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USAGE: English vowel transcription

From:Roger Mills <romilly@...>
Date:Thursday, October 12, 2000, 21:23
Nik Taylor wrote:

>Roger Mills wrote: >> but of course [æ], [I], [a] are now totally unrelated phonetically >> to [eI], [aI] and [oU] etc. > >I don't know if it was because of the spelling, but /E/ and /i/, /I/ and >/aj/, etc., always felt intuitively connected. In fact, it took me some >time to get used to the idea of /I/ being closer to /i/, and /E/ to >/ej/. It may have been due to spelling, but it may also have been due >to the number of alternations within the language, such as >/sejn/-/s&nIti/, or irregular past tenses like /bajt/-/bIt/, >/rajt/-/rItIn/, etc.
That is true. I'd suspect it's the influence of the spelling system, rather than something internalized. As you may know, Chomsky & Halle's _Sound Pattern of English_ accounted for lots of English peculiarites by positing an underlying sound system in which, essentially, as I recall, the Great Vowel Shift had not taken place.