المرجع الالكتروني للمعلوماتية
المرجع الألكتروني للمعلوماتية

English Language
عدد المواضيع في هذا القسم 6109 موضوعاً
Grammar
Linguistics
Reading Comprehension

Untitled Document
أبحث عن شيء أخر
تربية الماشية في جمهورية مصر العربية
2024-11-06
The structure of the tone-unit
2024-11-06
IIntonation The tone-unit
2024-11-06
Tones on other words
2024-11-06
Level _yes_ no
2024-11-06
تنفيذ وتقييم خطة إعادة الهيكلة (إعداد خطة إعادة الهيكلة1)
2024-11-05

لو دام العهد النبوي
1-12-2019
أعراض نقص الثايمنين
31-1-2021
تَعْجِيلِ فِعْلِ الْخَيْرِ – بحث روائي
19-7-2016
ما هي منتجات الحشرات التي يستعملها الإنسان؟
8-4-2021
Trapezoidal Rule
8-12-2021
Jakobsonian (adj.)
2023-09-28

Vowel systems DRESS  
  
496   09:29 صباحاً   date: 2024-04-15
Author : Norval Smith and Vinije Haabo
Book or Source : A Handbook Of Varieties Of English Phonology
Page and Part : 531-31

Vowel systems DRESS

DRESS words with ME /ě/ , and to some extent /ε:/, are represented in Suriname creoles by English words like neck, bed, egg, bread, dead, head, any, bury, ready, etc. The /ε:/ words are generally spelt ea. The normal representation of these differs in the various languages, although the phonemic symbol /e/ is traditionally used in all of them. In Sranan /e/ is usually  for instance. In Ndyuka /e/ is normally [e ~ ε], and in Saramaccan /e,ε/ are usually [e,ε] respectively. /ε/ is employed largely in Saramaccan in these words in combination with an anaptyctic vowel /-ε/.

Table 3. The DRESS set

A number of words that belong to this incidence set in RP and AmE have different realizations in the Suriname creoles.

Smith (1987) states: “According to Dobson (1957) raising of /e/ to /i/ is a fairly common process in the fifteenth or sixteenth century in the South-east. In the seventeenth century ships’ logs we find frequent examples of this raising, e.g. chists ‘chests’. Matthews (1938) provides many examples from Cockney including chistes (1553).”