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while we wait for the linguist's definitive answer, monophthongal = having a single vowel sound (as opposed to dipthongs and the like?) [ILIU]
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monophthongal = having a single vowel sound (as opposed to dipthongs and the like?) [ILIU] Yes. The vowels in fleece, kit, dress, bath, strut, foot, goose, palm, lot, and thought are monophthongs in most dialects. This is between around 8 and 10 vowels depending on the dialect. The vowels in face, goat, boy, out, high are diphthongs in most dialects. |  |  |  
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Is the w in cow (or vowel) considered to be a consonant? It seems to act the same as the w in cwm and crwth. |  |  |  
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The "ow" in "cow" is a digraph: two letters used to represent one sound. Which sound it represents depends on the word: compare "cow" and "mow". Other digraphs are th, sh, ch. 
Last edited by goofy; 06/29/2011 12:05 AM.
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 The "ow" in "cow" is a digraph: two letters used to represent one sound.   Oh, thank you for saying that!  I was struggling and struggling to try and discern any sound for w in that word. I was thinking the other day about the w in why, and realized that for me at least it's a diphthong:  kind of an ooo-wuh, the whole being sort of like ooo-wuh-eye.  Hmm--correction--more like ooo-wuh-eye-ee.  Not quite Hawaii!    |  |  |  
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Is the w in cow (or vowel) considered to be a consonant?
 Well, that's sort of a trick question. Cow in my dialect (General American English) is /'kaʊ/. That's a consonant followed by a diphthong. The /a/ does not occur in my dialect as a monophthongal vowel sound, but is pronounced like the vowel in bath or palmm in Australian English; the /ʊ/ occurs and is pronounced like the vowel in foot or put. /w/ is sometimes called a semi-vowel.
 
 [Edited for grammar and correctness.]
 
Last edited by zmjezhd; 06/29/2011 11:45 AM.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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 /ʊ/ is sometimes called a semi-vowel. I think you mean /w/. |  |  |  
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I was thinking the other day about the w in why, and realized that for me at least it's a diphthong:  kind of an ooo-wuh, the whole being sort of like ooo-wuh-eye.  Hmm--correction--more like ooo-wuh-eye-ee.  Not quite Hawaii!    The first sound in "why" is the semi-vowel /w/. /w/ is pretty much the same as /u/ (the vowel in "boot") - the difference is that /w/ is the onset of the syllable while /u/ is the nucleus. If that helps. |  |  |  
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ILIU too and didn't see 10 examples listed (WIKIPEDIA). Do you think that our speech patterns are so standardized and monotonously the same that people hear and recognize those distinctions in everyday speech? Regular, real people, not linguists or someone making a study?I tried saying the example words for both diphthongs and monophthongs out loud to see if I could hear two vowel sounds or just one. I am not sure that experiment was very successful. From living so many places during my childhood I have some very regional pronunciations of some words that I have retained as an adult.
 
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wow>>>> interesting topic. |  |  |  
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Back in the day, when people had such things, we would tape various words on our reel to reel tape deck and play the tape backwards.  The final W in words such as cow and shadow definitely sounded like a normal initial W when the word was played backwards.  You don't hear it when the word is coming at you in its usual way because you're not listening for it.  And even if you are listening for it you don't know how to hear it.  But it's there nonetheless.
 Zwoan wodash uth.
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I think you mean /w/.
 Yes, what goofy said.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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Do you think that our speech patterns are so standardized and monotonously the same that people hear and recognize those distinctions in everyday speech? Regular, real people, not linguists or someone making a study?
 Most assuredly, yes, but not consciously. That's how we can detect "foreign" accents. For example, most USans can distinguish between the two vocalic sounds in ship and sheep, but some can and others cannot distinguish between cot and caught. An experiment for people for whom the latter pair are homonyms, can you hear the distinction that other regional accents (dialects) make between those two sounds? Whether one can identify those sounds in isolation, or better yet, whether one can disentangle what one hears from what one writes is another matter entirely.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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 The final W in words such as cow and shadow definitely sounded like a normal initial W when the word was played backwards. Yes, but I think it's misleading to call it the final W. You would also hear it in words like bough , foe , so  which don't have a final written w . It's because these two sounds are diphthongs in your dialect, something like /aʊ/ and /oʊ/ (maybe, I'm guessing you're American). They consist of two sounds, and the second sound is almost identical to /w/ in articulatory terms.
Last edited by goofy; 06/29/2011 1:31 PM.
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I was thinking the other day about the w in why, and realized that for me at least it's a diphthong:  kind of an ooo-wuh, the whole being sort of like ooo-wuh-eye.  Hmm--correction--more like ooo-wuh-eye-ee.  Not quite Hawaii!    The first sound in "why" is the semi-vowel /w/. /w/ is pretty much the same as /u/ (the vowel in "boot") - the difference is that /w/ is the onset of the syllable while /u/ is the nucleus. If that helps.unless you put that old H in front like some of us... 
 formerly known as etaoin...
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So I just read the wiki on vowel sounds (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phonological_history_of_English_low_back_vowels ) and tried out saying some of those examples after looking at the citation of regional variances. Okay, so I "think" I say caught and cot the same...in listening to most people talk I would know what they are saying by context, not pronunciation. Ship and sheep, though, I don't think I've heard folks turn those into the same sound. Having lived so many places I can usually pick out regions from speech, but not always. Not having ever studied this, I don't think I ever realized how many technical variations there are in pronunciations and the little /o/ thingies to describe them. Amazing new world! 
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would that be a shadow, a long shadow, or a very long shadow? 
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The Shadow who knows what evil lurks in the heart of men.  And yes, goofy, I understand that's not the way you would represent it in IPA, but I was responding to Jackie's comment about not hearing a W sound in words like cow . |  |  |  
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Or broken down into (k + ah + oo)? |  |  |  
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Zat's more like it, Muse.  To hear the w sound I'd have to say cow-wah.  It was lovely to see you last weekend! [blowing kiss e]
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Zat's more like it, Muse.  To hear the w sound I'd have to say cow-wah.  It was lovely to see you last weekend! [blowing kiss e]
Backwards that would be awahk. |  |  |  
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zmjezhd must be rubbing off on you. |  |  |  
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 Just in case you want to hear what the cow said....moo |  |  |  
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Certainly expressing her opinion, that's for sure. 
 ----please, draw me a sheep----
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But if the cow spoke back(wards)she would say"o-om"
 
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As in chanting......very astute of you V     |  |  |  
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Sort of like the Hindu Prayer. 
 ----please, draw me a sheep----
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"o-om"Now while I am not a linguist (as proven on this forum) I am sure that translates as "Thank God you don't eat me."
 
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Or, "thank heaven, I'm not on the menu, even"! ! ! 
 ----please, draw me a sheep----
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Amoosing    |  |  |  
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 ----please, draw me a sheep----
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"o-om"
 Actually moo backwards sounds more like womb than om.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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so would that cow be pregnant then? 
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so would that cow be pregnant then?
 Kine have hooves, not paws.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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so would that cow be pregnant then? Be she pregnant or not, she certainly is in  meditative state....oom or om. 
 ----please, draw me a sheep----
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zmjezhd, were you calling for a  pregnant ... paws?   |  |  |  
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were you calling for a pregnant ... paws?
 That was my intent.
 
 Ceci n'est pas un seing.
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