NG-coalescence NG-coalescence is a historical sound change by which the final cluster , pronounced (the being realized as a
velar nasal by
assimilation with the velar ), came to be pronounced as just – that is, the final was dropped, but the velar quality of the nasal remained. The change took place in educated London speech around the end of the 16th century, and explains why there is no sound at the end of words like
fang,
sing,
wrong and
tongue in the standard varieties of Modern English. The change applies not only at the end of a word, but generally at the end of a
morpheme. If a word ending in
-ng is followed by a
suffix or is compounded with another word, the pronunciation normally remains. For example, in the words
fangs,
sings,
singing,
singer,
wronged,
wrongly,
hangman, there is no sound. An exception is the
comparative and
superlative forms of adjectives: in the words
longer/longest,
stronger/strongest,
younger/youngest, the is pronounced in most accents. The pronunciation with is thus possible only before a vowel; before a consonant, the only possibility is a bare . In other cases (when it is not morpheme-final), word-internal
-ng- does not show the effects of coalescence, and the pronunciation is retained, as in
finger and
angle. This means that the words
finger and
singer do not rhyme in most modern varieties of English, although they did in Middle English. The process of NG-coalescence might therefore be referred to as the
singer–finger split. Some accents, however, do not show the full effects of NG-coalescence as described above. In these accents,
sing may be found with , and
singer may rhyme with
finger. This is particularly associated with
English English accents in areas such as
Lancashire, the
West Midlands and
Derbyshire, and is also present in north-east varieties of
Welsh English. This includes the cities of
Birmingham (see
Brummie),
Manchester (see
Manchester dialect),
Liverpool (see
Scouse),
Sheffield and
Stoke-on-Trent (see
Potteries dialect). This also occurs in a small area of
Kent. As this occurs around the mining area of Kent, it might be a result of large-scale migration by miners from other more northerly coalfields to Kent in the 1920s. It is also associated with some
American English accents in the
New York City area. On the other hand, in some accents of the west of
Scotland and
Ulster, NG-coalescence is extended to morpheme-internal position, so that
finger is pronounced (cf.
Dutch vinger ), thus rhyming with
singer (although the is not dropped before a stressed syllable, as in
engage). It is because of NG-coalescence that is now normally regarded one of the
phonemes of standard English. In Middle English, the can be regarded as an
allophone of , occurring before
velar consonants, but in Modern English, in view of
minimal pairs such as
pan–pang and
sin–sing, that analysis no longer appears to hold. Nevertheless, some linguists (particularly
generativists) do regard a word like
sing as being
underlyingly , positing a rule that deletes after a nasal before a morpheme boundary, after the nasal has undergone assimilation. A problem with this view is that there are a few words in which is followed neither by a velar nor a morpheme boundary (such as
gingham,
dinghy,
orangutan and
Singapore, for those speakers who pronounce them without ), and some in which the is not deleted before a morpheme boundary (such as
longer,
stronger,
younger noted above). In the case of
longer, a
minimal pair occurs for some speakers between (
comparative form of the adjective
long) and ("someone who longs";
agent noun of the verb
long). The above-mentioned accents which lack NG-coalescence may more easily be analyzed as lacking a phoneme . The same may apply to those where NG-coalescence is extended to morpheme-internal position, since here a more consistent -deletion rule can be formulated.
G-dropping G-dropping is a popular name for the feature of speech whereby is used in place of the standard in
weak syllables. This applies especially to the ending of verbs, but also in other words such as
morning,
nothing,
ceiling,
Buckingham, etc. G-dropping speakers may pronounce this syllable as or (reducing to a syllabic consonant|syllabic [n] in some cases), while non-G-dropping speakers have ( with the
weak vowel merger) or . Relative to the great majority of modern dialects, which have
NG-coalescence, G-dropping does not involve the dropping of any sound, simply the replacement of the
velar nasal with the
alveolar nasal. The name derives from the apparent
orthographic consequence of replacing the sound written with that normally written . The spelling is sometimes used to indicate that a speaker uses the G-dropping pronunciation, as in for
making. The pronunciation with rather than is a long-established one. Old English verbs had a
present participle in and a verbal noun (
gerund) form in These merged into a single form, written but not necessarily spoken as such – the pronunciation may be inherited from the former distinct present participle form. The variant appears to have been fashionable generally during the 18th century, with the alternative being adopted in educated speech around the 1820s, possibly as a
spelling pronunciation. Today, G-dropping is a feature of colloquial and non-standard speech of all regions, including stereotypically of
Cockney,
Southern American English and
African American Vernacular English. Its use is highly correlated with the
socioeconomic class of the speaker, with speakers of lower classes using with greater frequency. It has also been found to be more common among men than women, and less common in more formal styles of speech. The fact that the pronunciation was formerly associated with certain upper-class speech is reflected in the phrase ''huntin', shootin' and fishin'' (used in referring to country
gentry who frequently engaged in such
field sports). Further evidence that this pronunciation was once standard comes from old rhymes, as in this couplet from
John Gay's 1732 pastoral
Acis and Galatea, set to music by
Handel: was presumably pronounced "shepherd, what art thou pursuin', heedless runnin' to thy ruin", although this would sound very odd in an opera today. Similarly, in the poetry of
Jonathan Swift (1667–1745), forms consistently rhyme with words ending in , as in this verse of
A Ballad on the Game of Traffic, where "lining" rhymes with "fine in":
Reduction of /mb/ and /mn/ In later Middle English, the final cluster was reduced to just (the plum-plumb merger). This affects words such as
lamb and
plumb, as well as derived forms with suffixes, such as
lambs,
lambing,
plumbed,
plumber. By analogy with words like these, certain other words ending in , which had no historical sound, had a silent letter added to their spelling by way of
hypercorrection. Such words include
limb and
crumb. Where the final cluster occurred, this was reduced to (the him-hymn merger), as in
column,
autumn,
damn,
solemn. (Compare French , where the cluster has been reduced to .) Both sounds are nonetheless still pronounced before vowels in certain derivatives, such as
columnar,
autumnal,
damnation,
solemnity.
Generalized final cluster reduction General reduction of final consonant clusters occurs in
African American Vernacular English and
Caribbean English. It also appears in the
Local Dublin English. The new final consonant may be slightly lengthened as an effect. Examples are: The
plurals of
test and
desk may become
tesses and
desses by the same rule that gives plural
messes from singular
mess. ==Medial cluster reductions==