
www.Usenet.com
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |
On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 17:27:21 -0800, "Bill Bonde ( the oblique allusion in lieu of the frontal attack )" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > >Holger Dansk wrote: >> >> On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 16:01:40 -0500, Bob LeChevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> wrote: >> >> >Holger Dansk <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> >>On Tue, 02 Dec 2003 12:19:53 -0500, Bob LeChevalier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >> >>wrote: >> >> >> >>>It has nothing to do with being black, or with mouth structure. It is >> >>>simply another dialectal pronunciation of English. Yours is no more >> >>>correct than theirs. >> >> >> >>Hog dodo. >> >> >> >>It's as incorrect as anything can bet you nitwit. >> > >> >Your English is incorrect for this context. >> > >> >>Don't you know right from wrong? >> > >> >I am a linguist; there is no morality in language. There are many >> >dialects and each is appropriate to its own context, so that there is >> >no "correct" or "incorrect" language, except with regards to a >> >specific context. >> >> We are not talking about local dialects here. We are talking about the >> English language in the entire world >> >There certainly isn't one world standard English. People in India, the >UK, the US, Australia, all sound different. I don't believe most >dictionaries tell you how to make each sound. In other words, the >dictionary might say that you should use a 'short a' in some word but it >won't exactly specify what a 'short a' actually is. This allows for >vowel rotations and other shifts that obviously exist in various >dialects. > > >> and what is right or wrong in the >> use of it. You seem to be confused. Just because there is a dialect in >> east Tennessee where people say "tar" for a tire, "far" for fire, "war" >> for wire, "diddle" for baby chicken instead of biddy, etc., does not >> mean that this is correct English. Correct English conforms to correct >> pronunciation. Otherwise, why have dictionaries giving the correct >> pronunciation? >> >Actually, dictionaries exist with 'correct' pronunciations for various >standards, say British English, American English, etc. but have you >looked to see if they explain in detail how to make the letter 't' sound >and explain in detail its various allophones and where they are >'correctly' used? > >> >>What's the matter with you? >> > >> >I'm more educated than you are about the nature of language in >> >general, and about the English language in particular. >> >> You, evidently, have become too educated about language and have become >> confused about the basic and fundamental rules of speaking and >> pronouncing English correctly as it should be today in the United States >> and not how it is pronounced in strange ways by people is certain areas >> of the United States and the world. Even worse, you strive to find out >> some excuse for many negroes having pronouncing it wrong for a few >> hundred years >> >There is evidence that various African American dialects retain features >from older forms of the English language than those current in vogue in >the United States as 'standards'. It might be you who speaks funny and >they had it correct all the time! You are very confused. We are talking about the correct way to speak English in the United States. Sometimes, a dictionary will give you two different correct ways to pronounce a word. However, when there is only one way, that means there is "only one way". We are not talking about the way English is pronounced in sub-saharan Africa, in Europe, or in Australia or Japan, etc., but only in the United States. Understand? Holger
| <-- __Chronological__ --> | <-- __Thread__ --> |