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Lexical set

A lexical set is a group of words that share a particular phonological feature.

A phoneme is a basic unit of sound in a language that can distinguish one word from another. Most commonly, following the work of phonetician John C. Wells, a lexical set is a class of words in a language that share a certain vowel phoneme. As Wells himself says, lexical sets "enable one to refer concisely to large groups of words which tend to share the same vowel, and to the vowel which they share".[1] For instance, the pronunciation of the vowel in cup, luck, sun, blood, glove, and tough may vary in different English dialects but is usually consistent within each dialect and so the category of words forms a lexical set,[2] which Wells, for ease, calls the STRUT set. Meanwhile, words like bid, cliff, limb, miss, etc. form a separate lexical set: Wells's KIT set. Originally, Wells developed 24 such labels—keywords—for the vowel lexical sets of English, which have been sometimes modified and expanded by himself or other scholars for various reasons. Lexical sets have also been used to describe the vowels of other languages, such as French,[3] Irish[4] and Scots.[5]

There are several reasons why lexical sets are useful. Scholars of phonetics often use abstract symbols (most universally today, those of the International Phonetic Alphabet) to transcribe phonemes, but they may follow different transcribing conventions or rely on implicit assumptions in their exact choice of symbols. One convenience of lexical sets is their tendency to avoid these conventions or assumptions. Instead, Wells explains, they "make use of keywords intended to be unmistakable no matter what accent one says them in".[1] That makes them useful for examining phonemes within an accent, comparing and contrasting different accents, and capturing how phonemes may be differently distributed based on accent. A further benefit is that people with no background in phonetics can identify a phoneme not by learned symbols or technical jargon but by its simple keyword (like STRUT or KIT in the above examples).[2]

Standard lexical sets for English edit

The standard lexical sets for English introduced by John C. Wells in his 1982 Accents of English are in wide usage. Wells defined each lexical set on the basis of the pronunciation of words in two reference accents, which he calls RP and GenAm.[6]

Wells classifies English words into 24 lexical sets on the basis of the pronunciation of the vowel of their stressed syllable in the two reference accents. Typed in small caps, each lexical set is named after a representative keyword.[9] Wells also describes three sets of words based on word-final unstressed vowels, which, though not included in the standard 24 lexical sets (the final three sets listed in the chart below) "have indexical and diagnostic value in distinguishing accents".[10]

Lexical sets, as defined in Wells (1982), pp. xviii–ix, 120–2, 166–7
Keyword RP GA Example words
KIT ɪ ɪ ship, sick, bridge, milk, myth, busy
DRESS e ɛ step, neck, edge, shelf, friend, ready
TRAP æ æ tap, back, badge, scalp, hand, cancel
LOT ɒ ɑ stop, sock, dodge, romp, possible, quality
STRUT ʌ ʌ cup, suck, budge, pulse, trunk, blood
FOOT ʊ ʊ put, bush, full, good, look, wolf
BATH ɑː æ staff, brass, ask, dance, sample, calf
CLOTH ɒ ɔ cough, broth, cross, long, Boston
NURSE ɜː ɜr hurt, lurk, urge, burst, jerk, term
FLEECE i creep, speak, leave, feel, key, people
FACE tape, cake, raid, veil, steak, day
PALM ɑː ɑ psalm, father, bra, spa, lager
THOUGHT ɔː ɔ taught, sauce, hawk, jaw, broad
GOAT əʊ soap, joke, home, know, so, roll
GOOSE u loop, shoot, tomb, mute, huge, view
PRICE ripe, write, arrive, high, try, buy
CHOICE ɔɪ ɔɪ adroit, noise, join, toy, royal
MOUTH out, house, loud, count, crowd, cow
NEAR ɪə ɪr beer, sincere, fear, beard, serum
SQUARE ɛə ɛr care, fair, pear, where, scarce, vary
START ɑː ɑr far, sharp, bark, carve, farm, heart
NORTH ɔː ɔr for, war, short, scorch, born, warm
FORCE ɔː or four, wore, sport, porch, borne, story
CURE ʊə ʊr poor, tourist, pure, plural, jury
happY ɪ ɪ copy, scampi, taxi, sortie, committee, hockey, Chelsea
lettER ə ər paper, metre, calendar, stupor, succo(u)r, martyr
commA ə ə about, gallop, oblige, quota, vodka

For example, the word rod is pronounced /ˈrɒd/ in RP and /ˈrɑd/ in GenAm. It therefore belongs in the LOT lexical set. Weary is pronounced /ˈwɪərɪ/ in RP and /ˈwɪrɪ/ in GenAm and thus belongs in the NEAR lexical set.

Some English words do not belong to any lexical set. For example, the a in the stressed syllable of tomato is pronounced /ɑː/ in RP, and /eɪ/ in GenAm, a combination that is very unusual and is not covered by any of the 24 lexical sets above.[11] The GenAm pronunciation of words pronounced with /ɒ/ before a velar consonant in RP, such as mock and fog, varies between /ɔ/ and /ɑ/ and so the words belong to no particular lexical set.[12]

The GenAm FLEECE, FACE, GOOSE, and GOAT range between monophthongal [i, e, u, o] and diphthongal [ɪi, eɪ, ʊu, oʊ], and Wells chose to phonemicize three of them as monophthongs for the sake of simplicity and FACE as /eɪ/ to avoid confusion with RP DRESS, /e/.[13]

The happY set was identified phonemically as the same as KIT for both RP and GenAm, reflecting the then-traditional analysis, although realizations similar to FLEECE (happy tensing) were already taking hold in both varieties.[14] The notation i for happY has since emerged and been taken up by major pronouncing dictionaries, including Wells's, to take note of this shift.[15] Wells's model of General American is also conservative in that it lacks the cotcaught (LOTTHOUGHT) and horsehoarse (NORTHFORCE) mergers.[8]

Choice of the keywords edit

Wells explains his choice of keywords ("kit", "fleece", etc.) as follows:

The keywords have been chosen in such a way that clarity is maximized: whatever accent of English they are spoken in, they can hardly be mistaken for other words. Although fleece is not the commonest of words, it cannot be mistaken for a word with some other vowel; whereas beat, say, if we had chosen it instead, would have been subject to the drawback that one man's pronunciation of beat may sound like another's pronunciation of bait or bit.[9]

Wherever possible, the keywords end in a voiceless alveolar or dental consonant.[9]

Usage edit

The standard lexical sets of Wells are widely used to discuss the phonological and phonetic systems of different accents of English in a clear and concise manner. Although based solely on RP and GenAm, the standard lexical sets have proven useful in describing many other accents of English. This is true because, in many dialects, the words in all or most of the sets are pronounced with similar or identical stressed vowels. Wells himself uses the Lexical Sets most prominently to give "tables of lexical incidence" for all the various accents he discusses in his work. For example, here is the table of lexical incidence he gives for Newfoundland English:[16]

  • KIT: ɪ
  • DRESS: ɛ
  • TRAP: æ
  • LOT: ɑ
  • STRUT: ɔ̈
  • FOOT: ʊ
  • BATH: æː
  • CLOTH: ɑː
  • NURSE: ɜr [ɝ:]
  • FLEECE:
  • FACE: ɛː, ɛɪ
  • PALM: æ, ɑː
  • THOUGHT: ɑː
  • GOAT: ʌʊ
  • GOOSE:
  • PRICE: əi
  • CHOICE: əi
  • MOUTH: əu
  • NEAR: ɛr
  • SQUARE: ɛr
  • START: ær
  • NORTH: ɔ̈r
  • FORCE: ɔ̈r
  • CURE: ɔ̈r
  • happY: [i]
  • lettER: ər [ɚ]
  • commA: ə

The table indicates that, for example, Newfoundland English uses the /ɪ/ phoneme for words in the KIT lexical set, and that the NORTH, FORCE and CURE sets are all pronounced with the same vowel /ɔ̈r/. Note that some lexical sets, such as FACE, are given with more than one pronunciation, which indicates that not all words in the FACE lexical set are pronounced similarly (in this case, Newfoundland English has not fully undergone the pane–pain merger). /ɔ̈/ is a back vowel [ɔ]; Wells uses the symbol ɔ̈ so that the reader does not confuse it with the THOUGHT vowel (which, in the case of many other accents, he writes with ɔ or ɔː).[17]

Wells also uses the standard lexical sets to refer to "the vowel sound used for the standard lexical set in question in the accent under discussion":[18] Thus, for example, in describing the Newfoundland accent, Wells writes that "KIT and DRESS are reportedly often merged as [ɪ]",[19] meaning that the stressed syllables of words in the KIT lexical set and words in the DRESS lexical set are reportedly often pronounced identically with the vowel [ɪ].

Lexical sets may also be used to describe splits and mergers. For example, RP, along with most other non-rhotic accents, pronounces words such as "father" and "farther" identically. This can be described more economically as the merger of the PALM and START lexical sets. Most North American accents make "father" rhyme with "bother". This can be described as the merger of the PALM and LOT lexical sets.

Origin edit

In a 2010 blog post, Wells wrote:

I sometimes think that a century from now my lexical sets will be the one thing I shall be remembered for. Yet I dreamt them up over a weekend, frustrated with the incoherent mess of symbols used in such contemporary publications as Weinreich's "Is a structural dialectology possible?".[20]

He also wrote that he claimed no copyright in the standard lexical sets, and that everyone was "free to make whatever use of them they wish".[20]

Extensions edit

Some varieties of English make distinctions in stressed vowels that are not captured by the 24 lexical sets. For example, some Irish and Scottish accents that have not undergone the fern–fir–fur merger split the NURSE lexical set into multiple subsets. For such accents, the 24 Wells lexical sets may be inadequate. Because of this, a work devoted to Irish English may split the Wells NURSE set into two subsets, a new, smaller NURSE set and a TERM set.[21]

Some writers on English accents have introduced a GOAL set to refer to a set of words that have the GOAT vowel in standard accents but may have a different vowel in Sheffield[22] or in south-east London.[23] Wells has stated that he didn't include a GOAL set because this should be interpreted as an allophone of GOAT that is sensitive to the morpheme boundary, which he illustrates by comparing the London pronunciations of goalie and slowly.[24]

Schneider et al. (2004), which documents the phonologies of varieties of English around the world like Wells (1982), employs Wells's standard lexical sets as well as the following supplementary lexical sets, as needed to illustrate finer details of the variety under discussion:[25]

  • GOAL, discussed above
  • horsES, officEs, paintEd and villAge, all referring to the unstressed allophone of KIT that is subject to the weak vowel merger
  • MARY, MARRY and MERRY, for the allophones of FACE (SQUARE in non-rhotic dialects), TRAP and DRESS before intervocalic /r/, commonly subject to Mary-marry-merry merger in North American English
  • MIRROR and NEARER, for the allophones of KIT and FLEECE before intervocalic /r/, commonly subject to mirror-nearer merger in North American English
  • treacLE and uncLE, both referring to the vocalized /əl/
  • Other supplementary lexical sets include:
HEAD, BIRTH, BERTH, PRIZE, AFTER, NEVER, STAY, STONE, STAND, DO, ONE, SNOW, BOAR, POWER, FIRE, EARS, TUESDAY, NEW, ORANGE, KITTEN, DANCE, TOMORROW, LOUD, HAND, PIN, PEN, THINK, LENGTH, GOING, POOL, PULL, FEEL, FILL, FAIL, FELL, COW, STAR, FIT, CUP, PIECE, BROAD, LOOSE, EIGHT, metER, BEER, BARE, BACK, BED, TERM, SPHERE, ZERO, carrIER, cordIAL, cUrious, TRUER, TRUANT, About, IT, SIT, LAYER, BITE, BIDE, BYRE, BILE, BOUT, BOWED, BOWER, BOWEL, DOOR, POOR
  • There is also the OFF set, which is the same as Wells's CLOTH.

Adaptation for Anglo-Welsh dialects edit

In his work for the Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects, David Parry adapted Wells's lexical sets for Anglo-Welsh dialects.

Lexical sets, as defined in Parry (1999), pp. 8–9.
Keyword Example words
BRIDGE bitch, bridge, finger, shilling, squirrel, thimble, whip, with
KETTLE buried, deaf, kettle, second, twelve, yellow
APPLES apples, hand, ladder, lamb, man, rabbits, rat, saddle, that, thatch
SUCK butter, furrow, jump, none, nothing, one, onions, suck, uncle
DOG cross, dog, fox, holly, off, porridge, quarry, trough, wash, wasps, wrong
BULL bull, butcher, foot, put, sugar, woman, wool
SHEEP cheese, geese, grease, key, pea, sheaf, sheep, weasel, weeds, wheel, yeast
GATE bacon, break, clay, drain, gate, lay (verb), potatoes, spade, tail, take, waistcoat, weigh
WORK first, heard, third, work (noun)
MARE chair, hare, mare, pears
ARM arm, branch, calf, chaff, draught, farmer, farthing, grass
STRAW forks, morning, saw-dust, slaughter-house, straw, walk
FOAL coal, cold, colt, comb, foal, oak, old, road, sholder, snow, spokes, toad, yolk
GOOSE dew, ewe, goose, hoof, root, stool, tooth, Tuesday, two
WHITE eye, fight, flies (noun, plural), hive, ivy, mice, white
OIL boiling, oil, voice
COW cow, plough, snout, sow (noun), thousand
EARS ears, hear, year
BOAR boar, door, four
FIRE fire, iron
HOUR flour, hour

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Wells (1982), p. xviii.
  2. ^ a b Mesthrie, Rajend (2000). "Regional Dialectology". Introducing Sociolinguistics. Edinburgh University Press, p. 50.
  3. ^ Armstrong, Nigel (2001). Social and stylistic variation in spoken French: a comparative approach. Amsterdam: John Benjamins. pp. 100ff. ISBN 90-272-1839-0.
  4. ^ Raymond Hickey (29 August 2011). The Dialects of Irish: Study of a Changing Landscape. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-023830-3.
  5. ^ Robert McColl Millar (2007). Northern and insular Scots. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-2316-7.
  6. ^ Wells (1982).
  7. ^ Wells (1982), p. 117.
  8. ^ a b Wells (1982), p. 118.
  9. ^ a b c Wells (1982), p. 123.
  10. ^ Wells (1982), p. 165.
  11. ^ Wells (1982), p. 122.
  12. ^ Wells (1982), p. 136.
  13. ^ Wells (1982), pp. 120–1.
  14. ^ Wells (1982), pp. 257–8, 294, 299.
  15. ^ Cruttenden (2014), pp. 84, 349–50.
  16. ^ Wells (1982), p. 499.
  17. ^ Wells (1982), p. 498.
  18. ^ Wells (1982), p. 124.
  19. ^ Wells (1982), p. 500.
  20. ^ a b "John Wells's phonetic blog: lexical sets". 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
  21. ^ Hickey, Raymond (2004). A sound atlas of Irish English. Mouton de Gruyter. pp. 54–55. ISBN 3-11-018298-X.
  22. ^ Stoddart, Upton and Widowson in Urban Voices, Arnold, London, 1999, page 76
  23. ^ Tollfree in Urban Voices, Arnold, London, 1999, page 165
  24. ^ "John Wells's phonetic blog: the evidence of the vows". 2011-05-03. Retrieved 2014-02-17.
  25. ^ Schneider et al. (2004), pp. 42–3, 53–4, 101–2, 137, 187, 236, 263–4, 273, 285, 290, 294, 303–4, 340, 359, 369, 395, 410, 460, 504–5, 515, 518, 585, 761–2, 849, 880, 893, 928, 945, 947, 956, 968, 987, 993, 1006, 1024, 1038, 1050.

Bibliography edit

  • Cruttenden, Alan (2014). Gimson's Pronunciation of English (8th ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-72174-5.
  • Parry, David (1999). A Grammar and Glossary of the Conservative Anglo-Welsh Dialects of Rural Wales. Sheffield: The National Centre for English Cultural Tradition.
  • Schneider, Edgar W.; Burridge, Kate; Kortmann, Bernd; Mesthrie, Rajend; Upton, Clive (2004). A Handbook of Varieties of English. Vol. 1: Phonology. Mouton de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-017532-5.
  • Wells, John C. (1982). Accents of English. Vol. 1: An Introduction (pp. i–xx, 1–278), Vol. 2: The British Isles (pp. i–xx, 279–466), Vol. 3: Beyond the British Isles (pp. i–xx, 467–674). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-52129719-2 , 0-52128540-2 , 0-52128541-0 .

External links edit

  • Nicole Taylor (with the collaboration of Norma Mendoza-Denton [1]), The University of Arizona, Anthropology 383, Standard Lexical Sets, 2002 (in Archive.is)
  • University of Pennsylvania, Linguistics 001, Lecture 9: Pronunciation of English

lexical, this, article, contains, phonetic, transcriptions, international, phonetic, alphabet, introductory, guide, symbols, help, distinction, between, brackets, transcription, delimiters, lexical, group, words, that, share, particular, phonological, feature,. This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters A lexical set is a group of words that share a particular phonological feature A phoneme is a basic unit of sound in a language that can distinguish one word from another Most commonly following the work of phonetician John C Wells a lexical set is a class of words in a language that share a certain vowel phoneme As Wells himself says lexical sets enable one to refer concisely to large groups of words which tend to share the same vowel and to the vowel which they share 1 For instance the pronunciation of the vowel in cup luck sun blood glove and tough may vary in different English dialects but is usually consistent within each dialect and so the category of words forms a lexical set 2 which Wells for ease calls the STRUT set Meanwhile words like bid cliff limb miss etc form a separate lexical set Wells s KIT set Originally Wells developed 24 such labels keywords for the vowel lexical sets of English which have been sometimes modified and expanded by himself or other scholars for various reasons Lexical sets have also been used to describe the vowels of other languages such as French 3 Irish 4 and Scots 5 There are several reasons why lexical sets are useful Scholars of phonetics often use abstract symbols most universally today those of the International Phonetic Alphabet to transcribe phonemes but they may follow different transcribing conventions or rely on implicit assumptions in their exact choice of symbols One convenience of lexical sets is their tendency to avoid these conventions or assumptions Instead Wells explains they make use of keywords intended to be unmistakable no matter what accent one says them in 1 That makes them useful for examining phonemes within an accent comparing and contrasting different accents and capturing how phonemes may be differently distributed based on accent A further benefit is that people with no background in phonetics can identify a phoneme not by learned symbols or technical jargon but by its simple keyword like STRUT or KIT in the above examples 2 Contents 1 Standard lexical sets for English 1 1 Choice of the keywords 1 2 Usage 1 3 Origin 1 4 Extensions 1 5 Adaptation for Anglo Welsh dialects 2 See also 3 References 4 Bibliography 5 External linksStandard lexical sets for English editThe standard lexical sets for English introduced by John C Wells in his 1982 Accents of English are in wide usage Wells defined each lexical set on the basis of the pronunciation of words in two reference accents which he calls RP and GenAm 6 RP refers to Received Pronunciation the traditionally prestigious accent in England 7 GenAm refers to an accent of the General American type which is associated with a geographically neutral or widespread sound system throughout the US 8 Wells classifies English words into 24 lexical sets on the basis of the pronunciation of the vowel of their stressed syllable in the two reference accents Typed in small caps each lexical set is named after a representative keyword 9 Wells also describes three sets of words based on word final unstressed vowels which though not included in the standard 24 lexical sets the final three sets listed in the chart below have indexical and diagnostic value in distinguishing accents 10 Lexical sets as defined in Wells 1982 pp xviii ix 120 2 166 7 Keyword RP GA Example wordsKIT ɪ ɪ ship sick bridge milk myth busyDRESS e ɛ step neck edge shelf friend readyTRAP ae ae tap back badge scalp hand cancelLOT ɒ ɑ stop sock dodge romp possible qualitySTRUT ʌ ʌ cup suck budge pulse trunk bloodFOOT ʊ ʊ put bush full good look wolfBATH ɑː ae staff brass ask dance sample calfCLOTH ɒ ɔ cough broth cross long BostonNURSE ɜː ɜr hurt lurk urge burst jerk termFLEECE iː i creep speak leave feel key peopleFACE eɪ eɪ tape cake raid veil steak dayPALM ɑː ɑ psalm father bra spa lagerTHOUGHT ɔː ɔ taught sauce hawk jaw broadGOAT eʊ oʊ soap joke home know so rollGOOSE uː u loop shoot tomb mute huge viewPRICE aɪ aɪ ripe write arrive high try buyCHOICE ɔɪ ɔɪ adroit noise join toy royalMOUTH aʊ aʊ out house loud count crowd cowNEAR ɪe ɪr beer sincere fear beard serumSQUARE ɛe ɛr care fair pear where scarce varySTART ɑː ɑr far sharp bark carve farm heartNORTH ɔː ɔr for war short scorch born warmFORCE ɔː or four wore sport porch borne storyCURE ʊe ʊr poor tourist pure plural juryhappY ɪ ɪ copy scampi taxi sortie committee hockey ChelsealettER e er paper metre calendar stupor succo u r martyrcommA e e about gallop oblige quota vodkaFor example the word rod is pronounced ˈrɒd in RP and ˈrɑd in GenAm It therefore belongs in the LOT lexical set Weary is pronounced ˈwɪerɪ in RP and ˈwɪrɪ in GenAm and thus belongs in the NEAR lexical set Some English words do not belong to any lexical set For example the a in the stressed syllable of tomato is pronounced ɑː in RP and eɪ in GenAm a combination that is very unusual and is not covered by any of the 24 lexical sets above 11 The GenAm pronunciation of words pronounced with ɒ before a velar consonant in RP such as mock and fog varies between ɔ and ɑ and so the words belong to no particular lexical set 12 The GenAm FLEECE FACE GOOSE and GOAT range between monophthongal i e u o and diphthongal ɪi eɪ ʊu oʊ and Wells chose to phonemicize three of them as monophthongs for the sake of simplicity and FACE as eɪ to avoid confusion with RP DRESS e 13 The happY set was identified phonemically as the same as KIT for both RP and GenAm reflecting the then traditional analysis although realizations similar to FLEECE happy tensing were already taking hold in both varieties 14 The notation i for happY has since emerged and been taken up by major pronouncing dictionaries including Wells s to take note of this shift 15 Wells s model of General American is also conservative in that it lacks the cot caught LOT THOUGHT and horse hoarse NORTH FORCE mergers 8 Choice of the keywords edit Wells explains his choice of keywords kit fleece etc as follows The keywords have been chosen in such a way that clarity is maximized whatever accent of English they are spoken in they can hardly be mistaken for other words Although fleece is not the commonest of words it cannot be mistaken for a word with some other vowel whereas beat say if we had chosen it instead would have been subject to the drawback that one man s pronunciation of beat may sound like another s pronunciation of bait or bit 9 Wherever possible the keywords end in a voiceless alveolar or dental consonant 9 Usage edit The standard lexical sets of Wells are widely used to discuss the phonological and phonetic systems of different accents of English in a clear and concise manner Although based solely on RP and GenAm the standard lexical sets have proven useful in describing many other accents of English This is true because in many dialects the words in all or most of the sets are pronounced with similar or identical stressed vowels Wells himself uses the Lexical Sets most prominently to give tables of lexical incidence for all the various accents he discusses in his work For example here is the table of lexical incidence he gives for Newfoundland English 16 KIT ɪ DRESS ɛ TRAP ae LOT ɑ STRUT ɔ FOOT ʊ BATH aeː CLOTH ɑː NURSE ɜr ɝ FLEECE iː FACE ɛː ɛɪ PALM ae ɑː THOUGHT ɑː GOAT ʌʊ GOOSE uː PRICE ei CHOICE ei MOUTH eu NEAR ɛr SQUARE ɛr START aer NORTH ɔ r FORCE ɔ r CURE ɔ r happY i lettER er ɚ commA e The table indicates that for example Newfoundland English uses the ɪ phoneme for words in the KIT lexical set and that the NORTH FORCE and CURE sets are all pronounced with the same vowel ɔ r Note that some lexical sets such as FACE are given with more than one pronunciation which indicates that not all words in the FACE lexical set are pronounced similarly in this case Newfoundland English has not fully undergone the pane pain merger ɔ is a back vowel ɔ Wells uses the symbol ɔ so that the reader does not confuse it with the THOUGHT vowel which in the case of many other accents he writes with ɔ or ɔː 17 Wells also uses the standard lexical sets to refer to the vowel sound used for the standard lexical set in question in the accent under discussion 18 Thus for example in describing the Newfoundland accent Wells writes that KIT and DRESS are reportedly often merged as ɪ 19 meaning that the stressed syllables of words in the KIT lexical set and words in the DRESS lexical set are reportedly often pronounced identically with the vowel ɪ Lexical sets may also be used to describe splits and mergers For example RP along with most other non rhotic accents pronounces words such as father and farther identically This can be described more economically as the merger of the PALM and START lexical sets Most North American accents make father rhyme with bother This can be described as the merger of the PALM and LOT lexical sets Origin edit In a 2010 blog post Wells wrote I sometimes think that a century from now my lexical sets will be the one thing I shall be remembered for Yet I dreamt them up over a weekend frustrated with the incoherent mess of symbols used in such contemporary publications as Weinreich s Is a structural dialectology possible 20 He also wrote that he claimed no copyright in the standard lexical sets and that everyone was free to make whatever use of them they wish 20 Extensions edit Some varieties of English make distinctions in stressed vowels that are not captured by the 24 lexical sets For example some Irish and Scottish accents that have not undergone the fern fir fur merger split the NURSE lexical set into multiple subsets For such accents the 24 Wells lexical sets may be inadequate Because of this a work devoted to Irish English may split the Wells NURSE set into two subsets a new smaller NURSE set and a TERM set 21 Some writers on English accents have introduced a GOAL set to refer to a set of words that have the GOAT vowel in standard accents but may have a different vowel in Sheffield 22 or in south east London 23 Wells has stated that he didn t include a GOAL set because this should be interpreted as an allophone of GOAT that is sensitive to the morpheme boundary which he illustrates by comparing the London pronunciations of goalie and slowly 24 Schneider et al 2004 which documents the phonologies of varieties of English around the world like Wells 1982 employs Wells s standard lexical sets as well as the following supplementary lexical sets as needed to illustrate finer details of the variety under discussion 25 GOAL discussed above horsES officE s paintE d and villA ge all referring to the unstressed allophone of KIT that is subject to the weak vowel merger MARY MARRY and MERRY for the allophones of FACE SQUARE in non rhotic dialects TRAP and DRESS before intervocalic r commonly subject to Mary marry merry merger in North American English MIRROR and NEARER for the allophones of KIT and FLEECE before intervocalic r commonly subject to mirror nearer merger in North American English treacLE and uncLE both referring to the vocalized el Other supplementary lexical sets include HEAD BIRTH BERTH PRIZE AFTER NEVER STAY STONE STAND DO ONE SNOW BOAR POWER FIRE EARS TUESDAY NEW ORANGE KITTEN DANCE TOMORROW LOUD HAND PIN PEN THINK LENGTH GOING POOL PULL FEEL FILL FAIL FELL COW STAR FIT CUP PIECE BROAD LOOSE EIGHT metER BEER BARE BACK BED TERM SPHERE ZERO carrIER cordIAL cU rious TRUER TRUANT A bout IT SIT LAYER BITE BIDE BYRE BILE BOUT BOWED BOWER BOWEL DOOR POORThere is also the OFF set which is the same as Wells s CLOTH Adaptation for Anglo Welsh dialects edit In his work for the Survey of Anglo Welsh Dialects David Parry adapted Wells s lexical sets for Anglo Welsh dialects Lexical sets as defined in Parry 1999 pp 8 9 Keyword Example wordsBRIDGE bitch bridge finger shilling squirrel thimble whip withKETTLE buried deaf kettle second twelve yellowAPPLES apples hand ladder lamb man rabbits rat saddle that thatchSUCK butter furrow jump none nothing one onions suck uncleDOG cross dog fox holly off porridge quarry trough wash wasps wrongBULL bull butcher foot put sugar woman woolSHEEP cheese geese grease key pea sheaf sheep weasel weeds wheel yeastGATE bacon break clay drain gate lay verb potatoes spade tail take waistcoat weighWORK first heard third work noun MARE chair hare mare pearsARM arm branch calf chaff draught farmer farthing grassSTRAW forks morning saw dust slaughter house straw walkFOAL coal cold colt comb foal oak old road sholder snow spokes toad yolkGOOSE dew ewe goose hoof root stool tooth Tuesday twoWHITE eye fight flies noun plural hive ivy mice whiteOIL boiling oil voiceCOW cow plough snout sow noun thousandEARS ears hear yearBOAR boar door fourFIRE fire ironHOUR flour hourSee also editDiaphoneme Homophone Minimal pairReferences edit a b Wells 1982 p xviii a b Mesthrie Rajend 2000 Regional Dialectology Introducing Sociolinguistics Edinburgh University Press p 50 Armstrong Nigel 2001 Social and stylistic variation in spoken French a comparative approach Amsterdam John Benjamins pp 100ff ISBN 90 272 1839 0 Raymond Hickey 29 August 2011 The Dialects of Irish Study of a Changing Landscape Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 023830 3 Robert McColl Millar 2007 Northern and insular Scots Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 2316 7 Wells 1982 Wells 1982 p 117 a b Wells 1982 p 118 a b c Wells 1982 p 123 Wells 1982 p 165 Wells 1982 p 122 Wells 1982 p 136 Wells 1982 pp 120 1 Wells 1982 pp 257 8 294 299 Cruttenden 2014 pp 84 349 50 Wells 1982 p 499 Wells 1982 p 498 Wells 1982 p 124 Wells 1982 p 500 a b John Wells s phonetic blog lexical sets 2010 02 02 Retrieved 2010 04 30 Hickey Raymond 2004 A sound atlas of Irish English Mouton de Gruyter pp 54 55 ISBN 3 11 018298 X Stoddart Upton and Widowson in Urban Voices Arnold London 1999 page 76 Tollfree in Urban Voices Arnold London 1999 page 165 John Wells s phonetic blog the evidence of the vows 2011 05 03 Retrieved 2014 02 17 Schneider et al 2004 pp 42 3 53 4 101 2 137 187 236 263 4 273 285 290 294 303 4 340 359 369 395 410 460 504 5 515 518 585 761 2 849 880 893 928 945 947 956 968 987 993 1006 1024 1038 1050 Bibliography editCruttenden Alan 2014 Gimson s Pronunciation of English 8th ed Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 72174 5 Parry David 1999 A Grammar and Glossary of the Conservative Anglo Welsh Dialects of Rural Wales Sheffield The National Centre for English Cultural Tradition Schneider Edgar W Burridge Kate Kortmann Bernd Mesthrie Rajend Upton Clive 2004 A Handbook of Varieties of English Vol 1 Phonology Mouton de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 017532 5 Wells John C 1982 Accents of English Vol 1 An Introduction pp i xx 1 278 Vol 2 The British Isles pp i xx 279 466 Vol 3 Beyond the British Isles pp i xx 467 674 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 52129719 2 0 52128540 2 0 52128541 0 External links editNicole Taylor with the collaboration of Norma Mendoza Denton 1 The University of Arizona Anthropology 383 Standard Lexical Sets 2002 in Archive is University of Pennsylvania Linguistics 001 Lecture 9 Pronunciation of English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lexical set amp oldid 1186929316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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