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Comment by b112

5 days ago

Interesting, I can see how it would sound the same, with a different accent.

Native English speaker. I tried saying both out loud and it sounds the same. It's just a glottal stop (?) either way in my accent.

  • They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds.

    • It matters what the tongue and voice box are doing in the surrounding sounds. The next letter (t) is voiced, and the prior sound is a vowel, so in practice many English speakers will continue to “voice” the c sound between e and d, the “g” is just a voiced “c”, which makes them homonyms in most speakers.

      (This post brought to you by YouTube, who keep putting Dr Geoff Lindsey in my recommendation queue, and now I’ve become a part time linguistics enthusiast. Other interesting facts: “chr” and “tr” are also almost entirely homonyms in most speakers. Try saying “trooper” and “chrooper” and see what I mean. In fact my 4 year old, who is recently learning to write, drew a picture of a truck and wrote “chruck” on the paper.)

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  • "Hard c" is voiced, "g" is unvoiced.

    • (I think you mean the other way around.)

      But the difference is almost meaningless in this case because in practice the c blends to the d, which is voiced.