[2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

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Expand view Topic review: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Trollswinga » Tue May 15, 2012 6:52 am

We've glottal put a stop to this thread.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Lethal Interjection » Tue May 15, 2012 2:36 am

trollswinga wrote:
DonRetrasado wrote:Two of my great grandparents were cockneys.

More like COCKneys
I see what you did there.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by trollswinga » Tue May 15, 2012 2:14 am

DonRetrasado wrote:Two of my great grandparents were cockneys.

More like COCKneys

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Lethal Interjection » Tue May 15, 2012 2:11 am

Some of my best friends are cockneys.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by DonRetrasado » Tue May 15, 2012 2:05 am

Two of my great grandparents were cockneys.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Sandwiches » Mon May 14, 2012 11:31 pm

Comic is still shit. Now you'll imagine Batman is cockney? Cockneys have more than one feature to their accent. Also, the very first sentence emphasises that standard american and cockney accents differ in their use of glottal stops, Batman is written to have an american accent presumably, so he won't sound cockney.

Knowing about glottal stops doesn't make anything cockney! whatashitcomic

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by mechanate » Mon May 14, 2012 11:19 pm

Anyone that works in radio, voice acting or voiceover is often taught to pronounce the last consonant in every word. It's not really noticeable until you hear it next to an amateur, but we are fairly accustomed to "professional-sounding" voices being very clear on the consonants in question. For voice actors, saying "elephan' gun" would likely result in a retake. It makes the words sound "run-together" and while it's perfectly acceptable for day-to-day conversation, it's generally not in the recording industry.

Don't believe me? Write down a couple of lines from a radio commercial, and have a friend read them while you record it. (Don't record yourself.) Then compare the recording to the original, and you'll see what I'm talking about.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by GUTCHUCKER » Thu May 10, 2012 2:06 pm

I dinagree wholeheartedly.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Kaharz » Thu May 10, 2012 12:13 pm

Revereche wrote:An unreleased consonant is not the name thing as a glottal stop. NOT. THE SAME. THING. :|
AN 'N' IS NOT THE SAME THING AS AN 'S.' NOT. THE. NAME. THING.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Lethal Interjection » Wed May 09, 2012 8:08 pm

Edminster wrote: raucous cries of yeRONG yeRONG would decrease a hundredfold.
I don't know if your intention was to have me hearing Dr. Cox, but that's what happened.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Revereche » Wed May 09, 2012 1:58 am

An unreleased consonant is not the name thing as a glottal stop. NOT. THE SAME. THING. :|

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by DonRetrasado » Wed May 09, 2012 1:38 am

Uh. A "t"?

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by Oldrac the Chitinous » Wed May 09, 2012 1:28 am

Your mom's a voiceless alveolar stop.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by kelly » Wed May 09, 2012 12:41 am

Your examples are all voiceless alveolar stops.

Re: [2012-May-08] Glottal Stops.

by kevang » Wed May 09, 2012 12:39 am

Edminster wrote:linguistics is no exception.
Strange, I don't remember that. Where was he wrong about linguistics before?

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