Linking and intrusive R
Sound change and alternation |
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Fortition |
Dissimilation |
Linking R and intrusive R are
Linking R and intrusive R may also occur between a root morpheme and certain
These phenomena first appeared in English sometime after the year 1700.[2]
Non-rhotic varieties
By definition, non-rhotic varieties of English pronounce /r/[3] only when it immediately precedes a vowel. This is called r-vocalisation, r-loss, r-deletion, r-dropping, r-lessness, or non-rhoticity.[4]
For example, even though the word tuner is spelled with an ⟨r⟩ (which reflects that an /r/ was pronounced in the past[5]), non-rhotic accents do not pronounce an /r/ when there is no vowel sound to follow it. In contrast, speakers of rhotic dialects, such as those of Scotland, Ireland, and most of North America (except in some of the Northeastern United States and Southern United States), always pronounce an /r/ in tuner and never in tuna so that the two always sound distinct, even when pronounced in isolation.[6][7] Hints of non-rhoticity go back as early as the 15th century, and the feature was common (at least in London) by the early 18th century.[8]
Linking R
In many non-rhotic accents, words historically ending in /r/ (as evidenced by an ⟨r⟩ in the spelling) may be pronounced with /r/ when they are closely followed by another morpheme beginning with a vowel sound. So tuner amp may be pronounced [ˈtjuːnər æmp].[nb 1] This is the case in such accents even though tuner would not otherwise be pronounced with an /r/. Here, "closely" means the following word must be in the same prosodic unit (that is, not separated by a pausa). This phenomenon is known as linking R. Not all non-rhotic accents feature linking R. South African English, African-American Vernacular English and non-rhotic varieties of Southern American English are notable for not using a linking R.[9][10]
Intrusive R
The phenomenon of intrusive R is an overgeneralizing reinterpretation
In extreme cases an intrusive R can follow a reduced schwa, such as for the example if you hafta[r], I’ll help and in the following examples taken from the native speech of English speakers from Eastern Massachusetts: I’m gonna[r]ask Adrian, t[ər]add to his troubles, a lotta[r]apples and the[r]apples. A related phenomenon involves the dropping of a consonant at the juncture of two words and the insertion of an r in its place. Sometimes this occurs in conjunction with the reduction of the final vowel in the first word to a schwa: examples of this are He shoulda[r]eaten and I saw[r]’m (for I saw them).[16]
Other recognizable examples are the
Just as with linking R, intrusive R may also occur between a root morpheme and certain
A rhotic speaker may use alternative strategies to prevent the
Margaret Thatcher was nicknamed "Laura Norder" because of her references during her period of office to "law and order" with an intrusive /r/.[20]
Prevalence
A 2006 study at the University of Bergen examined the pronunciation of 30 British newsreaders on nationally broadcast newscasts around the turn of the 21st century speaking what was judged to be "mainstream RP". The data used in the study consisted mostly of the newsreaders reading from prepared scripts, but also included some more informal interview segments. It was found that all the newsreaders used some linking R and 90% (27 of 30) used some intrusive R.[21]
Overall, linking R was used in 59.8% of possible sites and intrusive R was used in 32.6% of possible sites. The factors influencing the use of both linking and intrusive R were found to be the same. Factors favouring the use of R-sandhi included adjacency to short words, adjacency to grammatical or otherwise non-lexical words, and informal style (interview rather than prepared script). Factors disfavouring the use of R-sandhi included adjacency to proper names; occurrence immediately before a stressed syllable; the presence of another /r/ in the vicinity; and more formal style (prepared script rather than interview). The following factors were proposed as accounting for the difference between the frequency of linking and intrusive R:[21]
- overt stigmatization of intrusive R
- the speakers being professional newsreaders and thus, presumably, speech-conscious professionals
- the speakers (in most cases) reading from a written script, making the orthographic distinction between linking and intrusive R extremely salient
- the disparity between the large number of short grammatical words that end in possible linking R (e.g. "for", "or", "are", etc.) and the absence of such words that end in possible intrusive R.
See also
- Diaeresis (diacritic)
- Hiatus (linguistics)
- Pausa
- Liaison (French)
- Sandhi
- R-colored vowel
- Movable nu
Notes
- liaison) Gick (1999:31). Vennemann (1972:216), for example, argues that linking R is an instance of resyllabifying the rhotic phoneme. On the other hand, Wells would argue that it is not necessarily in the onset of the following syllable.
References
- ^ Trudgill & Gordon (2006:236)
- ^ Peters (1996:49)
- status.
- ^ Gick (1999:30)
- ^ Wells (1970:240)
- ^ Wells (1970:240)
- ^ Trudgill & Gordon (2006:236) lists the distribution of rhotic and non-rhotic dialects more explicitly.
- ^ Gick (1999:31)
- . Retrieved 4 May 2023.
- ^ Gick (1999:31), citing Kurath (1964)
- ^ Hartmann & Zerbian (2009:136)
- ^ Hock (2009:172)
- ^ Wells (1970:241). In Cockney, /aʊ/ is another vowel affected
- ^ Gick (1999:31–32)
- ^ Wells (1970:241), citing Gimson (1962:204) and Jones (1966:§§ 357–366)
- .
- ^ Wells, J.C. (2002-02-20). "Whatever happened to Received Pronunciation?". Archived from the original on 2023-04-10.
- ^ Wells (1982:223)
- ^ Gick (1999:32)
- ^ Collins, B., & Mees, I. (2003). The Phonetics of English and Dutch (3rd ed.). Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill.
- ^ a b Hannisdal, Bente Rebecca (2006). "R-sandhi" (PDF). Variability and change in received pronunciation: a study of six phonological variables in the speech of television newsreaders (Thesis). University of Bergen. pp. 158–181.
Bibliography
- Gick, Bryan (1999). "A gesture-based account of intrusive consonants in English" (PDF). Phonology. 16 (1): 29–54. S2CID 61173209. Archived from the original(PDF) on 2013-04-12.
- Gimson, A.C. (1962). An Introduction to the Pronunciation of English. London: Edward Arnold.
- Hartmann, D.; Zerbian, S. (2009). "Rhoticity in Black South African English – A sociolinguistic study". Southern African Linguistics and Applied Language Studies. 27 (2): 135–148. S2CID 143375531.
- Hock, Hans Henrich (2009). Language History, Language Change, and Language Relationship: An Introduction to Historical and Comparative Linguistics. Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-021842-8.
- Jones, Daniel (1966). The Pronunciation of English (4th ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Kurath, H. (1964). A Phonology and Prosody of Modern English. Heidelberg: Carl Winter.
- Peters, Robert (1996). "Early Modern English consonants". Journal of English Linguistics. 24: 45–51. S2CID 144814014.
- Trudgill, Peter; Gordon, Elizabeth (2006). "Predicting the past: Dialect archaeology and Australian English rhoticity". English World-Wide. 27 (3): 235–246. .
- Vennemann, T. (1972). "Rule inversion". Lingua. 29: 209–242. .
- Wells, J.C. (1970), "Local accents in England and Wales", Journal of Linguistics, 6 (2): 231–252, S2CID 143523909
- Wells, J.C. (1982). Accents of English 1: An Introduction. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-29719-2.
Further reading
- Halle, Morris; Idsardi, William (1997). "r, hypercorrection, and the Elsewhere Condition". In Roca, Iggy (ed.). Derivations and Constraints in phonology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 331–348.
- Heselwood, Barry (2006). "Final schwa and R-sandhi in RP English". Leeds Working Papers in Linguistics and Phonetics. Vol. 11. pp. 78–95.
- Mompean, Jose A.; Mompean-Guillamón, Pilar (2009). "/r/-liaison in English: An empirical study". Cognitive Linguistics. 20 (4): 733–776. S2CID 146163838.
- Mompean, Jose A. (2021). "/r/-sandhi in the speech of Queen Elisabeth II". Journal of the International Phonetic Association. 52 (2): 1–32. .
- Trudgill, Peter (1986). Dialects in Contact. Oxford: Blackwell.
External links
- A century of "intrusive" R in English — video by the British linguist Geoff Lindsey
- The Intrusive /r/ and Linking /r/ - British English Pronunciation & Connected Speech