What's with the semi-silent R? (english)

old.Tohtori

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In english, spoken really, sometimes there's a silent(ish) r there.

I think it's usually just after a word with a vowel at end, before is/isn't etc. Mostly noticed it after names.

Something like; "Your name is Amanda(r) isn't it?"

Dialect thing or?
 

Aph3x

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Its a dialect thing, though im not sure which area of Britan would call someone Amandar.
 

megadave

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I know a certain football commentator who might.


English as a language is properly bastardised now days. But yeah, dialect.
 

Job

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Maybe Cornish?
Amand-aar
Pirate?
 

Zede

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In english, spoken really, sometimes there's a silent(ish) r there.

I think it's usually just after a word with a vowel at end, before is/isn't etc. Mostly noticed it after names.

Something like; "Your name is Amanda(r) isn't it?"

Dialect thing or?

Dialect i think... no r in amanda-r, hmm trying to think what accent would pronounce it with said r on the end...cockneys...yer southern fairies.
 

old.Tohtori

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Amanda was just an example really, so it might not actually be after amanda.
 

mooSe_

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Do you also mean like pronouncing grass sort of like grarss or glass glarss?
 

old.Tohtori

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The R is deffo the last sound, like..hmm...well in american chopper the senior says idear instead of idea.
 

Lethul

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Every chinese student in my school says ideaR and stuff like that
:)

Is he Asian? :p
 

fettoken

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Your example is of an american dialect and language. And since americans and their language are of a lower standard (and, different pronunciation) it makes for a less than adequate example.
 

Cerb

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Not from England but I definatly remember seeing a tv add for rice pudding called ambroisia and I remember they had a cornwall accent and were singing "oh ar is amborsia(r)" so I think that might be what you are hearing?
 

old.Tohtori

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Your example is of an american dialect and language. And since americans and their language are of a lower standard (and, different pronunciation) it makes for a less than adequate example.

It was an example to moose to explain where the r is.

Cerb yeah that might be it, really need an english dialect map :p
 

gohan

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to be fair northeners don't sticks R's in but down south we but them everywhere

grarss barth parth glarss


idea id pronounced i-dear by every1 ive ever met never know anyone to say i-de-ah

and some people even prononuce gavin gav-lar in essex..... wierd i know ;D
 

Corran

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Scottish can be real odd as well.

There a town called Milngavie near me.
It is pronounced - Mil-guy ..... never could understand it.

another is Queenzieburn - pronounced Queenie-burn. Silent 'z' oO
 

old.Tohtori

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Another fun thing is the Shir/shire effect.

Lanconshire(or whatever it was) is pronounced "-shir", while the Shire in LotR will be shire.

Would be fun though, "We must go back to the shiiiir." :p
 

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