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unitedkingdom·United KingdombyGreyShuck

Researchers fear the British spoken 'r' is ready to roll away from the last bastion of rhoticity

Traditionally, parts of Lancashire have very clearly articulated "r"s, similar to the stereotype of Cornwall and the West Country. The pronunciation of these "r"s towards the ends of words is called rhoticity.

In fact, historically, hundreds of years ago, people throughout England used to pronounce strong "r"s. But now, says the research paper, these strong "r"s are definitely dying out.

In Blackburn, young speakers do mostly say their "r"s, but they are, according to the research team, phonetically very weak and often difficult to perceive. And they pronounce them less frequently than older speakers.

Researchers fear the British spoken 'r' is ready to roll away from the last bastion of rhoticityhttps://phys.org/news/2023-12-british-spoken-ready-bastion-rhoticity.htmlOpen linkView original on feddit.uk
lemmy.world

Northern Ireland isn't part of Britain. Hence why the UK is great Britain and Northern Ireland.

6

The "British" denomym applied to the United Kingdom. Not just Great Britain. The term "Britain" in general applies to the United Kingdom. Hence the Great part. In fact, "Great Britain" is occasionally short for "Great Britain and Northern Ireland" such as at the Olympics.

-2
kbin.social

Huh. Interesting.

"Speakers from places like Blackburn usually differentiate between pairs of words such as 'stellar' and 'stella', whereas most of England would consider them to be the same," says Dr. Turton.

Short of deliberately rolling the R, I don't actually know how I could pronounce it... I'd never thought about that before.

4

Except when the next word starts with a vowel. Then they add extraneous "r" sounds.

1
lemmy.world

Wait, is this the accent where they pronounce "water" like "wadugh"? Because they sound ridiculous. And I live in America where we have just so damned many stupid accents.

-15

Not quite - though I'm not sure what you mean exactly. It's about "ar" being pronounced either like "ah/uh" or "aRRR!/uRRR!" (Like a pirate, or breakfast cereal Tiger).

If "Baa" like a sheep and "Bar" like where you order drinks in a pub are pronounced the same, like "bah" = non-rhotic.

A pirate, or farmer from cornwall saying "Arr!" is very Rhotic.

As far as I'm aware, the majority of American accents are rhotic

12
lemmy.world

It's a nationwide thing which to be honest I have not noticed with R's.

However, you are correct in the dropping of T's where preceded with a vowel. The T is pronounced from the back of the throat like the smallest of coughs or throat clearing. I'm not even sure how to phonetically spell it but the closest is "up" without the p. It's crap, silly, lazy.

Wa(u)er Bu(u) Ye(u) I(u)...

... and so it goes. It winds me up when I hear it and correct them with "There's a T in water... tttt". Petty but annoying.

Don't get me started on "like", that's another awful habit.

-3

I can only apologise that myself and the entire Northern half of the country offend you so much, though I'd call that a glottal stop, rather than a "lazy dropped T".

I guess it cropping up unexpectedly in some accents/dialects might seem lazy, but in the North, where we talk proper (as opposed to talking "properly" down South), that's how those words are meant to sound :)

8

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Researchers fear the British spoken 'r' is ready to roll away from the last bastion of rhoticity | Spyke