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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 98 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, Phonetics, Intonations, American Accents, Countries, France, United States, American, Asia, Languages, Korea, Australia
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At 19:22:12 on Fri, 4 Mar 2005, HB (Email Removed) wrote in : Forgive my ignorance, but can anyone name a few English dialects? We always learned (translator school in Flanders) that English had many accents, not dialects, the only dialect we ever
uk.culture.language.english
by
molly mockford
4 yr 267 days ago
Accents, Consonants, Numbers, Dialects, Pronunciation, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, Countries, Great Britain, Writing, Asia, Languages, Ireland, China
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Great! Am I right to believe that people from Asia ... Chinese or Japanese or Mongolian I would be completely lost! Actually, I believe both Chinese and Japanese (I don't know about Mongolian) are much easier languages than English. Especially
misc.education.language.english
by
mark barratt
5 yr 37 days ago
Learning English, Spelling, Pronunciation, Consonants, Phonetics, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Writing, United States, American, Asia, China, Languages
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Great! Am I right to believe that people from Asia have to make an effort bigger than Europeans to learn ... In that, I admire Asians. If I were to study Chinese or Japanese or Mongolian I would be completely lost! Actually, I believe both Chinese
misc.education.language.english
by
sytse wielinga
5 yr 38 days ago
Contractions, Learning English, Numbers, Spelling, Pronunciation, Consonants, Phonetics, Students, Countries, Writing, United States, American, Asia, China, Languages
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I am according with you but, Then is wrong to pronounce the final segment as the first sound of 'cheap' or 'china' (/tS/)? Yes. The /tS/ is different from /dZ/. They are articulated in the same way, but the /tS/ sound is produced
misc.education.language.english
by
mxsmanic
5 yr 112 days ago
Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Asia, China, Languages
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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 112 days ago
Regards, Pronunciation, Consonants, Accents, American Accents, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Countries, United States, Speeches, American, Asia, China, Languages
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Well, there's Hangul, which I've seen explained as being pictographic at base, with the pictures representing the position of the vocal aparatus. Not for vowels it don't. As I understand it, hangeul does not reflect entirely the spoken
alt.usage.english
by
peter t. daniels
5 yr 211 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Asia, Korea, Speaking, Writing, Punctuation, Languages
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That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in "Asia"? What other consonants do you devoice between vowels? At a James Joyce affair I attended, they had a female member of the music
alt.usage.english
by
peter t. daniels
5 yr 217 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Asia, Speaking, Languages, Songs, Arts, Allophones, Music
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Possibly 'sh/zh'. I noticed recently that I pronounce 'Asian' with either, although 'Asia' always has 'sh'. That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in
alt.usage.english
by
john a. rea
5 yr 217 days ago
Vowels, Pronunciation, Consonants, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Asia, Speaking, Languages, Songs, Arts, Allophones, Music
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That's neutralization to an archiphoneme, rather than allophony, but whyever would you use (S) in "Asia"? What other consonants do you devoice between vowels? "Pronunciation: 'A-zh&, -sh&" so they are presumably
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