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' Ow, eez ye-ooa san,is e?'
'Oh, he's your son is he?'
The Shavian spelling rather over-emphasises the Cockney pronunciation, although some linguists maintain that there are only dipthongs and no "pure" vowels in Cockney. To some ears Cokney
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Rules help a long as they are predominantly consistent. When a rule is significantly inconsistent then it will lead to confusion.
For example, what rule can be applied to the double "o" sound in English? The words: food, blood, took, foot,
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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 83 days ago
Spelling, Accents, Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Languages, Ireland
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It may be a characteristic of a particular group of people, or it may
be an idiosyncracy of individual speakers. Other than the fact
that "w" quite often influences the sounds of vowels (especially "a"
and "o") which may follow it, there is no
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Hi Xcats,
This is related to the spelling of the past tense forms of regular verbs; it also applies to the "ing" form.
spelling of regular affirmative past tense forms
Most regular verbs: add -ed
work —worked
help —helped
start —
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Indeed. When English was first written, it was spelt phonetically. ... English represents how English was spoken in the 16th century. It's more complicated than that. Spelling standardised (thanks to printing) shortly *after* Shakespeare's
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I've never heard Shakespeare being performed with original pronunciation, so ... and spelling was much closer then than it is now. Indeed. When English was first written, it was spelt phonetically. However, by Shakepeare's time
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Assuming you want every vowel sound including diphthongs, you're missing ... actor, best known for role in "Hill Street Blues") Is "haid" a verb too? I know of "hayed". "Haid" is either a proper name or
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"er" as the I think Athel was talking about a schwa, /@/, as in a common BrE pronunciation of "Ibiza" as /aI'bi:T@/. A non-rhotic British "pronunciation spelling" of that might be "eye-BEETH-er", with
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On 28 Aug 2004 08:35:31 -0700, R H Draney Jon Miller filted: * I assume Sara meant to write "pooberty" there. I've never had much occasion to use the word, but it would not have occurred to me to pronounce it any other way than
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