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While it was 23/11/03 10:39 pm throughout the UK, Pat Durkin sprinkled little black dots on a white screen, and they fell thus: My practice: Standalone "A", if it is an adjective or article in initial or mid-phrase position, varies in
alt.usage.english
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stewart gordon
6 yr 3 days ago
Articles, Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Relationships, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Chat, Friends, Adjectives
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alt.usage.english
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boron elgar
6 yr 4 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Speeches, Languages, Speaking English
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alt.usage.english
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r f
6 yr 5 days ago
Articles, Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Speaking English
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alt.usage.english
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jerry friedman
6 yr 5 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Languages
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What's that meant to represent? Pronunciation-wise? I think it has to be /wUk/, like "shook". I thought you probably meant /wUk/, though I'm familiar with some accents which have /u/ in words (and "snooker" has /u/ in
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On 3 Nov 2003 14:48:00 -0800, I wrote, in part: It's at http://www.math.wustl.edu/~msh210/recording.html Well, I've now listened to Mr. Hamm's recording, though I will continue to study it on future occasions. My comments: First of
alt.usage.english
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r f
6 yr 21 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Consonants, Diphthongs, Countries, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Allophones
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Donna Richoux filted: Of course, you and I wouldn't mean the same thing by "aspidester," either. I played the first part again; the ... usual "uh" ending that Brits usually say when the word ends in -er. It's a much
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That is a definition of /A./: what /A./ is is a particular vowel phoneme. Which one? It's the ... an unambiguous definition; moreover, it's defined in terms of the things that phonemed ought to be defined in terms of. If it's a
alt.usage.english
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woody wordpecker
6 yr 41 days ago
Vowels, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Languages
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Defining /A./ as the vowel phoneme used in "cot", "bother", ... have the same phoneme. There are dialects where they don't. That's not a definition of turned-script-a. It's a statement of how turned-script-a is
alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
6 yr 41 days ago
Vowels, Numbers, Dialects, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Whom, Friendships, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Conversational
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