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They claim that a vowel is longer before an unvoiced consonant. Yes, but I noticed that vowel length only makes sense in stressed syllables, so as long as you stress the second word in each example this feature can be neglected. Devoicing
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r after any vowel has a special place in english. oor usually end up as ʊɚ, ɔɚ, oʊɚ poor: pʊɚ moore: mʊ ɚ , mɔ ɚ , moʊ ɚ floor: fl ɔ ɚ , floʊ ɚ door: d ɔ ɚ d oʊ ɚ oo before any but r: boom: bum doom: dum hood: h ʊd good: gʊd wood:
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got suck at learning american accent cuz some vowel are difficult to pronounce.. What are those vowels that you find difficult? Just keep a set of words (as they are called lexical sets) which are representative of those dificult vowels. Then
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
raindoctor
193 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Learning English, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Speeches, Languages, Students
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Hi, I am studying at City University in London and wanted to know in which context do we pronounce the as 'da' and as 'de'. Pronounce it as 'de' before vowel sounds. CJ
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It makes it even more difficult when you look at the variations in the American Dialect. There is no "American Accent" --there are 7 recognized main divisions (Western/Californian, Upper Midwest, Midland, Southern, MidAtlantic,
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
anonymous
289 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Dialects, Learning English, Online, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Students, Teaching, Classes
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Hi, and welcome to Englishforums! I'm Italian, so I know what your problem is. Mine was a different one though: it's not that I couldn't hear it, it's just that no one had ever told me there were two different vowels in English for
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Native speakers of English don't, unless dictating to children. In ... or "handbag" (which in rapid speech is indistinguishable from "ham-bag"). I'm English and have just a vestige of a "d" in handsome and a
misc.education.language.english
by
peter groves
1 yr 132 days ago
Spelling, Pronunciation, Vowels, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Writing, Speeches, Languages, Australia
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This debate really seems to be about two different things, spelling and pronunciation. The letter w (and y) is often used with other vowels (and sometimes alone as well) in spelling to reperesent a vowel sound . In the words hi and by , the letter
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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missmandy
1 yr 176 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Teaching, Languages
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Hi, I need some advice regarding ESL instruction. I don't have any formal ESL training or certification, but I do tutor some foreign students in English - mainly written English. I've been approached by a Russian student who wants to
misc.education.language.english
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4 yr 53 days ago
Universities, Pronunciation, Vowels, Accents, Intonations, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Schools, Training, Languages, ESL
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Enrico C wrote on 21 Nov 2004: One can always record one's own speech and compare it with a native speaker's rendition. On the contrary, I think one can improve a lot if others listen to him/her attentively and make him/her notice ...
misc.education.language.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 120 days ago
Numbers, Pronunciation, Vowels, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Speeches, Asia, China, Classes, Languages
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