Spoken English: Flourish Your Language

(coco) #1

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flauari (flowery, floury) flaua
leiariq (layering) leia
louariq (lowering) loua


Spoken Engfish II
flauad (flowered).
leiad (layered).
louad (lowered).
Note that eia(r) and oua(r) in rapid, especially in vulgar speech,
often pass into aea(r) and aoa(r).
When r is preceded by a short vowel, as in 'hurry' (hari), 'merry'
(meri), no ais generated.

UNACCENTEd vowEls
The two chief unaccented vowels in English are aand i, together
with the rarer o. The former may be regarded as a shortened oe,
as in 'her', into which it always passes when emphasised or pro-
longed, but it is really nothing but a voice murmur without any
defInite confIguration. The i is an intermediate vowel between i
and e and might as well be written e as i. It may be regarded
either as a very open i or a very close e.
The following are examples of 0: -
8temt (attempt), Cpouz (oppose), apon (upon), tadei (to-day).
soufa (sofa), menshan (mention), peishans (patience), krer8t (car-
rot).
faadha (father), ona (honour), mezha (measure).
faowad (forward), shepod (shepherd).
feivarit (favourite), mezhariq (measuring).
a is often dropped before l~ n and m~ always when the Cis preceded
by t or d and followed by I or n:-
met! (metal), gaadn (garden), gaadniq (gardening), mom (mut-
ton).
iivl (evil), loukl (local), simbl (cymbal, symbol).
When two or more unaccented as or is follow one another, one of
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