Difference between /əʳ/ and /ɚ/











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Consider the word 'future.' Cambridge Dictionary shows the transcriptions /ˈfjuːtʃəʳ/ and /ˈfjuːtʃɚ/. Are they different?










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    Consider the word 'future.' Cambridge Dictionary shows the transcriptions /ˈfjuːtʃəʳ/ and /ˈfjuːtʃɚ/. Are they different?










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      Consider the word 'future.' Cambridge Dictionary shows the transcriptions /ˈfjuːtʃəʳ/ and /ˈfjuːtʃɚ/. Are they different?










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      Consider the word 'future.' Cambridge Dictionary shows the transcriptions /ˈfjuːtʃəʳ/ and /ˈfjuːtʃɚ/. Are they different?







      phonetics






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      asked 1 hour ago









      Alejandro

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          One is the British English pronunciation, and the other is the American English pronunciation.



          In the British pronunciation, you don't pronounce the /r/ after /ə/ unless the next word starts with a vowel. (The superscript /r/ is saying add an /r/ after it if the next word starts with a vowel. Compare the words store /stɔːʳ/ and star /stɑːʳ/.)



          In American pronunciation, you combine the vowel /ə/ and the /r/ into a single r-colored vowel represented by /ɚ/.



          They're the same phoneme; it's just pronounced differently in British and American English.






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            1 Answer
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            One is the British English pronunciation, and the other is the American English pronunciation.



            In the British pronunciation, you don't pronounce the /r/ after /ə/ unless the next word starts with a vowel. (The superscript /r/ is saying add an /r/ after it if the next word starts with a vowel. Compare the words store /stɔːʳ/ and star /stɑːʳ/.)



            In American pronunciation, you combine the vowel /ə/ and the /r/ into a single r-colored vowel represented by /ɚ/.



            They're the same phoneme; it's just pronounced differently in British and American English.






            share|improve this answer



























              up vote
              4
              down vote













              One is the British English pronunciation, and the other is the American English pronunciation.



              In the British pronunciation, you don't pronounce the /r/ after /ə/ unless the next word starts with a vowel. (The superscript /r/ is saying add an /r/ after it if the next word starts with a vowel. Compare the words store /stɔːʳ/ and star /stɑːʳ/.)



              In American pronunciation, you combine the vowel /ə/ and the /r/ into a single r-colored vowel represented by /ɚ/.



              They're the same phoneme; it's just pronounced differently in British and American English.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                4
                down vote










                up vote
                4
                down vote









                One is the British English pronunciation, and the other is the American English pronunciation.



                In the British pronunciation, you don't pronounce the /r/ after /ə/ unless the next word starts with a vowel. (The superscript /r/ is saying add an /r/ after it if the next word starts with a vowel. Compare the words store /stɔːʳ/ and star /stɑːʳ/.)



                In American pronunciation, you combine the vowel /ə/ and the /r/ into a single r-colored vowel represented by /ɚ/.



                They're the same phoneme; it's just pronounced differently in British and American English.






                share|improve this answer














                One is the British English pronunciation, and the other is the American English pronunciation.



                In the British pronunciation, you don't pronounce the /r/ after /ə/ unless the next word starts with a vowel. (The superscript /r/ is saying add an /r/ after it if the next word starts with a vowel. Compare the words store /stɔːʳ/ and star /stɑːʳ/.)



                In American pronunciation, you combine the vowel /ə/ and the /r/ into a single r-colored vowel represented by /ɚ/.



                They're the same phoneme; it's just pronounced differently in British and American English.







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                edited 1 hour ago

























                answered 1 hour ago









                Peter Shor

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                61.4k5116219






























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