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How many Americans are aware that the "long 'o'"of Received Pronunciation is different from the American "long 'o'"? Some American accents have a "long 'o'" that is similar to the "long
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 127 days ago
Vowels, American English, Accents, Spelling, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, American Accents
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I stopped reading Katherine Kerr when the same mistake was perpetuated in her 3rd or 4th book: she gave 'thin' ... of an o - I like to call it a smiley - so %u means a smiley over the u. That diacritic is called a "breve" in
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 127 days ago
Vowels, American English, Spelling, Pronunciation, Whom, Diphthongs, Mistakes, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Friends
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I wonder if there are any speakers of a variety ... the "Ef" pronunciation. Is he from Scotland or somewhere nearthere? I don't know, but I still want to know what that ferocious-sounding interjection is that all the MPs utter
uk.culture.language.english
by
pat durkin
5 yr 131 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Careers, Business, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, United States, American
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I wonder if there are any speakers of a variety of BrE who has created an initialism for the phenom ... in London). It was the Speaker who consistently used the "Ef" pronunciation. Is he from Scotland or somewhere near there? I don't
uk.culture.language.english
by
areff
5 yr 131 days ago
Accents, Vowels, Consonants, Dialects, Pronunciation, Irony, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, United States, American
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I wonder whether he's a BrE, say, who is hearing some particular American accent's /E/ realization as an /i/. PIPs, for example, will say "semi" in a way that might sound like "simmy" or "simm-eye" to PINPs. I
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I would also use the same vowel in Juan and ... would train my colleagues by failing to respond to "one". I think the usual pronunciation of 'Juan' in AmE is h-less, because the name has become so naturalized. Or, rather, ... AmE
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Yes, but why do American dictionaries choose *my* pronunciation oversomeone from Alabama, or Massachusetts, or Wisconsin? There are glaring anddrastic differences in pronunciation from region to region. Not sure if this helps, but from
alt.usage.english
by
dylan nicholson
5 yr 144 days ago
Vowels, American English, Accents, Dialects, Pronunciation, Consonants, Business, United States, American, Speaking, References, Career, Speeches
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Yes, but why do American dictionaries choose *my* pronunciation over someone from Alabama, or Massachusetts, or Wisconsin? There are glaring and drastic differences in pronunciation from region to region. There are, certainly. But, as I said
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Well, because American dictionaries typically don't give strict phonetic prescriptions; rather, the pronunciation descriptions given by American dictionaries are generally ... same vowel as "pet" and "get", and that is as
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I don't necessarily agree with this. "Dictionaries describe the most *usual* pronunciation"?? What does "most usual" mean? The densest and ... There are a great many people in the South that pronounce "help" as
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