Quote:
Originally Posted by Xelebes
Many words have the postalveolar fricative intrusion. It mostly has to do with the alveolar approximant or the palatal approximant that follows the t.
Chruck
Chractor
Chrap
Inchrusion
Chraditional
Doe-ncha
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Well, none of those involve a "T" followed by an "O" but in any event only the last one is something I have ever heard coming from an English speaker's mouth. I can think of examples where a "T" takes on the "CH" sound when it follows a long "U", for example (cringe) "Chyousday/Chewsday".
Where do people say "chruck" and "chractor" - I really want to avoid it!