as we know, there's "deletion rule" in phonology.could someone list some different types of deletion in English or cite examples of "total deletion"?thank you!
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as we know, there's "deletion rule" in phonology.could someone list some different types of deletion in English or cite examples of "total deletion"?thank you!
I'm not sure that a "deletion rule" in phonology would be well-known here. It could mean quite a few things:
It is -> It's
want to -> wanna
That is my bike -> That my bike. (in African American Vernacular E).
What is the "deletion rule" as you understand it? And what do you call a "total deletion"?
in my book, deletion rule means deleting the sound ,although it's orthographically represented.for example,sign and signature ,g in the former is muted while in the latter it's pronounced.Then the text asks me to cite examples of total deletion, about which i'm really confused.
OK, well my second post was what you wanted. Note that this is a totally natural deletion which occurs because phonetically difficult sequences of sounds coincide. So people don't learn them, and ESL students definitely should not try to learn them.
Repetitions are often elided in English (as opposed to Italian, for example):
fish shop -> /fi shop/
Some vowels are dropped: mystery, general -> mistry, genral
Difficult consonant clusters: pumpkin -> pumkin.
I'll have to think more about "total deletions".
Would the glottal stop in Cockney pronunciation of 'bottle' count?
I've done a bit more reading on total deletion in phonology. (Most examples are from obscure African languages, so I won't bother posting them).
Suffice to say that your original "sign" has a total phonological deletion of the "g", and the absence of the second "p" in /pumkin/ is a total deletion.
It appears that near-total or non-total deletions are written about more often in respect of vowels, where one vowel can merge into a diphthong, or there can be a partial deletion of a vowel when two or three vowels follow one another.