Clipping (phonetics) explained

pronounced as /notice/In phonetics, clipping is the process of shortening the articulation of a phonetic segment, usually a vowel. A clipped vowel is pronounced more quickly than an unclipped vowel and is often also reduced.

Examples

Dutch

Particularly in Netherlands Dutch, vowels in unstressed syllables are shortened and centralized, which is particularly noticeable with tense vowels; compare the pronounced as //oː// phoneme in Dutch; Flemish: k'''o'''nijn 'rabbit' and Dutch; Flemish: k'''o'''ning 'king'.

English

Many dialects of English (such as Australian English, General American English, Received Pronunciation, South African English and Standard Canadian English) have two types of non-phonemic clipping: pre-fortis clipping and rhythmic clipping.

The first type occurs in a stressed syllable before a fortis consonant, so that e.g. bet pronounced as /[ˈbɛt]/ has a vowel that is shorter than the one in bed pronounced as /[ˈbɛˑd]/. Vowels preceding voiceless consonants that begin a next syllable (as in keychain pronounced as //ˈkiː.tʃeɪn//) are not affected by this rule.

Rhythmic clipping occurs in polysyllabic words. The more syllables a word has, the shorter its vowels are and so the first vowel of readership is shorter than in reader, which, in turn, is shorter than in read.[1]

Clipping with vowel reduction also occurs in many unstressed syllables.

Because of the variability of vowel length, the (IPA|ː) diacritic is sometimes omitted in IPA transcriptions of English and so words such as dawn or lead are transcribed as pronounced as //dɔn// and pronounced as //lid//, instead of the more usual pronounced as //dɔːn// and pronounced as //liːd//. Neither type of transcription is more correct, as both convey exactly the same information, but transcription systems that use the length mark make it more clear whether a vowel is checked or free. Compare the length of the RP vowel pronounced as //ɒ// in the word not as opposed to the corresponding pronounced as //ɒ// in Canadian English, which is typically longer (like RP pronounced as //ɑː//) because Canadian pronounced as //ɒ// is a free vowel (checked pronounced as //ɒ// is very rare in North America, as it relies on a three-way distinction between, and) and so can also be transcribed as pronounced as //ɒː//.

The Scottish vowel length rule is used instead of those rules in Scotland and sometimes also in Northern Ireland.

Serbo-Croatian

Many speakers of Serbo-Croatian from Croatia and Serbia pronounce historical unstressed long vowels as short, with some exceptions (such as genitive plural endings). Therefore, the name Jadranka is pronounced pronounced as /[jâdraŋka]/, rather than pronounced as /[jâdraːŋka]/.

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lecture 3: The vowel system; clipping. Wells. John C.. 2006. 23 October 2016.