Talk:short a

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Latest comment: 8 years ago by BD2412 in topic short a
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The following information passed a request for deletion.

This discussion is no longer live and is left here as an archive. Please do not modify this conversation, but feel free to discuss its conclusions.


short a[edit]

And all the other similar entries by the same person. No headword, no proper definition. SemperBlotto (talk) 20:31, 15 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

They should at least have the IPA symbols, rather than just giving a couple of random example words. But they seem rather SoP anyway: e.g. a "long o" in Old English was a different sound from a long o in Modern English, right? (Not purely because of vowel shift.) Equinox 20:39, 15 November 2015 (UTC)Reply
I don't think they're SOP at all as applied to modern English, especially in accents like General American that doesn't even have phonemic vowel length. The "short a" in a word like bad is not particularly short, and long i isn't a long vowel at all but a diphthong. These are historical names, but in modern English they're misnomers and thus do not have a meaning that's predictable from their component parts. —Aɴɢʀ (talk) 21:00, 15 November 2015 (UTC)Reply
I agree with Aɴɢʀ, a long a could potentially refer to a vowel such as occurs in "You've been a baaaaaaaaaad cat." But, in linguistics it doesn't, so not SOP. As for long oo and short oo - these are perhaps from the field of "phonics" as opposed to phonetics, but I had never heard of them and so didn't understand their meaning until I read the entries, so again not SOP. That said, the entries added by Pizza86 certainly need work (but not deletion).--Sonofcawdrey (talk) 11:18, 16 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Kept. There is no reasonable chance of deletion at this point. bd2412 T 19:03, 23 November 2015 (UTC)Reply