1917 | "That branch of phonetics which is more particularly
concerned with the various values of a given phoneme
(a) during the course of its history, (b) according to the
dialect in which it is used.
The phonologist teaches us that the vowel in cut generally
has the value of [ĘŚ] in the south of England, and the value
of [u] in certain northern dialects, whereas the phonetician
teaches us how to pronounce either or both of these sounds,
and tells us how they are formed by the organs of speech." | Palmer, Harold E. (1917, p.315) |