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<font size=3>At 02:26 PM 5/28/2004, you wrote:<br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite>As I'm not American, people should
tell me if I am simply behind the times.<br>
But<br>
I wonder whether I have noticed an old sound-change very belatedly coming
to<br>
completion.<br><br>
From my reading, the name of Preakness (NJ) is a member of the small
class of<br>
words (eg *great*, *break*) which were not included in the sound-change
whereby<br>
<ea> came to be pronounced [i:]; according to my reading,
Preakness, NJ is<br>
pronounced [preiknIs].<br><br>
But, twice in the last two days, I've heard National Public Radio
announcers<br>
pronounce it [prikn@s] ([@] = schwa). Is this
widely-attested? Could we be<br>
witnessing a change in the normative pronunciation?<br>
</blockquote><br>
Sorry, in this case you are indeed behind the times. To the best of
my knowledge the horse race has been called [prikn@s] since at least the
nineteen sixties when a horse from Toronto, my home town, won the
race. I've never heard any other pronunciation.<br><br>
Geoff</font></body>
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