Re: What's the different between /tS/ as one phoneme and as two?

From: Des Small (des.small_at_bristol.ac.uk)
Date: 07/21/04


Date: Wed, 21 Jul 2004 14:12:34 GMT


"Peter T. Daniels" <grammatim@worldnet.att.net> writes:

> Mxsmanic wrote:
> >
> > For a contrary example of a really thick accent in singing, listen to
> > Nat King Cole sing in Spanish or French. Thick accents like that are
> > actually rather rare.
>
> What bull***! Need I go any further than José Feliciano, to stay within
> your genre, whose English is very clearly not native?

*sings*:

Vant to buy some illushens
Slightly used, second-hant ?
Zey were lovely illushens,
Reaching high, built on sant.

Des
is haffing ze same

-- 
"[T]he structural trend in linguistics which took root with the
International Congresses of the twenties and early thirties [...] had
close and effective connections with phenomenology in its Husserlian
and Hegelian versions." -- Roman Jakobson