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I started a new thread, because my question is not quite the same as what is under discussion in the ... a sound that, to us non-Americans, seems closer to 'a', so I started thinking about the letters 'a, o, u'. It's been
alt.usage.english
by
jonathan jordan
5 yr 154 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Languages, American Accents
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(snip) I see it as a pronunciation spelling for those who pronounce the word as (drO:) and that includes rhotic AmE speakers in my experience (it may be a Midland phenomenon). MWCD11 includes (drO) as a dialectal pronunciation of
uk.culture.language.english
by
odysseus
5 yr 155 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, United States, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Diphthongs, Tips
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I have no luck in vowel discussions. All I can ... put in such a word. I'd call theirs a diphthong, Chances are yours is also a diphthong, though it may be a different diphthong from that which most BrE speakers ... seems to me to be
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A spelling tip: words like table and noble have what the Americans call a long vowel (tay, noh). Isn't it diphtongs? Spelling tip number two... Diphthongs has more Hs than you'd expect. Maybe you could visualize some "different
alt.usage.english
by
donna richoux
5 yr 157 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, British People, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Writing, Languages, Tips, Numbers
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"father" vowel) I remember going, when I liked organized religion, to the C of E St Barnabas in Oxford just for the smell and the routines! I remember talking to the Catholic priest in Dulverton, Devon, way back when, and him saying what
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Depends on how many people from Plaistow went on the grand tour. Didn'tlook like many last time I saw it, but that may have changed now. I'm not convinced, Steve: Italian has 'Messa', Spanish 'Misa', German ... one could
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High Church Anglicans sometimes used to say "Cahth-lick" (the "father" vowel) But some of them used to say "plahstic" too. And I have heard some Catholics talk of going to "Mahss". Me, too; I've always
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I have occasionally heard "catholic" pronounced "c@ thol' ic" (@ = schwa) to distinguish it from "Catholic". This variant is ... heard this distinction, I'd be interested to know where and which version of
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I've followed this thread with some amazement at how 'thing' ... the 'thing' in 'another thing coming' supposed to represent? Retribution? This issue was pretty much beaten to a pulp in AUE a couple of years back. So
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