Peter Moylan
2024-09-02 13:29:18 UTC
El Sun, 01 Sep 2024 09:49:19 +1000, Peter Moylan
Also here in el Norte (of New Mexico). People even say "ahina" forAs a singer, I have been told to de-emphasise any final 's'. In
fact, most of the choir is asked to leave it silent.
That's how people speak here. "Los olivos" are "loh'holivoh".fact, most of the choir is asked to leave it silent.
"así", which people from other parts of the Spanish-speaking world
think is funny.
Is there a natural tendency for languages to lose final syllables or
final consonants? This thread has provided examples in Spanish. French
lost a lot of final consonants (in speech, but not in writing) centuries
ago. Some southern Italian dialects have dropped a few final vowels, but
this does not extend to northern dialects or the mainstream version of
the language. Portuguese seems to drop all sorts of things.
Those are all examples in Romance languages. I can't think of any
examples in Germanic languages, and I don't know enough about other
language families.
The well-known example in English is the "dropped g", which reduces an
-ing ending to -@n. But that's not actually the dropping of a consonant,
it's the replacement of one consonant by another. The average English
speaker doesn't notice that, because we're not used to thinking of "ng"
as a single consonant.
--
Peter Moylan ***@pmoylan.org http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW
Peter Moylan ***@pmoylan.org http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW