As a linguistics student, I don't like this argument. Orthographic <j> in English represents the affricate /dʒ/, which is unambiguously a phoneme in English. <J> by itself (generally) represents /dʒ/, so…
As a linguistics student, I don't like this argument. Orthographic <j> in English represents the affricate /dʒ/, which is unambiguously a phoneme in English. <J> by itself (generally) represents /dʒ/, so…