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(My Uncle Maurice (and all the rest of us) used while he was alive (the rest of us still so use) to pronounce his name ('mOris) (MORRis).) I assume you used and use to use the 'orange' (cot) vowel in "Morris" /mAr@s/ (rhyming
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 176 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Pronunciation, Marriage, Business, Relationships, Speaking, Writing, Careers, Languages, Apologies
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Huh? The Spanish "a" is noticeably different from both the ... some influencing in New York (Largest City in America) too? You are correct, sir, but Mexicans do not dominate their number, unlike the Latino communities in the West and
alt.usage.english
by
skitt
5 yr 178 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Languages, Numbers
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Since your experience stems from NY, I'm not surprised. In California, the "father" pronunciation is quite common (the Latino influence, you know). Huh? The Spanish "a" is noticeably different from both the AmE
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Interesting examples. Those are one (sic) syllable words for me. . . . Two syllables for me; no diphthong. But they all have about the same quantity! so to say that has oneof something but has two ... to say that Miss Moore's syllable-count
alt.usage.english
by
jonathan jordan
5 yr 181 days ago
Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Languages, Arts, Poetry, Numbers
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Okay, let's try. When most Brits say "near to the ... "yatter" with a "th" tacked on the front (Tj&t@). Whereas some Scots can't handle consecutive vowels, and say 'theeter'. I love Eddie Mair this side
alt.usage.english
by
jonathan jordan
5 yr 182 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Apologies, Poetry, British Accents
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Whereas some Scots can't handle consecutive vowels, and say 'theeter'. I love Eddie Mair this side idolatry as much as any man, but "Beetrice is a penist in the theeter" elevates my blood temperature. And when it's
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Oddly, you seem to have failed to address the speech features of a number of former Chicago Residents Alienated Pentagonically (CRAP, preferably pronounced "creeap"). How do Donald Rumsfeld, Sy Hersh and Bob Woodward sound to you?
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As a native Spanish speaker I have a hard time to distinguish the difference between the vowels in * cut * cot * caught Are there any clues on how should I shape my mouth/lips/tongue/vocal chords/whatever to pronounce these vowels correctly? Hola
alt.usage.english
by
irma
5 yr 188 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Paragraphs, Learning English, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Students, Languages
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"Syllable" like "word" means whatever we wants it to mean to best suit our prejudices. FWIW, I agree ... breaks according to that, where sense must prevail over sound, so if I had to split it, it'd be
alt.usage.english
by
raymond
5 yr 199 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Hyphenation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Punctuation, Languages, Numbers
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Dylan Nicholson infrared: "Crèche", always in RobertE's UK sense, often retains its French grave accent and the vowel is closer to that of "air" rather than "mesh". In Aus. I've only ever heard it pronounced
alt.usage.english
by
peter moylan
5 yr 206 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Spelling, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Languages
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