A thread about your alveolar flap, or tap

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Pretty sure I'd go with flap -- let's pretend there was never any controversy about this and tell me what your alveolar flap sounds like. There are English speakers from all over the English speaking world here, why not talk about phonology.

The alveolar flap exists in all sorts of other languages, but I thought about this particular sound because of Spotify (the word itself, not the service, although that is fun/interesting too.)

For your reference:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonology
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alveolar_flap

1) Native English speaker?

-- If no, what is your first language and where (primarily) did you learn to speak English?

-- If yes, what dialect would you say you speak?

2) An example of a word or two you use it in

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:38 (fourteen years ago)

Me first I guess

1) yes, NE Ohio, USA
2) sitting pretty

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:39 (fourteen years ago)

I am not doing this for any formal research reason, btw, I would just like to know what ILX's flaps sound like. I bet there is a pretty big variety?

There's another one: variety

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:43 (fourteen years ago)

In case you don't want to go to wikipedia

The terms tap and flap may be used interchangeably.

Peter Ladefoged proposed for a while that it may be useful to distinguish between them. However, his usage has been inconsistent, contradicting itself even between different editions of the same text. The last proposed distinction was that a tap strikes its point of contact directly, as a very brief plosive, whereas a flap strikes the point of contact tangentially: "Flaps are most typically made by retracting the tongue tip behind the alveolar ridge and moving it forward so that it strikes the ridge in passing." However, later on, he no longer felt this was a useful distinction to make, and preferred to use the word flap in all cases.

For linguists who do make the distinction, the coronal tap is transcribed as a fish-hook "r", [ɾ], while the flap is transcribed as a small capital "d", [ᴅ], which is not recognized by the IPA. Otherwise, alveolars and dentals are typically called taps, and other articulations flaps. No language contrasts a tap and a flap at the same place of articulation.

This sound is often analyzed (and therefore transcribed) by native English speakers as an 'R-sound' in many foreign languages. For example, the 'Japanese R' in hara, akira, tora, etc. is actually an alveolar tap. In languages where this segment is present but is not a true phoneme, an alveolar tap is often an allophone of either an alveolar stop (/t/ or /d/) or a rhotic consonant like the alveolar trill or alveolar approximant.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:45 (fourteen years ago)

About other alveolar sounds, so you can distinguish what I'm not talking about:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SKdarTOse6c&feature=related

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:52 (fourteen years ago)

Around 2 min there's a long bit on "water grader greater better" in between a whole lot of Korean that I don't understand. (Not because it's unintelligible, but because I don't speak Korean)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9uHy_JOT70Q

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 13:58 (fourteen years ago)

First Gloria at 0:50, no flap
Second at 0:55, major flap!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vK34DVYsICY

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:12 (fourteen years ago)

I think he's taking his Latin pronunciation a little too seriously at points in the song; like, I don't think he'd say "Gloria" with that flap were he not singing (in fact, when I sing Latin most if not all of my Rs are flipped like that as a diction technique).

CLUB PISCOPO (DJP), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:18 (fourteen years ago)

You might even say it's a strategic flap. That happens.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:18 (fourteen years ago)

Oh, also I don't want to harvest people's geographical information or places of birth or anything -- I'm simply curious about your alveolar flap.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:20 (fourteen years ago)

anyway:

1. yes, "standard" upper-midwest American English with a few NE colloquialisms here and there (ex: "soda" instead of "pop")
2. double consonant Ts and Ds ("better", "ladder"), aforementioned single Rs when singing

CLUB PISCOPO (DJP), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:23 (fourteen years ago)

(when singing classical music, I should clarify; I'm not busting out the IPA on "Just Like Heaven")

CLUB PISCOPO (DJP), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:24 (fourteen years ago)

The one that makes me /skɾiym/ she said

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:26 (fourteen years ago)

(when singing classical music, I should clarify; I'm not busting out the IPA on "Just Like Heaven")

I don't know man sometimes I like to bust out a couple of IPA's and jam "Just Like Heaven"

pathos of the unwarranted encore (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:27 (fourteen years ago)

this is a IPA symbol for alveolar flap btw
feel free to c/p

ɾ

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:28 (fourteen years ago)

For the record, the alveolar flap is one of my favorite consonantal sounds. It's versatile, used in a variety of contexts, and carries a lot of interesting sociolinguistic information (for a consonantal sound).

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:35 (fourteen years ago)

A.k.a. "rolling your Rs," right? The more specific linguistic terms are useful for distinguishing between the trill and the tap outside the U.S., but I'm surprised this common phrase is nowhere on the Wikipedia page.

Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:39 (fourteen years ago)

Rolling is a trill

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:39 (fourteen years ago)

It's a repeated sound, whereas the flap or tap are not

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:39 (fourteen years ago)

I understand it with the 'r's', but how are t he double t's in, say, butter also considered a flat/tap?

I for one am (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:41 (fourteen years ago)

Because the double t is just an orthographic representation of the sound, which is a flap

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:41 (fourteen years ago)

Ahh I see, ta!

I for one am (Le Bateau Ivre), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:43 (fourteen years ago)

even if i soften the 't' to a 'd' (spodify, budder), i find it difficult connect that sound to the r/l in that first youtube clip...

ledge, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:44 (fourteen years ago)

That "softening" is actually a flap!

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:49 (fourteen years ago)

xp: But as the phrase is commonly used and understood, at least in American English so far as I'm aware, you either roll your Rs or you don't--there's no distinction made between a tap and a trill. I'd love to see linguistic exactness enter the common vocabulary though.

Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:53 (fourteen years ago)

The first youtube was to illustrate that those other sounds are NOT the alveolar flap -- not a trill, not an approximant (the US "hard" r), and not a tap. I just posted it for comparison's sake.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:54 (fourteen years ago)

A.k.a. "rolling your Rs," right?

Not quite. As La Lechera says, rolling your Rs is a series of these taps in quick succession; the term I've heard as a singer is "flipping your Rs", where you only do it once. Depending on the language, as a singer you often have different contexts where you roll or flip Rs; in English for example, the most common thing I've come across is that single Rs are flipped and double Rs are rolled, but in German singing diction it's pretty common roll all Rs.

CLUB PISCOPO (DJP), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:56 (fourteen years ago)

The first youtube was to illustrate that those other sounds are NOT the alveolar flap

ah ok! i'll stop muttering taps and flaps under my breath, cara mia, before i get funny looks in the office.

ledge, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 14:59 (fourteen years ago)

Before you stop, log your flaps!

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 15:14 (fourteen years ago)

1) Yes, south of England, Received Pronunciation innit
2) For double Ts et al, probably vary between no flap/flap/full-on glottal stop, depending on context/intent/laziness.

ledge, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 15:19 (fourteen years ago)

Thank you! Well done.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 15:24 (fourteen years ago)

rolling your Rs is a series of these taps in quick succession

Right, I'm saying that in the absence of better linguistic terms entering common parlance in America, "she rolls her Rs" doesn't have that meaning--it can mean either rolling or flipping. Ask a person on the street in the U.S. what "flipping your Rs" means and they'll think you're talking about selling real estate.

Pete Scholtes, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 15:29 (fourteen years ago)

Tbf, there are a lot of things you could ask a person on the street in the US and they would be likely to come up with an inaccurate answer.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:27 (fourteen years ago)

What are Fritos made of?

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:27 (fourteen years ago)

Where is South America?

CLUB PISCOPO (DJP), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:28 (fourteen years ago)

1. YES BALTIMORE
2. BALTIMORE

69, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:42 (fourteen years ago)

Interesting! Can a person from Baltimore tell if someone is not from Baltimore by the way that person pronounces Baltimore?

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:45 (fourteen years ago)

100%

69, Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:47 (fourteen years ago)

I think that's true for a lot of place names, but kudos for attaching the significance of nativity to the alveolar flap.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 18:57 (fourteen years ago)

mostly ledge's answer here too but for the sake of completeness

Yes, South of England; not sure what my accent officially is, somewhere on the line between Received Pronunciation and Estuary English but with a hint of West Country (all these are prob the same to Americans anyway)

Mostly do not use this sound (tt/dd between vowels comes out as either fully pronounced or a glottal stop, with not much in between, though occasionally something slightly like this creeps in)

did not know what it was until I looked up wikipedia's examples at forvo.com (I love forvo.com), but US-ian "water" is a good example to me as it is fun to say in a fake American accent

the ascent of nyan (a passing spacecadet), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 19:27 (fourteen years ago)

Thank you for your input -- water is a good example!

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 August 2011 20:00 (fourteen years ago)

I didn't really get the distinction until the Baltimore example. But now if I try to say Baltimore with the flap it sounds like a spanish speaker saying Voldemort.

the wheelie king (wk), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 08:17 (fourteen years ago)

pronunciation of "water bottle" is probably the ultimate American English example of this

I thought that I heard you loling, I thought that I heard you steen (crüt), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 09:46 (fourteen years ago)

water shows vowels really well too, so you get that extra bonus

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 11:53 (fourteen years ago)

maybe because of proximity to the highly distinctive flap? even standing near the flap will get you attention, this much is for sure.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 11:53 (fourteen years ago)

LOL, Glaswegian pronunciation of 'water' is like a noise you might hear in kung fu movie

Duncan Disorderly (Tom D.), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 11:56 (fourteen years ago)

Tell me more about these sounds

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 12:03 (fourteen years ago)

Can't do phonetics, but sorta WAAAAAAAAAAHHH-UH-r. Bigget glottal stop in history after the WAAAAAAAAAAHHH.

Duncan Disorderly (Tom D.), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 12:07 (fourteen years ago)

Glottal stops are so interesting -- I esp. like them as a variant of the flap/alveolar sounds.

Ke$ha likes them too -- listen to her "what?" at 1:18 -- you can totally tell that her mouth is wide open and there's no way she could flap because she can't be bothered to even close her mouth.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xXNSwkmoWqs

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 12:16 (fourteen years ago)

I think that's probably only true of word-final /t/, not intervocalic /t/ in her strange made-up dialect.

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Wednesday, 10 August 2011 12:19 (fourteen years ago)

i'm a nasal tapper, i think. a moderate one i guess. there's definitely plasticity in the frequency and degree i use the nasal tap. tired/drunk/speaking a bit faster than usual. or just the flow of whatever it is in particular i'm saying at the time. i would probably say "center for dennists" most of the time, but "cenner for dennists" could come out, too, for example. but i think i say "dentist" whenever in singular form. idk!

from MN for the record

arby's, Thursday, 11 August 2011 19:27 (fourteen years ago)

I pronounce the hell out of the t in sentence, center, and dentist.

ilx poster and keen dairy observer (Jenny), Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:04 (fourteen years ago)

When I say "dentist" in regular speech, it's probably more like "dennis-ed" a la with a nasal tap but I also have a background in linguistics so I am aware that how I actually pronounce words on a day-to-day basis is, as Rumsfeld says, a known unknown.

the girl from spirea x (f. hazel), Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:28 (fourteen years ago)

Den-tissed.

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:31 (fourteen years ago)

my consonants are more or less defined, i used to say "water" with a glottal stop in the middle (classic irish midlands, that) but don't anymore. oh wait, except for "R" which the rest of the English-speaking world pronounces as "arrr" (if they're spelling out for example) but which I & everyone I know say as "orr" (as in the word 'or', not 'ore'). fuck knows what that is though?

re: glottal stops - m.i.a makes use of hers a lot, particularly in lovalot:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dVpp4ubSh-k

gyac, Thursday, 11 August 2011 20:43 (fourteen years ago)

Actually, maybe I do use it, in place of a /t/ if I'm speaking quickly in things like "what if...?" "but it..."

yeah, my first thought was that this was not really a thing in Britisherland, but I can see that a quick, quiet one creeps in accidentally to "gotta" etc... possibly even "Britain" too for that matter.

The really pronounced d-like versions instead of r are confusing to me; on some of them I would totally transcribe it as a d, and I'm not sure I can make that noise without saying "d" instead. e.g. any of the three Portuguese pronunciations here: http://www.forvo.com/word/cara/#pt

(I might not know what I'm talking about, I got a bit confused with the introduction of nasal taps as well - most of the wikipedia examples of a nasal tap were what I thought we were already talking about)

the ascent of nyan (a passing spacecadet), Thursday, 11 August 2011 21:13 (fourteen years ago)

Pleasant Plains, is what you're describing the same sound you hear when people say "no she di'int"? If so, that is a glottal stop!

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Thursday, 11 August 2011 22:47 (fourteen years ago)

No, but to me, that's what other people sound like when they say "Benton".

≝ (Pleasant Plains), Thursday, 11 August 2011 23:11 (fourteen years ago)

Here is a pretty good Sussex County, DE accent example:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x9mVVjhObfE

ilx poster and keen dairy observer (Jenny), Thursday, 11 August 2011 23:57 (fourteen years ago)

in the first 44 seconds of that video, which is all i feel like watching before i make dinner,

i hear nasal tapping (invenned)
and a lot of philly (particularly in words like "load")

in standard AE, "load" has a diphthong - /ow/
in his dialect, the vowels seem to be less rounded

that's my 45 second analysis

it was pleasant and delightful, just like (La Lechera), Friday, 12 August 2011 00:29 (fourteen years ago)

Nathalie, you're...Belgian, right? Did you learn English concurrently with Dutch? French? Tell me about your language learning.

Oh no, I learned Flemish first. English from about the age of 8 probably. On my own, from television, because there's subtitling so it was easy to link the words. My parents never realized until I spoke to a client in our shop. I tend to pick up languages quite easily. Also accents. I tend to mimic accents. I hate and love this at the same time. I can't seem to "hold onto" them but otoh it helps me as well.

That said, some friend said I pronounced "the" the wrong way. Made me sad as I thought I was perfect, but alas no it seems that that sound gives it away.

I was taught french (and german) in school but I am not as good as with English and Dutch, sadly. Also learned a bit of Japanese ;

Nowadays they already expose kids to french from about four/five years old. They play french songs during class. I absolutely love this! Other parents moan that it should be English, but French is an official language (as is German) so why English (before French)?

I adore languages.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Friday, 12 August 2011 15:02 (fourteen years ago)

one year passes...

omg huge lol @ 45 or so

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZY2R_K3NFPo&feature=youtu.be

free your spirit pig (La Lechera), Thursday, 30 May 2013 13:12 (twelve years ago)

two weeks pass...

Languages that evolve at high elevations are more likely to include a type of sound called an ejective consonant that's easier to make when the air is thinner, new research shows.

mookieproof, Thursday, 13 June 2013 17:42 (twelve years ago)

that is SUPER cool

they are either militarists (ugh) or kangaroos (?) (DJP), Thursday, 13 June 2013 17:51 (twelve years ago)

language is a means to an end, might as well take the path of least resistance

free your spirit pig (La Lechera), Thursday, 13 June 2013 17:55 (twelve years ago)

two years pass...

i haven't been following the "she rolls her 'r' too much" vanessa ruiz brouhaha too closely because it makes me angry and basically i think anyone who criticizes multilingual people for pronouncing proper nouns naturally is an ignoramus BUT

i have been disappointed because in the coverage i have encountered, there was no "The Flap about the Flap" headline-- if it's about her pronunciation of /r/, it's most likely related to the flap, not the trill (aka the "rolling" r that people gave her shit about)

missed opportunities, jokers!

La Lechera, Sunday, 27 September 2015 13:34 (ten years ago)

seven months pass...

If you would like to hear the word "button" pronounced with a very distinguishable flap, listen to this program https://www.wbez.org/shows/curious-city/mixed-signals-do-chicagos-crosswalk-buttons-actually-work/3776a8f6-af50-496a-beb8-741c4b3abbe0

i have heard many people insert a glottal stop in that position, but this flap is really noticeable

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Saturday, 21 May 2016 14:30 (nine years ago)

That's a nice idiosyncrasy. I do hear the glottal stop in "button" from lots of people and can't figure out if it's a regionalism or what.

El Tomboto, Saturday, 21 May 2016 14:55 (nine years ago)

I don't think people from the south ever use a glottal stop in button - I tend to associate it with Yankees but it's obviously not a coastal thing, I dunno

El Tomboto, Saturday, 21 May 2016 14:56 (nine years ago)

I think I derive more satisfaction from hearing/noticing the differences than I do from placing them -- I'll leave that up to the pros

Buddin

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Saturday, 21 May 2016 15:15 (nine years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K4dx42YzQCE

mookieproof, Saturday, 21 May 2016 15:40 (nine years ago)

five months pass...

Does your first language influence your trombone playing?

mookieproof, Saturday, 12 November 2016 04:35 (nine years ago)

awesome link

El Tomboto, Saturday, 12 November 2016 05:43 (nine years ago)

five months pass...

https://dood.al/pinktrombone

mookieproof, Tuesday, 9 May 2017 19:16 (eight years ago)

yikes

weird woman in a bar (La Lechera), Tuesday, 9 May 2017 19:24 (eight years ago)

I love that thing so much

PJD PDJ DPJ (DJP), Tuesday, 9 May 2017 19:58 (eight years ago)

six years pass...

are we at a tipping point with flapping in the word "important"? i think the flap may be dominant but have no data nor interest in collecting it lol

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 16 June 2023 13:15 (two years ago)

I've noticed the undergrads I work with taking this all the way to a glottal stop along with not schwa-ing the final vowel!

like, me:
/ɪmpɔrtənt/

them:
/ɪmpɔɾɛnt/ or /ɪmpɔʔɛnt/

the absence of bikes (f. hazel), Friday, 16 June 2023 13:28 (two years ago)

(I probably use the tap a lot too... but really I just swallow the entire last syllable so when they hit that final vowel with stress it really stands out to me)

the absence of bikes (f. hazel), Friday, 16 June 2023 13:30 (two years ago)

My accent naturally skips out the first T in important, please acknowledge that we are valid! It’s very impor—-ant to me.

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 14:14 (two years ago)

i say impor'n'

c u (crüt), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:08 (two years ago)

I've noticed the undergrads I work with taking this all the way to a glottal stop along with not schwa-ing the final vowel!

this is partially why i have noticed it, working with first year college students and listening to their podcasts

gyac ur glottal stop is hella valid

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:29 (two years ago)

i forgot i started this thread for the flap until this morning
i guess it wasn't very impordent

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:30 (two years ago)

i say impor'n'


👑

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:32 (two years ago)

Wait crüt are you from the South

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:35 (two years ago)

Everything is valid

I pronounce the first t but not the second

Grandall Flange (wins), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:35 (two years ago)

Buster Posey the absolute king of saying important with 0 Ts

imPOR’an’

“You’re not as important as you think you are”

If Buster Posey is able to say that, you should be able to have that realization as well. pic.twitter.com/wNgdZAHdQg

— The Catching Academy (@CatchingAcademy) November 4, 2021

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:38 (two years ago)

Wait crüt are you from the South

yep! I'm from Georgia. I don't have a super thick accent but it's "there"

c u (crüt), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:43 (two years ago)

Never heard about this. Does it break down to:

=flap = short pause on t sound
=tap = longer pause on t sound

?

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:43 (two years ago)

buster posey's pronunciation o(t)m

c u (crüt), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:46 (two years ago)

I am from the Irish midlands and we notoriously have a flat accent that mirrors the landscape. I make more of an effort to enunciate now cos the third time someone looked at me and said “I’ve never heard someone say ‘cutting’ like that,” it got old.

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:49 (two years ago)

xp onnamoney

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:49 (two years ago)

Never heard about this. Does it break down to:

=flap = short pause on t sound
=tap = longer pause on t sound

?

not really -- flap and tap are essentially the same and it's not a durational feature (nothing to do with pauses that i am aware of)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_dental_and_alveolar_taps_and_flaps

Piggy Lepton (La Lechera), Friday, 16 June 2023 15:58 (two years ago)

important is super variable for me, it's often like that clip without the rhoticity but I do any combination of aspirating or glottalising either one or both of the t's but I basically never flap idk what rules govern this

your original display name is still visible (Left), Friday, 16 June 2023 16:19 (two years ago)

enunciating/aspirating the first t in important sounds really aggressive!

but i guess not as aggressive as going full glottal reduplication a la
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o0Ux0A4OHSo

Philip Nunez, Friday, 16 June 2023 16:32 (two years ago)

I think I do that when I want the importance of it to be taken note of which is a whole complicated sociolinguisic thing. if I do it with both t's I'm probably really pissed off and it makes me sound super petulant

your original display name is still visible (Left), Friday, 16 June 2023 16:44 (two years ago)

lol if you super enunciate cause you’re pissed you need to add an extra syllable like ITS IMPORTANT-UH

Grandall Flange (wins), Friday, 16 June 2023 16:47 (two years ago)

I am from the Irish midlands and we notoriously have a flat accent

sorry, whats a fleah hacksen?

Ár an broc a mhic (darraghmac), Friday, 16 June 2023 17:19 (two years ago)

Don’t get me started on how you talk

TY FRANCE HATES TEXAS CONFIRMED (gyac), Friday, 16 June 2023 17:39 (two years ago)

confession: I notice this most in conversations about /kɪʔɛnz/

the absence of bikes (f. hazel), Friday, 16 June 2023 18:29 (two years ago)


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