11.629, Disc: Underlying Schwa?
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LINGUIST List: Vol-11-629. Tue Mar 21 2000. ISSN: 1068-4875.
Subject: 11.629, Disc: Underlying Schwa?
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Date: Sun, 19 Mar 2000 21:17:31
From: Earl Herrick <kfemh00 at tamuk.edu>
Subject: underlying schwa
-------------------------------- Message 1 -------------------------------
Date: Sun, 19 Mar 2000 21:17:31
From: Earl Herrick <kfemh00 at tamuk.edu>
Subject: underlying schwa
The comments by Browne and O'Bryan in 11.590 prompt me to add my
two-cent's-worth to the "underlying schwa" discussion, although it doesn't
relate exactly to an _underlying_ schwa, whatever that may be.
I'm a native speaker of American English, in my 60's, who still has pretty
much of my North Midland native dialect from northeastern Kansas. Thanks to
O'Bryan's example, I now realize that I have at least three unstressed
vowels in my speech. (I'm not sure whether I have four, because I'm not
sure how stable the vowel of the second syllable of "pillow" is in my speech.)
I have a schwa, of course, and I also have a high front unstressed vowel
that occurs e.g. in the second syllable of "city". The only minimal pair
between these that I was formerly aware of is between "sofa" and "Sophie"
(the ordinary pronunciation of the name of my great-great-aunt whose name
more formally was "Sophia"). But I do have a barred-i that occurs regularly
tho very rarely. It occurs in the suffix "-ment", and it also occurs in
distinctive pairs taken from the triad of "gist" meaning 'essence' with
small-cap-i, "just" the adverb in "Just a minute." with barred-i, and
"just" the adjective related to "justice" with schwa. (And I couldn't be
sure that I was always pronouncing the adverb unstressed.) O'Bryan now
gives me a second minimal pair, because I clearly pronounce "Hit 'im" =
"Hit him" with barred-i and "Hit 'em" = "Hit them" with schwa.
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