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uk.culture.language.english
by
michael west
5 yr 168 days ago
Accents, Vowels, Pronunciation, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, United States, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Animals, American, Australia, Languages, British Accent
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uk.culture.language.english
by
peter t. daniels
5 yr 168 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Animals, Writing, Languages, Classes
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"Cues" I'd interpret as a single vowel-sound which happens to be written as two letters - it rhymes with "booze". Depends where you hail from. The pronunciation guides of dictionaries notwithstanding, booze rimes with lose
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: So how does the rule on "u" and "a" or "an" work (or all the vowels for that matter)? Why is it a university, but an umbilical cord? Because of the pronunciation, not the spelling. University is pronounced
uk.culture.language.english
by
molly mockford
5 yr 278 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Consonants, Articles, Universities, Pronunciation, Speaking, Colours, Animals, Writing, Students, Schools, Indefinite
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The only source I have for the pronunciation of "Czolgosz" ... interpret the ad-hoc phonetic spelling "cholgosh" - /tSolgAS/, I suppose. If the "cot" vowel was intended in the first syllable, then I don't see any
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If two pronunciations have vowels from different phonemes, then the broad-phonetic transcriptions of those two pronunciations should use symbols corresponding to the appropriate phonemes. From this paragraph it sounds like what you're
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If two pronunciations have vowels from different phonemes, then the broad-phonetic transcriptions of those two pronunciations should use symbols corresponding to the appropriate phonemes. From this paragraph it sounds like what you're
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If two pronunciations have vowels from different phonemes, then the broad-phonetic transcriptions of those two pronunciations should use symbols corresponding to the appropriate phonemes. From this paragraph it sounds like what you're
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Dena Jo and others want a way other than ASCII IPA to represent pronunciation. I have objected to ad hoc transcriptions because there's no way to pin down what the symbols stand for. It has occurred to me that we have a ready-made system
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