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Native speakers of English don't, unless dictating to children. In ... or "handbag" (which in rapid speech is indistinguishable from "ham-bag"). I'm English and have just a vestige of a "d" in handsome and a
misc.education.language.english
by
peter groves
1 yr 17 days ago
Spelling, Pronunciation, Vowels, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Writing, Speeches, Languages, Australia
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With the stress on the second vowel of 'romeo', as I was taught it. The words themselves are chosen to be readily distinguishable in poor hearing conditions, and the ordained stress patterns are designed to aid this distinction. If I'm
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This debate really seems to be about two different things, spelling and pronunciation. The letter w (and y) is often used with other vowels (and sometimes alone as well) in spelling to reperesent a vowel sound . In the words hi and by , the letter
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
missmandy
1 yr 60 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Teaching, Languages
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I'm afraid that in British English the rule *is* different. We do indeed tend to use hyphens after the prefix "non-" (which avoids the possibility of mispronouncing words such as "nonnative" ). As regards other prefixes,
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
1 yr 241 days ago
Regards, British English, Punctuation, Vowels, Prefixes, Pronunciation, Hyphenation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Languages
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I stumbled upon the latter use recently, and it got me thinking. There seems to be some exceptions to the simple rule that I still use when deciding on "a" or "an"... Don't make it too complicated! It goes almost entirely
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Yes, but John Hall implied that he heard this in ... (using SAMPA notation) but I've never noticed this. (SAMPA: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/sampa/english.htm) SAMPA is itself quite confusing since it offers two different symbols (V and U)
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The OP was referring to its pronunciation before a vowel sound. Oh. The entrance is on the second floor (the / thee) ? A Mexican might use "thee" but an Englishman never would. Mind you, a Yorkshireman might use "t" and someone
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No you wouldn't. Pronunciation skills training is part of professional ... the 'Sounds of American' stress on that particular site. DC I would serously consider sending the student to a vocal coach who could help her to sing on the
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Hi, I need some advice regarding ESL instruction. I don't have any formal ESL training or certification, but I do tutor some foreign students in English - mainly written English. I've been approached by a Russian student who wants to
misc.education.language.english
by

3 yr 302 days ago
Universities, Pronunciation, Vowels, Accents, Intonations, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Schools, Training, Languages, ESL
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I must be slow this morning, but I got there in the end. You are not the only one, even I did not get it straight away. As John seems to have noticed, in day to day life I am John Lawler. But when I first started posting to this group and
uk.culture.language.english
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4 yr 81 days ago
Spelling, Accents, Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Languages, Ireland
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