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9.4.2 Clitic “to”

Special mention needs to be made of to, as a preposition (to the door), an infinitival conjunction (to go), or as part of words like tomorrow, together. It behaves as though it was part of the preceding word. Such verbal parasites are known as clitics.

It is easy to see that the behavior of to will have certain consequences. As a result, flapping applies to the /t/ in go tomorrowall day todayfly to Boston.

go tomorrow

fly to Boston

 

Also t-voicing is frequent in cases like They seem to think…, It‘d be wrong to say…, They’re open today.

they seem to think

hard to believe

Because geminate consonants do not occur inside words, hard to believe, which through t-voicing is /hɑrd dəbəliːv/, becomes /hɑrd əbəliːv/. Because of flapping, it will come to sound just like heart a believe. Can you explain why flapping applies to heart a?

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An Introduction to American English Phonetics Copyright © by Ton Broeders and Carlos Gussenhoven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.