tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382369381372118960.post7583483988908852097..comments2024-01-08T18:25:51.974+00:00Comments on Kraut's English phonetic blog: From the pressKrauthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11932831673529849848noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382369381372118960.post-50594009042864704752015-07-26T00:34:48.653+01:002015-07-26T00:34:48.653+01:00Yes indeed Petr. They're using ultrasound appa...Yes indeed Petr. They're using ultrasound apparently. I have X-ray motion films of uvular r in South Swedish and most uvular consonants in Greenlandic Inuit, but not English. They all have uvular constrictions in the upper pharynx. The uvula itself is not a good place for these consonants, it would get in the way for stops and fricatives as there are open passages on either side. Sidney Woodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01138711082469220983noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382369381372118960.post-89881405247462486962015-07-25T19:28:19.196+01:002015-07-25T19:28:19.196+01:00Your're right, Sidney. Ms Lawson says fairly a...Your're right, Sidney. Ms Lawson says fairly at the beginning of the interview: "So I don't think this is a case of Anglicisation [...]" and then later on "In Anglo-English /r/ began to disappear from about 1700 [...]". What I would like to see is the pharyngeal offglide (or "pharyngealised vowel" to use her term) of this Scottish arr in words like <i>car, cart</i> or <i>first</i> in an MRI film - they have the technical gadgets /ʊp/ there.Krauthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11932831673529849848noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2382369381372118960.post-85178301709008353592015-07-25T13:18:14.446+01:002015-07-25T13:18:14.446+01:00Too many bishops among their informants? I think L...Too many bishops among their informants? I think Lawson said Anglo-English in the podcast interview, but Anglican certainly occurs in the text on the "World in Words" page! The interesting part for me was the bunched-tongue Scottish examples which are approximants not trills or fricatives, which is also far more common in England than the RP apical types. I'm sure this will turn out to be uvular.Sidney Woodhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01138711082469220983noreply@blogger.com