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I'm certain there's a better way to entitle this question, so maybe someone can edit it.

Consider the word the word "we'll". My understanding of the Fill-Feel Merger means "we'll" could end up sounding like "wheel". In fact, I'm pretty sure I've heard that pronunciation in a southern and/or Black English.

Assuming that does become the prominent pronunciation, does that imply that the pronunciation of "wheel" will change? I imagine there are other examples of homonyms developing in this way. Does one word typically "win" over time and keep its pronunciation longer? I guess I'm asking if homonyms change at a greater rate than other words; and, of so, is there a pattern to it like: the more frequently used word "wins" or is more resistant to change?

DBWeinstein
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    This is just a side comment, but the pin-pen merger isn't relevant to "we'll" and "wheel". The pin-pen merger is a merger of the sounds /ɪ/ (as in "kit") and /ɛ/ (as in "dress") before a nasal consonant (/n/, /m/, or /ŋ/ as in "sing"--although in some accents vowels before /ŋ/ have special further changes). The word "wheel" is usually pronounced /wiːl/, with the /iː/ vowel of "fleece" and the non-nasal final consonant /l/. – brass tacks Feb 27 '19 at 21:23
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    "We'll" and "wheel" -aren't- already the same? (I thought I spoke standard GenAmE) – Mitch Feb 28 '19 at 00:05
  • I don't think so, but I'm not 100% sure. I'm from NY so maybe I say it with an accent. I say "will". – DBWeinstein Feb 28 '19 at 01:13
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    If (like myself) you pronounce we'll and wheel the same, that's usually the WINE-WHINE merger, affecting the consonants. I've not heard the vowels being pronounced differently, but I'll have to do some more research. – Michaelyus Feb 28 '19 at 10:54
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    The merger of We'll and wheel (fill–feel merger) is independent of the pin–pen merger and is observed in the US South and, indeed, Black English. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English-language_vowel_changes_before_historic_/l/#Fill%E2%80%93feel_merger – Nardog Feb 28 '19 at 11:45
  • This may answer your question: https://linguistics.stackexchange.com/q/12414 – Nardog Feb 28 '19 at 11:46
  • Why the down vote? – DBWeinstein Feb 28 '19 at 12:51
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    @nardog Surely the relevant example for the FILL-FEEL merger is will - we'll. – Michaelyus Feb 28 '19 at 16:38
  • @Michaelyus Oops, that's what I meant. – Nardog Feb 28 '19 at 17:10
  • @Nardog wait, which way is it going? – DBWeinstein Feb 28 '19 at 17:31
  • @dwstein A merger is a merger - it doesn't necessarily mean one is merging with the other and oftentimes the result is intermediate. In fill–feel in particular, though, I think the common result is something like [fijəɫ] . – Nardog Feb 28 '19 at 17:37
  • @Nardog I think they are asking a related but different question. – DBWeinstein Feb 28 '19 at 17:53

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