Slavic accents in English Mgr. Yurii Chybras 1. /h/ > /x/ 2. /h/ > /ɦ/ 3. /v/~/w/ merger, i.e. both phonemes may occur interchangeably with no patterns whatsoever 4. /s/~/z/ devoicing, i.e./z/ is regularly devoiced to /s/ following the spelling 5. fronting 6. stopping 7. alveolarisation 8. aspiration 9. vowel approximation 10. vowel reduction and its degree 11. /ɪ/ > /i/ merger 12. final-obstruent devoicing 13. realisation as /r/ 14. affricate and fricative palatalisation, i.e. the respective sounds are pronounced as palatal rather than post-alveolar 15. affricate and fricative retroflexion, i.e. the respective sounds are pronounced as post-alveolar retroflex 16. [ɫ] > /l/ 17. /i/ palatalisation, i.e. consonants preceding /i/ are pronounced palatalised 18. /s/, /z/~/θ/, /ð/ merger Senk yu for yo atenshn