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barrier'. Pronounced "mock", the Mach number is the ratio of the speed of a fluid, or of This would appear to be a case where pronunciation spelling doesn't do the job. I'm going to avoid ... British pronunciation of
alt.usage.english
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dr robin bignall
5 yr 307 days ago
Vowels, Universities, Spelling, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Students, Schools, Numbers
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It was apparently known as 'Mach 1' (pronounced in BrE as 'mack 1') in 1947. Pronounced "mock", the Mach number is the ratio of the speed of a fluid,or of This would appear to be a case where pronunciation spelling
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 308 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Pronunciation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Languages, Numbers
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I'm fighting a losing battle with my six-year old son ... colloquialism that migrated to written English, rather than vice versa. The weak pronunciation of "have" and the weak pronunciation of "of" are basically the same,
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I would need more information about the speech of the person in question to be able to say whether "whut" was being used here as eye dialect or simply as phonetic spelling. Very good point. Obviously, as a BrE/AusE speaker, my
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} On Thu, 15 Jan 2004 02:24:12 +0100, Ross Howard } }> } }> >( . . . ) } }> >> So the change to /'INglIS/ and /'INgl@nd/ was not particularly }> >> unusual it's just that the spelling of and }> >>
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"Ms." may not be an abbreviation, but it must not ... is "nth" at least one computerized version of Scrabble accepts it. sh - don't tell everyone. I made a mistake in my previous message, as I realized after receiving a
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 334 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Pronunciation, Abbreviations, Mistakes, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Speaking, Languages
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"Rather", as I've mentioned, is also a different phenomenon: the"ah" pronunciation is more archaic, and is retained in some areas andsome accents which never developed the "ah" in words like "half"
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There are a few words which tend to have the ... the same) - half, halve, calf, can't, shan't, banana, rather. Also there are still a handful of AmE speakers that follow the southern England approach (mainly in Eastern New England). Yes,
alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
5 yr 349 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Spelling, Pronunciation, Whom, Tenses, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing
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