Th-stopping
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Th-stopping is the realization of the dental fricatives [θ, ð] as stops—either dental or alveolar—which occurs in several dialects of English. In some accents, such as some Irish English, Indian English, and much of the working-class English in North America and sometimes southern England, they are realized as the dental stops [t̪, d̪] and as such do not merge with the alveolar stops /t, d/. Thus pairs like tin/thin and den/then are not homophonous.[1] In other accents, such as Caribbean English, Nigerian English, and Liberian English, such pairs are indeed merged.[1] Th-stopping occurred in all continental Germanic languages, resulting in cognates such as German die, "the", and Bruder, "brother".
Contents
New York City English[edit]
For the working class of New York City and its surrounding region, the fricatives /θ/ and /ð/ are often pronounced as affricatives or stops, rather than as fricatives. Usually they remain dental, so that the oppositions /t-θ/ and [d-ð] are not lost. Thus thanks may be pronounced [θæŋks], [tθæŋks], or [t̪æŋks] in decreasing order of occurrence;[citation needed] all are distinct from tanks. The [t̪] variant has a weakish articulation. The /t-θ/ opposition may be lost, exceptionally in the environment of a following /r/ (making three homophonous with tree), and in the case of the word with, (so that with a may rhyme with the non-rhotic pronunciation of "bitter-bidder"; with you may be [wɪtʃu], following the same yod-coalescence rule as hit you. These pronunciations are all stigmatized.[citation needed]
The [d-ð] opposition seems to be lost more readily, though not as readily as the "Brooklynese" stereotype might lead one to believe. As in many other places, initial [ð] is subject to assimilation or deletion in a range of environments in relatively informal and/or popular speech, e.g. who's there [huz (z)ɛə]; as in many other places, it is also subject to stopping there /dɛə/. This option extends to one or two words in which the /ð/ is not initial, e.g. other, which can thus become a homonym of utter-udder. But it would not be usual for southern to be pronounced identically with sudden or breathe with breed.[citation needed]
African American Vernacular English[edit]
In African American Vernacular English, in the words with and nothing, [t] may occur corresponding to standard [θ], with the [t] itself being succeeded by the t-glottalization rule: thus [wɪʔ] for with and [ˈnʌʔɪn] for nothing.[2]:83 Th-stopping is also reported for some other non-initial [θ]s, apparently particularly when preceded by a nasal and followed by a plosive, as keep your mouth closed.[2]:90 In initial position, [θ] occurs in AAVE just as in standard accents: thin is [θɪn], without the stopping of West Indian accents.[3] Stopping of initial [ð], however, is frequent making then homophonous with den.
Frequency in other accents[edit]
Th-stopping is also commonly heard, specifically from speakers of working-class origins, in the American English dialects of the Inland North (for example, in Milwaukee, Chicago, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Scranton), the Upper Midwest (for example in the especially Fennoscandian-descended locals of Minnesota's Iron Range and Michigan's Upper Peninsula), and Mid-Atlantic region (for example, in Philadelphia and Baltimore),[4] It is also heard in a minority of speakers of England's Estuary dialect (for example, in London), but only in case of the word-initial /ð/.[5] Many speakers of Philippine English and some speakers of other variants in Asia also have th-stopping.
Homophonous pairs[edit]
| /t, d/ | /θ, ð/ | IPA | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ate | eighth | ˈeɪt | |
| Bart | bath | ˈbɑːt | Non-rhotic accents with trap-bath split. |
| bat | bath | ˈbæt | Without trap-bath split. |
| bayed | bathe | ˈbeɪd | |
| bet | Beth | ˈbɛt | |
| bladder | blather | ˈblædə(ɹ) | |
| blight | Blythe | ˈblaɪt | |
| blitter | blither | ˈblɪɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| boat | both | ˈboʊt | |
| body | bothy | ˈbɒɾi | Without lot-cloth split and with intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| boot | booth | ˈbuːt | |
| breed | breathe | ˈbɹiːd | |
| Brett | breath | ˈbɹɛt | |
| brought | broth | ˈbrɔːt | With lot–cloth split. Also /ˈbrɒt/ in some accents. |
| cedar | seether | ˈsiːdə(ɹ) | |
| cent | synth | ˈsɪnt | With pen-pin merger. |
| cite | scythe | ˈsaɪt | |
| clot | cloth | ˈklɒt | Without cot–caught merger. |
| coot | couth | ˈkuːt | |
| Dan | than | ˈdæn | |
| dare | their | ˈdeə(ɹ) | |
| dare | there | ˈdeə(ɹ) | |
| day | they | ˈdeɪ | |
| debt | death | ˈdɛt | |
| Dee | the | ˈdiː | The before vowels and silent H. |
| Dee | thee | ˈdiː | |
| den | then | ˈdɛn | |
| dense | thence | ˈdɛns | |
| dents | thence | ˈdɛn(t)s | |
| dhow | thou | ˈdaʊ | |
| die | thy | ˈdaɪ | |
| dine | thine | ˈdaɪn | |
| dirt | dearth | ˈdɜː(ɹ)t | with fern-fir-fur merger. |
| dis | this | ˈdɪs | |
| doe | though | ˈdoʊ | |
| does | those | ˈdoʊz | |
| dough | though | ˈdoʊ | |
| dow | thou | ˈdaʊ | |
| dow | though | ˈdoʊ | |
| drought | drouth | ˈdɹaʊt | |
| dye | thy | ˈdaɪ | |
| eater | either | ˈiːɾə(ɹ) | |
| eater | ether | ˈiːtə(ɹ) | |
| eight | eighth | ˈeɪt | |
| fate | faith | ˈfeɪt | |
| fetter | feather | ˈfɛɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| fit | fifth | ˈfɪt | Some accents pronounce fifth as /ˈfɪft/. |
| fodder | father | ˈfɑdə(ɹ) | With father-bother merger. |
| fort | forth | ˈfɔː(ɹ)t | |
| fort | fourth | ˈfɔː(ɹ)t | |
| fraught | froth | ˈfɹɔːt | With lot-cloth split. |
| frot | froth | ˈfɹɒt | Without lot-cloth split. |
| got | goth, Goth | ˈɡɒt | |
| groat | growth | ˈɡɹoʊt | |
| hart | hearth | ˈhɑː(ɹ)t | |
| header | heather | ˈhɛdə(ɹ) | |
| heart | hearth | ˈhɑː(ɹ)t | |
| heat | heath | ˈhiːt | |
| hitter | hither | ˈhɪɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| hurt | earth | ˈɜː(ɹ)t | With H-dropping and fern-fir-fur merger. |
| Ida | either | ˈaɪdə | Non-rhotic accents. |
| knead | neath | ˈniːd | |
| kneader | neither | ˈniːdə(ɹ) | |
| kneed | neath | ˈniːd | |
| ladder | lather | ˈlædə(ɹ) | |
| lade | lathe | ˈleɪd | |
| laid | lathe | ˈleɪd | |
| latter | lather | ˈlæɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| letter | leather | ˈlɛɾə(ɹ) | |
| lied | lithe | ˈlaɪd | |
| load | loathe | ˈloʊd | |
| lout | Louth | ˈlaʊt | |
| mat | math | ˈmæt | |
| mead | Meath | ˈmiːd | |
| meat | Meath | ˈmiːt | |
| meet | Meath | ˈmiːt | |
| mete | Meath | ˈmiːt | |
| mit | myth | ˈmɪt | |
| mutter | mother | ˈmʌɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| naught | north | ˈnɔːt | Non-rhotic accents. |
| neater | neither | ˈniːɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| neat | neath | ˈniːt | |
| need | neath | ˈniːd | |
| oat | oath | ˈoʊt | |
| oats | oaths | ˈoʊts | |
| odes | oaths | ˈoʊdz | |
| pads | paths | ˈpædz | Without trap-bath split. |
| paid | pathe | ˈpeɪd | |
| part | path | ˈpɑːt | Non-rhotic accents with trap-bath split. |
| parts | paths | ˈpɑːts | |
| pat | path | ˈpæt | Without trap-bath split. |
| pats | paths | ˈpæts | |
| pit | pith | ˈpɪt | |
| pity | pithy | ˈpɪti | |
| rat | wrath | ˈɹæt | Without trap-bath split. |
| rate | wraith | ˈɹeɪt | |
| read | wreathe | ˈɹiːd | |
| reads | wreathes | ˈɹiːdz | |
| reads | wreaths | ˈɹiːdz | |
| reed | wreathe | ˈɹiːd | |
| reeds | wreathes | ˈɹiːdz | |
| reeds | wreaths | ˈɹiːdz | |
| ride | writhe | ˈɹaɪd | |
| rot | Roth | ˈɹɒt | Without lot-cloth split. |
| root | ruth, Ruth | ˈɹuːt | With yod-dropping. Some accents pronounce root as /ˈɹʊt/. |
| route | ruth, Ruth | ˈɹuːt | |
| scent | synth | ˈsɪnt | With pen-pin merger. |
| seed | seethe | ˈsiːd | |
| seeder | seether | ˈsiːdə(ɹ) | |
| sent | synth | ˈsɪnt | With pen-pin merger. |
| set | saith | ˈsɛt | |
| set | Seth | ˈsɛt | |
| she'd | sheathe | ˈʃiːd | |
| sheet | sheath | ˈʃiːt | |
| side | scythe | ˈsaɪd | |
| sight | scythe | ˈsaɪt | |
| sit | Sith | ˈsɪt | |
| site | scythe | ˈsaɪt | |
| smit | smith | ˈsmɪt | |
| smite | Smyth | ˈsmaɪt | |
| spilt | spilth | ˈspɪlt | |
| soot | sooth | ˈsuːt | Some accents pronounce soot as /ˈsʊt/. |
| sudden | southern | ˈsʌdən | Non-rhotic accents. |
| sued | soothe | ˈsuːd | With yod-dropping. |
| suede | swathe | ˈsweɪd | Some accents pronounce swathe as /ˈswɒd/. |
| suit | sooth | ˈsuːt | With yod-dropping. |
| swat | swath | ˈswɒt | Without lot-cloth split. |
| swayed | swathe | ˈsweɪd | Some accents pronounce swathe as /ˈswɒd/. |
| tank | thank | ˈtæŋk | |
| taught | thought | ˈtɔːt | |
| teat | teeth | ˈtiːt | |
| tent | tenth | ˈtɛnt | |
| Thai | thigh | ˈtaɪ | |
| tick | thick | ˈtɪk | |
| tide | tithe | ˈtaɪd | |
| tie | thigh | ˈtaɪ | |
| tied | tithe | ˈtaɪd | |
| tin | thin | ˈtɪn | |
| toot | tooth | ˈtuːt | |
| tor | thaw | ˈtɔː | Non-rhotic accents. |
| tor | Thor | ˈtɔː(ɹ) | |
| tore | thaw | ˈtɔː | Non-rhotic accents with horse-hoarse merger. |
| tore | Thor | ˈtɔː(ɹ) | With horse-hoarse merger. |
| torn | thorn | ˈtɔː(ɹ)n | With horse-hoarse merger. |
| tort | thought | ˈtɔː(ɹ)t | Non-rhotic accents. |
| trash | thrash | ˈtɹæʃ | |
| trawl | thrall | ˈtɹɔːl | |
| tread | thread | ˈtɹɛd | |
| tree | three | ˈtɹiː | |
| true | threw | ˈtɹuː, ˈtɹɪu | |
| true | through | ˈtɹuː | With yod-dropping. |
| tum | thumb | ˈtʌm | |
| tump | thump | ˈtʌmp | |
| turd | third | ˈtɜː(ɹ)d | With fern-fir-fur merger. |
| udder | other | ˈʌdə(ɹ) | |
| utter | other | ˈʌɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| Utes | youths | ˈjuːts | |
| welt | wealth | ˈwɛlt | |
| wetter | weather | ˈwɛɾə(ɹ) | With intervocalic alveolar flapping. |
| wit | width | ˈwɪt | |
| wit | with | ˈwɪt | |
| wordy | worthy | ˈwɜː(ɹ)di, ˈwʌɹdi | |
| wort | worth | ˈwɜː(ɹ)t, ˈwʌɹt | Some accents pronounce wort as /ˈwɔː(ɹ)t/. |
| wrought | Roth | ˈɹɔːt | With lot-cloth split. |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ a b Wells, J.C. (1989). The British Isles. Accents of English. 2. Cambridge: University Press. pp. 565–66, 635. ISBN 9780521285407.
- ^ a b Wolfram, Walter A. (September 1970). "A Sociolinguistic Description of Detroit Negro Speech". Language. 46 (3): 764. doi:10.2307/412325. ISSN 0097-8507. JSTOR 412325.
- ^ Wolfram 1969, p. 130, does however mention the use of 'a lenis [t]' as a rare variant.
- ^ van den Doel, Rias (2006). How Friendly Are the Natives? An Evaluation of Native-Speaker Judgements of Foreign-Accented British and American English (PDF). Landelijke onderzoekschool taalwetenschap (Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics). p. 268.
- ^ van den Doel, Rias (2006). How Friendly Are the Natives? An Evaluation of Native-Speaker Judgements of Foreign-Accented British and American English (PDF). Landelijke onderzoekschool taalwetenschap (Netherlands Graduate School of Linguistics). p. 251.