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Thus spake Charles Riggs: In, I believe, all native-speaker English dialects, "fill" and "feel" ... generally use /I/ and /i/, respectively, to represent these phonemes. What's so *** good about it? Alls you need, instead
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The better your knowledge of phonetics and phonemics, the closer ... for example, can mark you as a non-nativespeaker of French. I understand that, but to learn how to pronounce "pas beaucoup", I listen to a French speaker say it.
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My native language is English and I haven't got a ... it the most burning on your mind this Sunday morning? The better your knowledge of phonetics and phonemics, the closer you can get, when learning a foreign language, to speaking ... you
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Hi all, My native language is Estonian. Thus it's not ... phonemes or allophones of the same phoneme (in complementary distribution)? My native language is English and I haven't got a clue what you're talking about. I know, somehow,
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
6 yr 95 days ago
Accents, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Allophones
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Harvey Van Sickle (Email Removed) burbled Came across this in another group this morning (in a thread about the current virus), and found it interesting: yet ... I'd not come across "on mass" before, but it strikes me as an
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Congratulations Jitchaiquer. (My own phonetic, I won't do again. I promise)
CONGRATS
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RP speakers don't rhyme 'bald' and 'bold'; I believe they say roughly (bOld) and (b@Uld), BICBWAT. Some AmE speakers merge that pair, I think (don't Minnesotans?). I don't think so, though my relatives in Minnesota
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RP speakers don't rhyme 'bald' and 'bold'; I believe they say roughly (bOld) and (b@Uld), BICBWAT. Some AmE speakers merge that pair, I think (don't Minnesotans?). And there's no single phonetic CIC or CINC
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This is the environment to do it. Which part of China are you from?
Do you know English Phonetics? It is a little difficult to explain written (and not orally)
It depends on whether the next word begins with a vowel sound or not.
If you go to
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el3.net... If I were going to use the word "Bolivarian," I'd ... would make an accent on the first "i" seem strange. The common American pronunciation of Bolivar is with stress on the first and last syllables. The correct
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
6 yr 109 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Fricatives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Languages
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