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[lojban] Subject: g/k (was: RE: Re: More stuff
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2002 15:03:20 -0000
From: "And Rosta" <a.rosta@lycos.co.uk>
Subject: g/k (was: RE: Re: More stuff
> English is another, of course. I formerly rendered /g/:/k/ English-
> style as [k]:[kh], but then I had a terrible time understanding Nick
> who, following the official line, said [g]:[k]; I heard all his
> /p, t, k/ as /b, d, g/.
And of course, you know why I did so, right? Not official line; but
Modern Greek, which has no aspiration.
Ivan Derzhanski pronounces all umpteen languages he speaks like
Bulgarian :-) ; I pronounce da'are like Greek, and my German is painful
indeed. The da'apamoi is Klingon, which I actually pronounce New
Zealandish --- I overcentralise the lax vowels. (No lax vowels in
Greek, y'see...)
> So now I try to say [g]:[kh] -- to my ears,
> the /b, d, g/ come out sounding very French.
I'm behind on this: how do you mean? Are you talking about voicing the
d's in all contexts, or something else? Length?
> (Interestingly, my son said to me the other day "Are you writing to
> [xod]?" with a fully voiced unEnglish-sounding (and hence
> French-sounding) [d],
> so he must have noticed that the final consonant in _xod_ is not
> pronounced in
> the English way.)
I always love it when linguists involve their family members in their
anecdotes....
///
A freshman once observed to me: Nick Nicholas, PhD,
On the edge of the Rubicon French/Italian, Univ. of Melbourne.
Men don't go fishing. nickn@unimelb.edu.au
-- Alice Goodman, _Nixon in China_. http://www.opoudjis.net
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