and "j" supposed to differ? Can I have that in IPA please?
13/07/2012 11:49:02 PM
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Sure, if I can copy/paste this in
14/07/2012 01:00:04 AM
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