[title]Family quotes[/title] [description]Welcome to our family quotes section! Here you'll find some of the funniest (and wisest) quotes on the subject of family life![/description]
Learn English and meet people on the world’s largest EFL social network

We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!

Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com


Share this topic:
This question is Not Answered
Latest post Fri, Jul 17 2009 2:59 PM by Anonymous. 0 replies.
Suggest an answer | | |
Anonymous  +  824033 Fri, 17 Jul 09 02:59 PM
Hello,

I have a question. I have been studying English for some years now, and, at this moment, I have
reached the point that, in my pronunciation of English idioms, I sound very near native, which is
a good thing, obviously. However, over the past year, I have still been looking for more advanced ways to make headway so as to make it even more natural.


Does any of you know a good website or apropriate literature for the following:

- a list of allophonically transcribed words (so not phonetically) with a number of very common English words, like, e.g. goodmorning, 


- also, a book or website that teaches you to make the right tongue setting for British English 



Perhaps this may all seem a tad far-fetched, but I know that any further information on this can help me get even better.



Thanks in advance for your advice!

© MediaCet Ltd. 2009, v5.0.3616.28671. All content posted by our users is a contribution to the public domain, this does not include imported usenet posts.*
For web related enquires please contact us on webmaster@mediacet.com, status updates are available at status.mediacet.com.
*Usenet post removal: Use 'X-No-Archive'. You may not have understood that your posts would end up in the public domain. Please send proof of the poster's email, we will remove immediately.