• Dhs92
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      141 month ago

      The A is slightly more emphasized in the second that. It’s subtle

        • Rhaedas
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          41 month ago

          Could be. So you say them exactly the same and not an inflection shift?

            • Dhs92
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              71 month ago

              Because you generally put more emphasis on the subject in English

              • @variants@possumpat.io
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                21 month ago

                I’ll try and pay attention next time I have to say that that or if someone else says it. I think reading it and over thinking it makes it sound weird

              • lad
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                11 month ago

                I think it depends on if you want to emphasize something specifically or not. Second ‘that’ is the default it seems, but I first expected ‘was’ to be emphasized in this sentence

    • @ornery_chemist@mander.xyz
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      31 month ago

      In fluent speech, the conjunction (the first “that”) is unstressed, and as a result some speakers reduce the vowel a bit toward schwa. However, if you told those speakers to carefully pronounce each word, I bet they would pronounce the conjunction and the pronoun the exact same same. A more common example of this kind of reduction is the word “to”, which is almost always reduced to /tə/ ([tə] ~ [tʊ] ~ [ɾə] depending on dialect and surrounding words) in everyday speech when unstressed.

      Fun fact, you can reduce just about every unstressed vowel in English to schwa (if it’s not already a schwa) and still be largely understood.