And then there’s me pronouncing Ts like Ts and not like Ds. “Day-tuh” vs “Dah-tuh”.
I wonder what Lt. Cmdr. Data would think of my pronunciation vs the American way of saying it and I’m trying to recall which pronunciation Sir Patrick used being that he’s an Englishman playing a Frenchman…
It’s day-da not da-da
And then there’s me pronouncing Ts like Ts and not like Ds. “Day-tuh” vs “Dah-tuh”.
I wonder what Lt. Cmdr. Data would think of my pronunciation vs the American way of saying it and I’m trying to recall which pronunciation Sir Patrick used being that he’s an Englishman playing a Frenchman…
The movement of sound up/forward in the mouth is a common thing in language, so much so there’s a name for it (which I can’t recall).
All language shows this pattern.
Pretty fascinating stuff that John McWhorter covers in at least 2 Great Courses:
The Story of Human Language
and
Language Families of the World
He may also mention it in Ancient Writing and the History of the Alphabet, but I may be misremembering.
There’s a clip of Sir Stewart delivering the opening lines with a French accent. It’s hilarious