[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.)
 

Rover_KE

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The short answer is no.

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

Rover
 

BobK

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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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Raymott

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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.
 

konungursvia

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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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