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Hello, Vladimir, this combination has not yet been codified in major pronunciation dictionaries, perhaps due to the narrowness of its use outside technical areas; therefore, we should resort to analogy. Thus, acronyms of a similar type
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The clue listed only the vowels. It was up to the contestants to figure out which state had those vowels in that order. AIE would be M ai n e IIIA would be V i rg i n ia EEEE is Tennessee I don't know which ones they listed, but apparently
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I think I hear 'Sunday' there.You must ...on Sunday.(maybe) Hmm, it might be "Sunday", yes. Here comes a BIG problem that I've been wondering about for ages... And I'd like to find out more on this phenomenon soon.The
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No. Some words that begin with a vowel are pronounced as if they begin with a consonant. In these cases, an is not used, but a . a European ( y oor-o-pean) a one-time chance ( w un time) CJ
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For the third person singular, use s .
It's pronunciation will depend on what comes before it: voiced consonant or vowel /z/; unvoiced consonant /s/.
animals, cows; pets
For a word ending in /s/ or /z/ sound , use es
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- the "l" in "lee" is a clear L : we find it before vowels and /j/. - the "l" in "bell" is a dark one : we find it in all other cases (end of word, before a consonant). However, it is said that in American
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There are two issues: (1) heuristics used in phonics (2) phonetics g: /g/, /dʒ/ c: /k/, /s/ /k/ is voiceless, whereas its counterpart /g/ is voiced. /s/ is voicelss; /dʒ/ is voiced. Velar consonants get softened (or voiced) before front vowels
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
raindoctor
40 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Phonics, Speaking, Teaching, Careers, Jobs, Children, Reading
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These are consonants: b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y, z. These are vowels: a, e, i, o, u.
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Hi,
Do you know what a vowel is? A consonant is a letter that is not a vowel.
Plese note the correct spelling of the word.
Best wishes, Clive
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when U is pronounced as "you", then the consonant rule applies, and when the U sounds like "uh", then the vowel rule applies. That is right. It is an observation of sound change in word flow, not a rule of grammar.
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