Hmmm.....Now that I think of it, I actually say and write it both ways. Honest to god I do and for the life of me I don't think I have any internal usage rules that govern when I use one vs the other.
And a lot of East Anglian accents drop the entire ends of nearly all words.
So: "an a lo o Ea' an'lia' accen' dro' thu entir' en' o' nearl' a' wor'" is entirely comprehensible provided you understand what the speaker is saying before they open their mouths. (It's very like someone with a cleft palate.)
There's also the related but completely opposite tendency to put more syllables into words where they don't properly belong. But I wouldn't want to confuse anyone.
So: "an a lo o Ea' an'lia' accen' dro' thu entir' en' o' nearl' a' wor'" is entirely comprehensible provided you understand what the speaker is saying before they open their mouths.
Ah. But you see, so much of everyday talk is incredibly predictable. Two people, who know each other, pretty much know what's going to be said. There's always a lot of "How are you doing?", "I'm alright, how's yourself?" going on.
I think they're telescoping predictable small talk, and saving time and energy for more important things. Meanwhile, doing what every accent does to a certain extent: excluding casual eavesdroppers from easily telling what's being said.
There's also the related but completely opposite tendency to put more syllables into words where they don't properly belong. But I wouldn't want to confuse anyone.
Kind of like the reverse of the Hebrew alphabet - where they miss out all the vowels. Welsh does that, they say. But I think it's more like Scots Gaelic.
And aluminium is both spelt (sic) aluminium in the dictionary and pronounced aluminium in real life. Unless you happen to be American.
No. I was thinking of words like toast pronounced toe-ast, and coat co-at. See? Yes, really, I do talk with people who do that.
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