Did you know, the Kentish dialect of the Middle English period voiced their otherwise unvoiced bilabial fricatives. The dialect has all but died out, leaving but small traces of itself in daily speech. For instance, it is because of this dialectal differentiation that the female version of a fox is a vixen, instead of a *fixen. Maybe your next opus could be titled "The Erratic Voicing of Bilabial Fricatives of Bygone Dialects, and the Current Phonetic Inconsistencies Arisen Thereof".
Thanks very much for posting this. The sync with Nosferatu is wicked cool. "The Master is coming! The Master is coming!" Who is Portable Jesus? Inquiring minds want to know!
Did you know, the Kentish dialect of the Middle English period voiced their otherwise unvoiced bilabial fricatives. The dialect has all but died out, leaving but small traces of itself in daily speech. For instance, it is because of this dialectal differentiation that the female version of a fox is a vixen, instead of a *fixen. Maybe your next opus could be titled "The Erratic Voicing of Bilabial Fricatives of Bygone Dialects, and the Current Phonetic Inconsistencies Arisen Thereof".
Frozenyak 1 month ago
Never thought I'd find another song named after a phoneme.
FeedsNoSliesMusic 1 year ago
Thanks very much for posting this. The sync with Nosferatu is wicked cool. "The Master is coming! The Master is coming!" Who is Portable Jesus? Inquiring minds want to know!
littlerattyratratrat 3 years ago