المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6222 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
الشكر قناة موصلة للنعم الإلهية
2025-01-12
أسباب ودوافع الكفران وطرق علاجه
2025-01-12
عواقب كفران النعمة
2025-01-12
معنى كفران النعمة
2025-01-12
دور الإدارة الحكوميـة فـي التنـميـة التكـنولوجـيـة 2
2025-01-12
دور الإدارة الحكوميـة فـي التنـميـة التكـنولوجـيـة 1
2025-01-12

Micronutrients: Minerals
15-12-2021
Gavin Brown
24-3-2018
تكوين العقد الجذرية Nodulation
5-5-2019
Cubic Triangular Number
16-12-2020
محلول واطئ التوتر Hypotonic Solution
4-9-2018
Insect Resistance
12-12-2020

Consonants NG  
  
880   08:15 صباحاً   date: 2024-03-02
Author : Urszula Clark
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 155-7


Read More
Date: 2024-03-06 724
Date: 2024-07-02 501
Date: 2024-03-02 825

Consonants NG

As noted above, the NG variable provides one major distinguishing factor as regards the WM dialect. As Hughes and Trudgill (1996: 63) explain, most varieties do not, in informal speech, have [ŋ] in <-ing>, but rather [n]. However, in a West-Central area of England (including Birmingham, Coventry, Stoke, Manchester, Liverpool and Sheffield, as well as rural counties including Staffordshire and parts of Warwickshire) there is a form [ŋg] for cases showing <ng> in the spelling. Thus, as Wells (1982: 365–366) notes, while most accents of English have a three term system of nasals, the West Midlands and parts of the (southern) North-West have a two-term system whereby [ŋ] is merely an allophone of /n/. Wells calls this phenomenon velar nasal plus. Most accents (including RP) have [ŋ] in words like song, hang, wrong; but some Northern accents are non-NG-coalescing and so disallow final [ŋ] (at least after stressed vowels).

 

Chinn and Thorne (2001: 22) go so far as to suggest that while [ŋg] frequently occurs in the speech of younger Birmingham speakers, this pattern may actually be a recent development, as it is “not altogether true” of older speakers. Wells notes that [ŋg] occurs well up the social scale; Heath (1980) found it in all social classes in Cannock, while in the BC [ŋ] has been reported as occurring in unstressed word-final syllables (thus [Imo:niŋ] vs.  ). Indeed, although NG is stereotypically realized as [ŋg] in the WM dialect, analysis of the BCDP data makes it clear that there is variation (particularly among younger speakers) between [ŋg] and [n] and [ŋ].

 

Similarly, for Sandwell, Mathisen (1999: 111) notes word-final [ŋg ~ ŋ]  and [ŋg] before a word-initial suffix, but comments that it is subject to considerable stylistic variation, with [ŋg] favored by teenage women and for monitored speech.

 

The potential alternation between [n] and [ŋg] in BC is noted also by Biddulph (1986: 12).