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"You knew your brother did a bad thing, did you?"
"You knew your brother did a bad thing, did you ?"
Is the difference between those two an accent matter, or a
pronunciation matter?
Neither. The intonation is the key. You have
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SillyMe wrote: There is no need to improve an accent. Sometimes some work on pronunciation is required, but no more than that. Everyone should just make sure that he could be understood and that is enough. I've seen a lot of people who thought
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To tell you the truth, I've never heard any foreigner (unless they learned English when they were very young, or had lived in an English speaking country for at least a decade, and had extensive, and personalized accent coaching) ever be able to
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
marvin a.
2 yr 351 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Consonants, American English, Pronunciation, Numbers, British English, British Accent, Spelling, British People, Vocabulary, Paragraphs
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require >>> working with a linguistic therapist in a language laboratory. Am I >>> write in thinking that even someone ... Where >>> would she look for this kind of tutoring? It doesn't seem to be >>>
misc.education.language.english
by
django cat
3 yr 287 days ago
Learning English, Pronunciation, Accents, American Accents, British People, Students, Speaking, Countries, Great Britain, United States, Speeches, American, Asia, China, Languages
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I've heard (say, in some British songs) the following pronunciation: the vowel in "got" was pronounced in a sort of ... where a similar thing could happen, say "pot", "stop", etc. I mean I didn't notice it in
uk.culture.language.english
by
matthew huntbach
4 yr 163 days ago
Accents, Vowels, Regards, British People, Pronunciation, Speaking, United States, Countries, Great Britain, Arts, Music, American, Songs, Speeches, American Accents
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In regard to the comment on Americans not having the variety or plethora of accents present in the UK, I have a mixed response. Part of me wants to be angry because that is a pretty ignorant statement, but another part wants to agree with you for
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The English spoken in different parts of Britain is very different. Scottish English sounds nothing like cockney English, for example. ... to an American accent? Surely it would be better to, at the very least, separate English English from
alt.usage.english
by
don aitken
6 yr 47 days ago
Accents, Spelling, Dialects, Pronunciation, British People, British English, Countries, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Punctuation, Languages, American Accents
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How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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