horse-hoarse merger

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English[edit]

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Pronunciation[edit]

Noun[edit]

horse-hoarse merger

  1. (phonology) A phonemic merger of /ɔɹ/ and /oɹ/ to where the words horse and hoarse are homophones.
    • 2017 August 9, Raymond Hickey, “Irish English in the Anglophone world”, in World Englishes, volume 36, number 2:
      Among the changes, which took place in Dublin English in the 1990s (Hickey 1999), are the following four which are also found in general forms of American English: (a) use of retroflex /r/, in fork [fo:ɻk]; (b) use of an intervocalic alveolar tap, for example in water [wɑɾɚ]; (c) the horse/hoarse‐merger and (d) the which/witch‐merger.