intraidiolectal variations.
The first type of
intraidiolectal phonetic variations are spontaneous, accidental, un
intentional, unconditioned, non-functional, and therefore abso
lutely non-distinctive linguistically. For example, though the
pronunciation of one and the same sound, word or a phrase may
be different acoustically, though identical and non-distinctive
from the linguistic point of view.
The second type of intraidialectal phonetic variations may
be intentional and conditioned by different styles of speech3, i.e.
colloquial and full styles of pronunciation (see next paragraph).
Some terms have been suggested for use in the intradialectal
and interidiolectal phonetic variations. The term
diaphone (D.
Jones) is defined as a sound used to denote a sound together with
other sounds which replace it consistently in the pronunciation of
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