Dawgs

Paul Johnston paul.johnston at WMICH.EDU
Thu Oct 26 18:29:04 UTC 2006


Ranges from a raised backwards-c long monophthong (in careful
speech), through a diphthong starting with this vowel and going to
schwa (thus, [O@]), through [o@] to [U@].  V1's are slightly
centralized.  I don't have a lengthened V1 in mine, but if I come out
with a monophthongal variant, it's a long one.  The stereotype is
probably [U@].

In a pattern that throws Midwesterners, I have this vowel in dog, but
centralized script a (+ or - following schwa) in all other -og words.

Paul Johnston


On Oct 26, 2006, at 2:12 PM, Jonathan Lighter wrote:

> ---------------------- Information from the mail header
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> Sender:       American Dialect Society <ADS-L at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU>
> Poster:       Jonathan Lighter <wuxxmupp2000 at YAHOO.COM>
> Subject:      Re: Dawgs
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> ---------
>
> How does one indicate the notorious NYC "dawg," also heard in
> "cawfee"?
>
>   It's extra tense, I think. Not elongated, though.
>
>   JL
>
> "Mark A. Mandel" <mamandel at LDC.UPENN.EDU> wrote:
>   ---------------------- Information from the mail header
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> Sender: American Dialect Society
> Poster: "Mark A. Mandel"
> Subject: Re: Dawgs
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> ---------
>
> Bev wrote:
>>>>
> Actually, I'll modify my vowel a bit: In this area, at least, the core
> vowel is midway between /a/ and /O/, the so-called "turned script a".
> <<<
>
> Cardinal "turned script a" is low back rounded: same jaw and tongue
> position
> as "script a", but with lip rounding. Is that what you mean?
> http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/IPA/vowels.html
>
> m a m
>
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