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I stopped reading Katherine Kerr when the same mistake was perpetuated in her 3rd or 4th book: she gave 'thin' ... of an o - I like to call it a smiley - so %u means a smiley over the u. That diacritic is called a "breve" in
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 127 days ago
Vowels, American English, Spelling, Pronunciation, Whom, Diphthongs, Mistakes, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Friends
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I have come to the sudden realization that I don't ... and I can't say (wVjr). -Aaron J. Dinkin Dr. Whom I pronounce them all in the same way. But I have heard others pronounce them differently, as you say. Fi-uhr, with a schwa. But no one
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I wonder if there are any speakers of a variety ... the "Ef" pronunciation. Is he from Scotland or somewhere nearthere? I don't know, but I still want to know what that ferocious-sounding interjection is that all the MPs utter
uk.culture.language.english
by
pat durkin
5 yr 132 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Careers, Business, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, United States, American
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I wonder if there are any speakers of a variety of BrE who has created an initialism for the phenom ... in London). It was the Speaker who consistently used the "Ef" pronunciation. Is he from Scotland or somewhere near there? I don't
uk.culture.language.english
by
areff
5 yr 132 days ago
Accents, Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Irony, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, United States, American
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I wonder whether he's a BrE, say, who is hearing some particular American accent's /E/ realization as an /i/. PIPs, for example, will say "semi" in a way that might sound like "simmy" or "simm-eye" to PINPs. I
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I know dialects and idiolects differ on this pernt, but in my dialect "gram" and "Graham" and "graham" and, I ... I'm talking from, what with the vowel shift and all. A Southern US speaker would probably have even
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I think all of your cot/caught vowels sound like normative CINC AmE "aw". Suddenly you're throwing around this word "normative", which means about the same as "prescriptive". No one can be rightfully prescribing
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 147 days ago
Vowels, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Countries, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Speeches, Degree
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A certain AUE contributor has deluded himself into thinking there's a substantial difference between my vowels in "call" and "Bob" in that remark. In general I agree; You agree that "a certain AUE contributor has
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When people write to me addressing me as "Graham", I usually reply with "who?" That might work for the spoken name, too. Have you tried that on US speakers that call you "Gram"? Or is that pronunciation only used when
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Skitt filted: I'm also fluent in Cat (and the related Mountain Lion), and have a serviceable smattering of conversational Coyote..r You'll have noticed then, that while Cat contains a wide variety of vowel sounds, they don't bother
alt.usage.english
by
robert bannister
5 yr 149 days ago
Vowels, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Conversational
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