Some
English sounds that may be perceived by native speakers as single vowels are in fact diphthongs; an example is the vowel sound in
pay, pronounced . However, in some dialects (e.g.
Scottish English) is a monophthong . Some dialects of English make monophthongs from former diphthongs. For instance,
Southern American English tends to realize the diphthong as in
eye as a long monophthong ,
Smoothing Smoothing is a monophthongization of a closing diphthong (most commonly ) before a vowel that can occur in
Received Pronunciation and other accents of English. (Some have called this "levelling", but this is rarely used because it may be confused with
dialect levelling.) For example,
chaos, pronounced without smoothing, becomes with smoothing. Smoothing applies particularly readily to and when preceding , hence for
fire and for
tower, or with the syllabicity loss of , . The centring diphthong deriving from smoothing and syllabicity loss may further undergo monophthongization, realizing
fire and
tower as or , similar or identical to
far, tar; unlike smoothing, this type of monophthongization (which Wells terms "monophthonging") does not require a following vowel. Smoothing can occur across word boundaries in the same conditions (closing diphthong + vowel), as in
way out,
they eat,
go off. ==Old English==