[General] feeling /fee-ling/ feel-ling

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LiuJing

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Teachers, have you ever heard the word feeling pronounced as 'feel-ling' rather than 'fee-ling'?

Thank you.

(Someone told me it is southern AmE.)
 
The short answer is no.

If anybody writes in to say they use two separate Ls I'll be more than surprised.

Rover
 
Teachers, have you ever heard the word feeling pronounced as 'feel-ling' rather than 'fee-ling'?

...

There's a third possibility*: 'feel-ing'. I think songs may be a little misleading - if you're looking for everyday speech patterns. A lot of singers will choose to leave a syllable open and tack the consonant onto the following syllable (though the less formal, electrically amplified singers of today aren't so interested in sonorousness). In this case the dark l of /fi:l/ becomes the clear l of /lɪŋ/.

*I'm talking about logic, not practice. I generally use, and hear, the dark l; but it varies.

b
 
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There's a third possibility*: 'feel-ing'. I think songs may be a little misleading - if you're looking for everyday speech patterns. A lot of singers will choose to leave a syllable open and tack the consonant onto the following syllable (though the less formal, electrically amplified singers of today aren't so interested in sonorousness). In this case the dark l of /fi:l/ becomes the clear l of /lɪɲ/.

*I'm talking about logic, not practice. I generally use, and hear, the dark l; but it varies.

b
Yes, I'd never suggest that songs in general are a good way to judge pronunciation, but I couldn't help posting this one.
 
Yes, I'd never suggest that songs in general are a good way to judge pronunciation, but I couldn't help posting this one.

On the other hand, songs can tell us a great deal about the slowed-down correct pronunciation of the language, although certain deformations are allowed ("Baby I'm a want you...").
 
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