/aʊr/–/aʊər/ merger The
Middle English merger of the vowels with the spellings and affects all modern varieties of
English and causes words like
sour and
hour, which originally had one syllable, to have two syllables and so to rhyme with
power. In accents that lack the merger,
sour has one syllable, and
power has two syllables. Similar mergers also occur in which
hire gains a syllable and so makes it pronounced like
higher, and
coir gains a syllable and so makes it pronounced like
coyer.
Card–cord merger The '''
card–
cord merger
, or merger'
, is a merger of Early Modern English with , which results in the homophony of pairs like card
/cord
, barn
/born
and far
/for
. It is roughly similar to the father–bother merger but before r
. The merger is found in some Caribbean English accents, in some West Country accents in England, and in some accents of Southern American English. Areas of the United States in which the merger is most common include Central Texas, Utah, and St. Louis, but it is not dominant anywhere and is rapidly disappearing. Rhotic dialects with the card
–cord'' merger are some of the only ones without the
horse–hoarse merger; this correlation is well-documented in the United States.
merger In
Modern English, the reflexes of Early Modern English and are highly susceptible to
phonemic mergers with other vowels. Words belonging to that class are most commonly spelled with
oor,
our,
ure, or
eur. Examples include
poor,
tour,
cure,
Europe (words such as
moor ultimately from
Old English ō words). Wells refers to the class as the words after the keyword of the
lexical set to which he assigns them. In traditional
Received Pronunciation and
General American, words are pronounced with Received Pronunciation ( before a vowel) and General American . However, those pronunciations are being replaced by other pronunciations in many accents. In
Southern England, words are often pronounced with , so
moor is often pronounced ,
tour , and
poor . The traditional form is much more common in Northern England. A similar merger is encountered in many varieties of
American English, whose prevailing pronunciations are and ⁓, depending on whether or not the accent is rhotic. For many speakers of American English, the historical merges with after palatal consonants, as in "cure", "sure", "pure", and "mature", and merges with in other environments such as in "poor" and "moor". In
Australian and
New Zealand English, the centering
diphthong has mostly disappeared and is replaced in some words by (a sequence of two separate
monophthongs) and in others by (a long monophthong). The outcome that occurs in a particular word is not always predictable although, for example,
pure,
cure, and
tour may rhyme with
fewer and have , and
poor,
moor, and
sure rhyme with
for and
paw and have .
merger In
East Anglia, a
merger in which words like
fury merge to the sound of
furry is common, especially after
palatal and
palatoalveolar consonants, so
sure is often pronounced , which is also a common single-word merger in American English in which the word
sure is often . Also,
yod-dropping may apply, which yields pronunciations such as for
pure. Other pronunciations in the accents that merge
cure and
fir include
pure,
curious,
bureau and
mural. For some U.S. speakers can be maintained, dropped, or coalesced as it would in other contexts; often dropped after alveolar consonants (e.g.
endure,
Zurich) but maintained after other consonants (e.g.
pure,
cure).
– merger Varieties of
Southern American English,
Midland American English and
High Tider English may merge words like
fire and
far or
tired and
tarred towards of the second words: . That results in a
tire–
tar merger, but
tower is kept distinct.
–– merger Some accents of southern
British English, including many types of Received Pronunciation and in
Norwich, have mergers of the vowels in words like
tire,
tar (which already
merged with , as in
palm), and
tower. Thus, the triphthong of
tower merges with the of
tire (both surface as diphthongal or with the of
tar through
triphthong smoothing). Some speakers merge all three sounds, so
tower,
tire, and
tar are all pronounced .
Horse–hoarse merger The '''
horse–
hoarse merger
, or merger'
, is the merger of the vowels and before historic , which makes word pairs like horse
–hoarse
, for
–four
, war
–wore
, or
–oar
, morning
–mourning
pronounced the same. Historically, the class belonged to the Early Modern English phoneme (containing the same vowel as l
ot
), while the class was (containing the same vowel as g
o''). The merger now occurs in most varieties of English. Accents that have resisted the merger include most
Scottish and
Caribbean accents as well as some
African American,
Southern American,
Indian,
Irish,
older Maine,
South Wales (excluding Cardiff),
Northern English (particularly
Manchester), and
West Midlands accents. In the non-rhotic British accents that make the distinction, is typically merged with , while the phonological status of varies. The areas of Wales that make the distinction merge it with the monophthongal variety of : (those accents lack the
toe–tow merger). In the accents of Northern England that lack the merger, is not merged with any other lexical set; it is pronounced around while - is a more open . For many speakers, however, as noted by
Henry Sweet, this contrast had by 1890 become constricted to word-final positions if the following word began with a consonant (so 'horse' and 'hoarse' had thus become
homophonous, but not 'morceau' and 'more so'). In his 1918
Outline of English Phonetics,
Daniel Jones described the distinction as optional, but he still considered it to be frequently heard in 1962; the two vowels are differentiated in the first (1884–1928) and second (1989) editions of the
Oxford English Dictionary with the caveat that in most varieties of southern British pronunciation the two had become identical; no distinction is drawn in the third edition, as well as in most modern British dictionaries (
Chambers being a notable exception).
John C. Wells wrote in 2002 that the distinction had become obsolete in RP. In the 2006 study, even
St. Louis, Missouri, which traditionally maintained the
horse–
hoarse distinction so strongly that it instead
merged card and cord, showed that only 50% of the participants still maintained the distinction. The same pattern (a
horse–
hoarse distinction and a
card–
cord merger) also exists in a minority of speakers in Texas and Utah. New Orleans prominently shows much variability regarding the merger, including some speakers with no merger at all. Black Americans are rapidly undergoing the merger but are also less likely to do so than white Americans, with a little over half of the 2006 study's black participants maintaining the distinction nationwide. In some
Indian,
Welsh, and
Southern American dialects, the distinction between and may be maintained through the presence or absence of , with
horse being and
hoarse being . The two groups of words merged by the rule are called the
lexical sets (including
horse) and (including
hoarse) by Wells (1982). In dialects that maintain the distinction between the two phonemes, is indicated almost exclusively by the spellings
or,
aur and
ar (when preceded by /w/), as in
horse,
aural,
war, while is generally indicated by the spellings
oar,
ore,
our and
oor, as in
hoarse,
wore,
four,
door. However, can also sometimes occur in words with the
or spelling. This is usually in one or more of the following circumstances: • When the vowel immediately follows a
labial consonant, , as in
force itself. • In
past participles in
-orn with corresponding
past tense forms in
-ore, as in
torn, or words made from ones with the vowel. • When the is followed by a vowel within the same
morpheme, as in words like
glory and
flora. However, it does not occur in all words that fit the above criteria. The following table lists some words irregularly with the sound, rather than , with the cases that make them so and regular words by comparison. Note that in non-standard accents many words can shift their pronunciation without changing
diaphonemes due to
lexical diffusion.
merger The
merger or '''
cheer–
chair merger''' is the merger of the Early Modern English sequences and , as well as the between them, and is found in some accents of Modern English. Many speakers in New Zealand merge them towards the vowel, but some speakers in
East Anglia and
South Carolina merge them towards the vowel. The merger is widespread in Caribbean English, including
Jamaican English.
mergers Common in a vast majority of modern English dialects worldwide is the merger of as many as five
Early Modern English vowels (, , , , and ) into when followed by an before a consonant or at the end of a syllable. Thus, the vowels in words like , , and are the same in almost all modern accents of English.
John C. Wells briefly calls it the
merger. When another vowel follows, these are often distinct; contrast the vowels in
merry,
hurry,
weary,
mirror, and
furry (see the
Mary–marry–merry merger,
mirror–nearer merger, and
hurry–furry merger for details). The major exceptions to most of the Nurse mergers are
Scottish English and older
Irish English, which also do not have mergers of vowels before following another vowel. What Scottish and older Irish English have in common is
rhoticity without
r-colored vowels, meaning that
/r/ is used at the end of a syllable. Words and names with historic are spelled as in
earn,
earth or
pearl, in words which have stayed distinct (see both the
meet–meat and
pane–pain mergers), and they include the function words
her and
were. The relevant words and names with historic are in a stressed syllable, historic are spelled as a stressed , and is any or . The diaphoneme originates from unstressed vowels before and was not otherwise distinct. Scottish English and rural Irish English dialects both use sequences of a vowel then not
r-colored vowels, and both lack the
foot–strut split; which result in comparable developments. However, the actual realizations of the retained Nurse vowels vary. Also, while most of Scottish English has some distinction, more prestigious/younger Irish English realizes the Nurse merger as . The table below summarizes the overall differences: In
Scottish English,
mid front and are merged into , paralleling the
mid back vowel horse–hoarse merger, which Scottish English lacks. The vowel in
fir is usually distinct, but is liable to merge than because their non-rhoticized equivalents and belong to the same phoneme; this parallels the
hurry–furry merger. All EME became , which included before . The (
letter), (
term) and (
fur) vowels are fully distinct from each other. For rural and very conservative
Irish English, (in
whirl) merges entirely with (in
earl), sometimes merging again with . The merged merges again with after
labials and
coronal plosives (
including and becoming and ) in many common words, but this no longer productive.
merger Some
older Southern American English varieties and some of England's
West Country dialects have a partial merger of . They generally pronounce as , which rhymes
near with a word like
sir or
fur (compare general English realisations of
cue and
coo). Words such as
beard are then pronounced as . Usual word pairs like
beer and
burr are still distinguished as and . However, is dropped after a
consonant cluster (as in
queer) or a
palato-alveolar consonant (as in
cheer), likely because of
phonotactic constraints, which then results in a merger with : , . There is evidence that the
African American Vernacular English in
Memphis, Tennessee, merges both and with , so
here and
hair are both pronounced the same as the strong pronunciation of
her.
merger The
merger (words like
perk being pronounced like
pork) involves the merger of with and occurs in
broadest Geordie. Some words (roughly those spelled with
a) have a distinct vowel in broad Geordie. Therefore, the merger involves only some of the words corresponding to historical in Received Pronunciation.
merger The
merger, or '''
fair–
fur merger''', is a merger of with that occurs in some accents like
Scouse, various other dialects within historic
Lancashire,
Teesside,
Hull, the newer
Dublin, and the
Belfast accents. Scouse, the accent of Liverpool and the Merseyside area, is the dialect with which the merger is most stereotypically associated. It is also found in many neighbouring regions of historic Lancashire, such as
Bolton,
Wigan and
Blackburn, where the quality is generally a more central [ɜː]~[ɵː]. The merger can also be found among some speakers in the Teesside conurbation and the Humberside (Hull -
East Riding of Yorkshire -
North East Lincolnshire) area with a quality intermediate between [ɛː] and [ɜː]. The merger is found in some varieties of
African American Vernacular English and is pronounced : "A recent development reported for some
AAE (in Memphis, but likely found elsewhere)." This is exemplified in
Chingy's song "
Right Thurr", in which the merger is spelled in the title. Labov (1994) also reports such a merger in some western parts of the United States "with a high degree of r constriction". == See also ==