المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6697 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension
Teaching Methods

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية


Consonant deletion  
  
1048   11:48 صباحاً   date: 2024-07-06
Author : Edgar W. Schneider
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 1126-67


Read More
Date: 2024-05-02 856
Date: 2024-07-02 798
Date: 2024-06-28 845

Consonant deletion

English is fairly unique among the world’s major languages in allowing complex consonant clusters, with sequences of up to four consonants in a row, and so the reduction of such clusters conforms to a natural tendency towards simplification and less marked phonotactic patterns. It is therefore not a surprise that such simplification tendencies are fairly widespread. Omitting a non-functional word-final consonant preceded by another one (e.g. wasp > was’) is the norm in the Caribbean, in ethnic dialects and contact forms of AmE, in LSE and Cameroon, and in South-East Asia, and it also occurs variably in all dialects of AmE, all non-white dialects of SAfE, and also in northern England. If the last consonant is the sole realization of an inflectional morpheme (e.g. helped > help’), the ensuing loss of information inhibits the process, which thus occurs less frequently but is nevertheless documented in roughly the same regions. Word-final single consonants (e.g. cut > cu’) are deleted much more reluctantly. In comparison, the simplification of word-initial consonant clusters (e.g. splash > ‘plash) is much more restricted, mostly to contact-induced varieties, including BrC, JamC, T&TC, and a few West African and Asian varieties.