We have partnered with TradePub to bring you free industry magazines and resources - no coupons or credit cards required!
Visit: englishforums.tradepub.com
-
Apon is a Middle English spelling of upon . Many u- prefixes were spelt a- in Middle English. However after spellings were standardised, the a- prefix largely fell out of use. The correct spelling in Modern English is upon . Although, in many
-
Hmm, so it certainly is a sort of southern dialect. Because I love country music that unfortunately has a not much good grammar. But I like it, what can I do? At least if someday I go to southern US, I'll understand what people mean when say
-
Are you sure they speak standard American or British English? It sounds like it might be from a sort of dialect of English. Where I live nobody puts that pronoun there. The only meaning it might have, to my ear, is a sort of enthusiastic emphasis,
-
"The phrase 'caught on camera' could n't be more appropriate, as a lardy sweat-bucket of a bus driver shows he has all the self control of Amy Whitehouse going out for a swift half. "Watch as the dastardly kids torment the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
spaced_man
53 days ago
Dialects, Accents, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Context, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Summer, Languages
-
short 'the' (before a consonant sound)
French le
Oddly e nough, a large p e r centage of unstressed English vow e ls "reduce to schwa" in rap i d speech, including those underlined here. It varies, depending on the
-
In the States, we come up with new lingos and idioms all the time, no? I don't know. I've never seen "no" used as a sentence tag that way, for example. I was told that "yes?" would sound like "mexican" or
-
AJ Hoge's "effortless english" is a waste of money. I made the mistake of buying it for a friend who doesn't speak much English and she doesn't even use it. I don't blame her because it takes a lot of effort to learn with
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
elena_osullivan
59 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Consonants, American English, Dialects, Pronunciation, Grammar, Speak English, Relationships, Speaking, United States, American, Languages, Friends
-
I haven't the patience to read through all of that thread, but there is no single American pronunciation. We have several regional dialects, all of which are acceptable. The Webster's pronunciations that I have already given you are fine– what
-
There are whole websites on AUSTRALIAN ENGLISH , INDIAN ENGLISH , SINGAPOREAN ENGLISH , etc. Use a search engine to find the word or the dictionary you want.
-
im looking for different dialects ones that im not familar with but not sure were to look for example some people say starved or nesh when there feelin cold bt i need more so if u could help id be grateful cheers kirsty
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
|
Ask a question right now..
|