Hello,
is it true that some native Danish speakers don't use stød?
Mark
Moderator:Mulder-21
0stsee wrote:Hello,
is it true that some native Danish speakers don't use stød?
Mark
SImon Gray wrote:I've never thought about it, perhaps some dialects don't use it? It doesn't matter anyway, as dialects are virtually dead in Denmark these days. And stød is not that important anyway, as you can usually always derive the meaning from the context in the few words that use it.
yvonne_v wrote:SImon Gray wrote:I've never thought about it, perhaps some dialects don't use it? It doesn't matter anyway, as dialects are virtually dead in Denmark these days. And stød is not that important anyway, as you can usually always derive the meaning from the context in the few words that use it.
Does it sound foreign if you don't pronounce stød? I mean, could you understand a person is not a native speaker if he or she doesn't pronounce it, even though he has a perfect pronunciation? (ok, I understand this is quite a stupid example, because having a perfect pronunciation in Danish is almost impossible for a foreigner )
SImon Gray wrote:"et blad som er god_"
Jayan wrote:Kommer stødet før eller efter konsonanten, det er ved siden af?
Dvs. i ordet mand udtales det ma'n ( ' betyder stød) eller man' ? Jeg tror det skal være den anden måde, men sommertider lyder det som det er den første.
Is there any word with only one syllable that has the stød? Not that I know Danish, but I've always interpreted the stød as the eqvivalent of the Swedish "grave accent", that only exists in words with two or more syllables.
[...] en række oprindelige accent 1-ord udvikler ikke stød på dansk, fordi de indeholder lydforbindelser, der ikke er "stødbærende", typisk konsonantforbindelserne rs, rp, rt, rk (f.eks. vers, hårdt, bark) og forbindelserne kort vokal + r, l, n, v, j, d (f.eks. bær, ven, hav, tøj). Sidstnævnte får dog stødet "tilbage", når de påføjes den bestemte artikel (f.eks. bærr’et, venn’en, ha’vet, tøj’et).
[...] a number of words that originally had the first accent, fail to develop stød in Danish because they contain clusters that do not support it, usually the consonant clusters rs, rp, rt, rk (e.g., vers, hårdt, bark) and combinations of short vowel + r, l, n, v, j, d (e.g., bær, ven, hav, tøj). Stød is restored in the latter words, however, when they receive the definite article. (e.g., bærr’et, venn’en, ha’vet, tøj’et).
Kommer stødet før eller efter konsonanten, det er ved siden af?
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