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AJ Hoge's "effortless english" is a waste of money. I made the mistake of buying it for a friend who doesn't speak much English and she doesn't even use it. I don't blame her because it takes a lot of effort to learn with
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
elena_osullivan
59 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Consonants, American English, Dialects, Pronunciation, Grammar, Speak English, Relationships, Speaking, United States, American, Languages, Friends
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I want to ask 2 questions about pronunciation first:
1) Do Americans say /use- d / or /use- t / in used to?
2) I saw Ann Cook wrote this in American Accent course:
If the first consonant is voiced, the next one will be as well. If the
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Hi David, here you can find some stuff about American English. Vowels, consonants, lots of stuff... http://evaeaston.com/pr/home.html On that website there's also a link to this page, where the states are pronounced.
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Hi, this is interesting, it reminds me of something I read in a book for improving pronunciation (the famous "American Accent Training"). The title of the paragraph is "Spoon or Sboon?" She (the author) say: "Say spoon. Now say sboon. Hear how
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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 350 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Consonants, American English, Pronunciation, Numbers, British English, British Accent, Spelling, British People, Vocabulary, Paragraphs
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I think the problem with his Standard American Accent is two fold- one,
his native accent sneaks through a few times in the consonants as a few
have pointed out. Secondly, and I think this is the deal breaker, he
has some problems with stress
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Raf, your question is kind of strange, given the fact that many educated Britons do not even pronounce the "r" in "world." However, I've heard a lot of people ask the same question. The biggest problem is that the /r/ sound
misc.education.language.english
by
credoquaabsurdum
4 yr 94 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, Phonetics, Intonations, American Accents, Countries, France, United States, American, Asia, Languages, Korea, Australia
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If you tell me the name of the program, I can tell you how PROnounce is different. Almost all the major language learning PC software titles use template-based pronunciation analysis. Such systems often score people worse for missing the exact
misc.education.language.english
by
james salsman
5 yr 53 days ago
Pronunciation, British English, Consonants, Accents, American Accents, Mistakes, Countries, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Ireland, Languages, British Accent
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/eIdZ/ There's only one syllable; you must mean the final ... countless other English words: judge, edge, jail, June, major, etc. Thanks for replying, I am according with you but, Then is wrong to pronounce the final segment as the first sound
misc.education.language.english
by
einde o'callaghan
5 yr 108 days ago
Regards, Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, American Accents, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Countries, United States, Speeches, American, Asia, China, Languages
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I wonder whether he's a BrE, say, who is hearing some particular American accent's /E/ realization as an /i/. PIPs, for example, will say "semi" in a way that might sound like "simmy" or "simm-eye" to PINPs. I
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