tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-377103124456226005.post8408127942837691606..comments2024-03-17T09:14:13.950+00:00Comments on John Wells’s phonetic blog: AfzeliusJohn Wellshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13684304410735867148noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-377103124456226005.post-21627559456429564282009-08-17T23:19:04.580+01:002009-08-17T23:19:04.580+01:00Your mapping table has [aʊ] twice, for Afzelius...Your mapping table has [aʊ] twice, for Afzelius's <i>ai</i> and his <i>au</i>.John Cowanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11452247999156925669noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-377103124456226005.post-70897265012165286542009-08-16T03:50:47.578+01:002009-08-16T03:50:47.578+01:00There's a good Udtaleordbog for Danish, by Pet...There's a good Udtaleordbog for Danish, by Peter Molbæk Hansen (Gyldendal). It includes inflected forms, and has no definitions.<br /><br />Such a dictionary is quite necessary for Danish, in which the correspondence between grapheme and phoneme isn't too clear.<br /><br />The number of vowel phonemes in Danish seems hard to determine, as the disappearance of post-vocalic /r/ in some cases has complicated things. It would probably be best to pretend that the /r/ is still there.Lance Eccleshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04712002642501309020noreply@blogger.com