• intensely_human
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    3 months ago

    It’s halfway in between. You say “f’ree”. It sits in the spot between 1 and 2, like a wobbly and uncertain syllable, that lingers as “mine” beyond “me”.

    Notice how the former is longer than the latter, despite being the same number of notes. A warble, a wiggle, a bridge between meters, “FR” is timed out like “baroque”.

    • zitrone 🍋@lemmings.world
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      3 months ago

      what?

      mine is /maɪ̯n/

      me is /miː/ (UK), /mi/ (US) or /mɪ/ (northern England)

      baroque is /bæˈɹɒk/ (UK) or /bəˈɹoʊk/ (US)

      do you just want to add an /iː/ between fr and fr?

      /fɹiːfɹ/?