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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
대한언어학회 언어학 언어학 제19권 제4호
발행연도
2011.1
수록면
233 - 259 (27page)

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The purpose of this paper is to investigate the distribution of /ju/ in British English, specifically after the coronal sonorants /n, l, r/. The distribution of /ju/ has occasioned a variety of conflicting analyses or suggestions. According to Borowsky (1986), in British English, the /j/in /ju/ is retained after /r/ and /l/ when it occurs in an unstressed word-medial syllable (i.e., a weak position). To check this fact and to get an exact distribution of /ju/ after /n, l, r/, I collected relevant words from OED Online (the 2nd Edition, 1989) and analyzed them in my previous work (Hwangbo, 2010). In this paper, I used CELEX Lexical Database (Baayen et al., 1993) which provides primary pronunciations as well as secondary pronunciations if any. I collected data only from the primary pronunciations, which I think shows the general tendency of pronunciation. The data were collected and grouped in the same way as used for OED data collection. They were further grouped according to the positional strength of a syllable where /ju/ or /u/ occurs: strong position vs. weak position. One of the most important findings is that /ru/, not /rju/ occurs even in a weak position, contrary to Borowsky's proposal, and this fact is argued to be closely related to the fact that British English is nonrhotic.

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