random language factoid
May. 23rd, 2018 03:12 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Reading kids books has made me notice something about US English that otherwise wouldn’t have occurred to me.
Namely: you guys pronounce “squirrel” and “toward” as though they have one syllable, not two.
(The rhymes in kids books have a very weird scansion if I read them in my accent.)
Namely: you guys pronounce “squirrel” and “toward” as though they have one syllable, not two.
(The rhymes in kids books have a very weird scansion if I read them in my accent.)
It's regional
Date: 2018-05-23 06:17 am (UTC)I pronounce squir-rel, two syllables, but it's spoken as quickly as 'girl,' and uses the schwa-plus-R as the dominant vowel sound. I pronounce 'toward' as though it is written tWaard, with the a of 'father.' That's ABSOLUTELY regional; I'm from North Carolina in the US, and after decades in California, THAT word hasn't changed, though I've smoothed out ninety percent of my original accent.