Shona Whyte:
Articles on teaching pronunciation, including a 1964 paper by Beatrice Honikman on articulatory settings that I have found particularly helpful.
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Shona Whyte:
Articles on teaching pronunciation, including a 1964 paper by Beatrice Honikman on articulatory settings that I have found particularly helpful.
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“Ever since Richard Brinsley Sheridan created the chronically misspeaking character of Mrs. Malaprop in his 18th-century romantic comedy The Rivals, we’ve had a convenient word with which to point out other people’s linguistic inferiority. But is saying “epitaphs” when you really mean “epithets,” as Mrs. Malaprop did, really a sign of ignorance? In fact, there’s much more to malapropisms than you might think. Listen as Bob Garfield and I [Mike Vuolo] discuss what a common speech error reveals about the way that our mental lexicon—that is, the dictionary in our head—is likely organized.”
Shona Whyte: Lexicon Valley podcast with discussion between Mike Vuolo and Bob Garfield using David Fay and Anne Cutler's 1977 article for scientific background. Delete the scoop?
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