User:Gilgamesh~enwiki/New General American

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This is an attempt to describe the phonology of General American (GA) English as it is most commonly spoken by people my age (b. 1980) and younger.

Consonants[edit]

Bilabial Labio-
dental
Dental Alveolar Post-
alveolar
Palatal Velar Labio-
velar
Glottal
Nasal m n ŋ
Plosive p b t d k ɡ (ʔ)
Affricate
Fricative f v θ ð s z ʃ ʒ h
Approximant ɹ j (ʍ) w
Lateral l
  • The plosives /p t k/ and the affricate /tʃ/ have aspirated allophones [pʰ tʃʰ kʰ] at the very beginning of stressed syllables. But this aspiration does not occur if the consonant comes immediately after another consonant beginning the syllable, so the clusters [ˈsp ˈst ˈsk] are not aspirated. But the syllable boundary is an important determining factor, so the sequences /sˈp sˈt sˈtʃ sˈk/ still become [sˈpʰ sˈtʰ sˈtʃʰ sˈkʰ].
  • /t/ and /d/ have an allophone, the alveolar flap [ɾ], only between vowels where the next syllable is not stressed, or at the end of a word before another word that starts with a vowel. This is called intervocalic alveolar flapping, and is a fundamental sandhi in GA. Some speakers may actually weakly distinguish /t/ from /d/ in polished speech by flapping them as voiceless [ɾ̥] and voiced [ɾ] respectively; but most speakers do not do this, and will only hear [ɾ], which they will perceive as an allophone of /d/. For example, better /ˈbɛt.əɹ/ can be articulated as [ˈbɛɾ̥.əɹ], but it is usually said and heard as [ˈbɛɾ.əɹ] and a homophone of bedder /ˈbɛd.əɹ/.
  • Similarly, /nt/ and /n/ have a related allophone, a nasalized alveolar flap [ɾ̃], with voiceless nasalized [ɾ̥̃] as a possible weak distinction for /nt/. For example, banter /ˈbænt.əɹ/ can be articulated as [ˈbæɾ̥̃.əɹ], but it is usually said and heard as [ˈbæɾ̃.əɹ] and a homophone of banner /ˈbæn.əɹ/.
  • [ʔ] is abundant in speech, but /ʔ/ is a conditionally independent phoneme which can only be perceived as an independent phoneme word-internally before a vowel. It is extremely scarce in words of native English origin, but can be found in interjections like uh-oh /ˈɜʔ.ɵʊ/. In loanwords from other languages with this phoneme (particularly from Hawaiian), /ʔ/ is less likely to be retained in place names (like Hawaii), but is usually retained in learnt terms like 'a'a /ˈɑʔ.ɑ/. If [ʔ] is found at the beginning of a word, it is not a separate phoneme, but prosthetic consonant for sentences that begin with a vowel. If [ʔ] is found word-internally before a consonant, or at the end of a word, it is usually perceived as an allophone of /t/. [ʔ] as an allophone of other plosives is possible, such as temp /ˈtɛmp/ having a possible articulation of [ˈtʰɛmʔ]. It is even possible for [ʔ] to appear before [t], such as with tempt /ˈtɛmpt/ having a possible articulation of [ˈtʰɛmʔt].
  • The phonemes ð/ are often only weakly distinguished in the combinations /sθ zð/. While enunciations of [sθ zð] can be heard, they are usually [sː zː] in relaxed speech. Additionally, the sequence /nð/ can be heard as [n̪ː] or [n̪d̪] without affecting the underlying perception of both consonant phonemes.
  • The phonemes /v ð/ used to have more prominent approximant allophones of ð̞], but these have mostly restrengthened into fricatives among younger speakers.
  • /ʍ/ is all but extinct in natural speech, having been replaced by /w/. However, it is still a known distinction, and speakers can enunciate the distinction with effort. Those who fail to perceive /ʍ/ as a phoneme in its own right may perceive its enunciated articulations as the consonant cluster /hw/.
  • /l/ has a "dark" allophone of [ɫ] which practically always is the realization at the end of closed syllables. /l/ elsewhere can be "clear" [l] or "dark" [ɫ] in free variation. However, "dark" [ɫ] also greatly affects most vowels that precede it, while "light" [l] does not do this; see Vowels.
  • GA has yod-dropping before all coronal consonants.

Vowels[edit]

Lexical set IPA + [ɫ]
KIT ɪ ɪɤl
DRESS ɛ ɛɤl
TRAP æ æɤl
LOT ɑ ɑl
STRUT ɜ ɤl
FOOT ɤ ɤl
BATH æ -
CLOTH ɒ~ɑ -
NURSE ɵɹ ɵɹ.ɤl
FLEECE i i.ɤl
FACE ɛɪ ɛɪ.ɤl
PALM ɑ ɑl
THOUGHT ɒ~ɑ ɑl
GOAT ɵʊ ɤl
GOOSE ᵻu ɯl
PRICE ɑɪ ɑɪ.ɤl
CHOICE ɔɪ ɔɪ.ɤl
MOUTH æʊ æɤl
NEAR ɪɹ -
SQUARE eɹ~ɛɹ -
START ɑɹ ɑɹ.ɤl
NORTH ɔɹ -
FORCE ɔɹ -
TOUR ʊɹ -
HAPPY i -
LETTER əɹ -
COMMA ə ɤl
  • Only back unrounded vowels are stable before [ɫ]. /ɪɤ/, /ɛɤ/ and /ɯ/ function as allophones of KIT /ɪ/, DRESS /ɛ/ and GOOSE /ᵻu/ respectively, because the former three are only found before [ɫ].
  • [ɫ] splits off into an additional syllable /.ɤl/ after NURSE /ɵɹ/, FLEECE /i/, FACE /ɛɪ/, PRICE /ɑɪ/, CHOICE /ɔɪ/ or START /ɑɹ/.
  • TRAP /æ/ and MOUTH /æʊ/ merge as /æɤ/ before [ɫ]. However, owl is two-syllable /ˈæʊ.ɤl/.
  • TRAP /æ/ and DRESS /ɛ/ become FACE /ɛɪ/ usually become before /ŋ/. Certain words, like anger and angry, are more likely to keep their /æ/, resulting in a phoneme split. KIT /ɪ/ tenses into FLEECE /i/ before /ŋ/.
  • STRUT /ɜ/, FOOT /ɤ/, GOAT /ɵʊ/ and COMMA /ə/ merge as /ɤ/ before [ɫ].
  • The cot-caught merger is variable in GA, depending on the speaker. Speakers with the merger tend to pronounce CLOTH/THOUGHT as LOT/PALM. Even many speakers without the merger distinguish the phonemes in a subtle way.
  • Some GA speakers have æ-tensing in certain words of the TRAP set and in practically all of the BATH set. This tense articulation is at or near /ɛæ/. Others use the plain TRAP vowel for all of these without lexically-distinctive tensing or lack thereof. At this time there is still seldom any conscious distinction between lax /æ/ and tense /ɛæ/, and dictionaries do not usually treat them as separate phonemes.
  • The GOOSE vowel /ᵻu/ has an allophone /ᵿu/, /ʊu/ or /u/ after bilabial consonants.
  • A distinction between SQUARE and a combination of DRESS+/ɹ/ may still be recognized by some GA speakers in regions where the Mary-marry-merry merger has not gone through. For those without the merger, SQUARE may be realized as /eɹ/ or similar. For those with the merger, it as well as /æɹ/ merge with /ɛɹ/.
  • A combination of LOT+/ɹ/ was historically [ɒɹ], and today there is still a split between some GA speakers who have /ɑɹ/ for them all, and the greater majority of those who have /ɑɹ/ in -orrow words and in sorry but /ɔɹ/ in virtually every other case. Provisionally, a broad notation of /ɒɹ/ can be used for LOT+/ɹ/.
  • The horse-hoarse merger is widespread, such that a distinction between NORTH and FORCE is long-extinct outside of a few increasingly isolated regions where the merger has not yet gone through. For a theoretical minority who still make it, a broad transcription of /oɹ/ can be used for the FORCE set.
  • The traditional CURE set is here renamed TOUR, because /jʊɹ/ (as would be found in cure) is no longer a stable combination in GA. Instead, /jɵɹ/ is found in those words, using the NURSE vowel. Some other words in the traditional TOUR set also do not have /ʊɹ/:
    • poor, whore, your and the name Moore (but not the word moor) may have the FORCE vowel (and thus, for most GA speakers, the NORTH vowel). door and floor always have FORCE, in GA and worldwide.
    • Most -ure and -ur- words usually have the NURSE vowel, even with yod-dropping.

Samples[edit]