is the n in bon pronounced?
@candle The n only serves to make the vowel nasal.
The French nasal vowels are: "on", "an", "un"/"in" (the last two are supposed to be different from each other, but the nuance is increasingly lost in most regions)
@Louvelune and in bonne is the pronounciation different?
@candle Yes, that's why the n is doubled: to mark this is a separate sound, not the nasal vowel ensemble. #grammarlogic #grammarmagic ^^
@Louvelune @candle i can rec you a bit of pronounciation if you want
it works the same way for words with -om too (or is it just exceptions??? ugh can't tell)
@sempervirenx @candle It's just a graphic thing: the n becomes m when followed by b or p (like in 'jambe'/leg, or 'lampe') - that's because these 3 letters are made by pressing the lips together, n isn't.
So technically yes, it works the same: "ombre" is the nasal "on", but "homme" has its 'm' properly pronounced.
But it's a by-product of that graphic convention, it's the presence of the m that's a weird grammatical add-on... xD
@sempervirenx @Louvelune interesting you may have missed while away: i learnt i pronounce the english r abnormally! (or rather my generation increasingly pronounce it a new way...)
@sempervirenx @Louvelune think its called r-labialization
@candle @sempervirenx Oooooh, I went to the wiki page (for starters), it's fascinating..
To hell with their Proper™ Pronunciation™, language is alive and we make it grow! \o/
@candle @sempervirenx Oh? ::wriggle linguistic ears:: *o*
Do you have a source? I assume it was in an article or something? :3 https://witches.town/media/OGaw6l23J2v6rVhkgrI