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Hello. I've heard (say, in some British songs) the following pronunciation: the vowel in "got" was pronounced in a sort of American manner, more like in "but", for example. That was Blur, by the way. The sound was not even
uk.culture.language.english
by
danilla
4 yr 163 days ago
Accents, Vowels, Pronunciation, Speaking, United States, Countries, Arts, American, Songs, Speeches, British Accent
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Never thought of that; I don't hear anything in South ... way I don't hear Britishness in a S Asian accent? Right; I think a typical native Californian English speaker would say that a typical Philippino English speaker has a very soft
misc.education.language.english
by
django cat
5 yr 52 days ago
Pronunciation, Accents, Intonations, Students, Speaking, United Kingdom, Animals, Writing, United States, Speeches, American, Asia, Languages, British Accent
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You mean, pronounced "usedta" and "hasta"? No, for "used to", I mean "useta" with the /d/ assimilated to /t/ (or, at least, to a voiceless (d), which isn't quite the same thing).. Good point, but
misc.education.language.english
by
james salsman
5 yr 54 days ago
Tenses, Past Tenses, Pronunciation, Accents, Context, Speaking, Countries, Great Britain, Speeches, Training, Ireland, Languages, British Accent, Homographs, Scottish Accents
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Connected speech works just fine. Most people often elide some ... red if they are elided or spoken too quickly, though. OK. But that's elision. What about assimilation? You say that the analysis is at the phoneme level. How would this cope
misc.education.language.english
by
james salsman
5 yr 55 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Accents, Mistakes, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Colours, United States, Speeches, American, Training, Languages, ESL, British Accent
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On 21-Aug-2004, Mxsmanic (Email Removed) wrote in message (Email Removed): ?? Every description I've ever read of French pronunciation for ... /d/ and /n/ are dental, unlike their alveolar English counterparts. These consonants are more
misc.education.language.english
by
jim heckman
5 yr 95 days ago
Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Animals, Tips, Speeches, Languages, British Accent
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