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I thank you all for your effort to help me and of course for your time... I think my questions were answered. Especially a reply by Marvin A. completely answered my questions. What pronunciation to choose depends on what American accent you want
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Get an electronic pronouncing dictionary and practise your pronunciation every day for 10-20 minutes, without exceptions. Use books with English idioms, and practise with your computer/laptop and a piece of paper. Pick out a word. Try to predict
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
dokterjokkebrok
85 days ago
Accents, American Accents, Pronunciation, Idioms, Regards, Online, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages
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Of course both those books have CD's. Without CD's those books would be worthless... Both books are especially about intonation, linking words, reduced sounds and something about pronunciation you can hardly find in books on American
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
freekarol
88 days ago
American English, British English, Intonations, Accents, Pronunciation, American Accents, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, American, Training, Languages
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My guess is that one of the following is true. 1) He's not from the U.S., but he learned English very, very early in life. 2) He's from the U.S., but has picked up a tiny bit of the accent of his immigrant parents. 3) He's from the
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
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califjim
89 days ago
Accents, American Accents, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Asia
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I was going to say NO! (dictionaries for learners say that the weak form is only a conjunction, and American Accent Training says so too) but I just checked on Merriam Webster, and a weak form is listed for the pronoun too... so, if it's
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I noticed that this question is tagged as unanswered. Received pronunciation is so named because it was 'received by', i.e. taught to public school pupils and RADA pupils. ( RADA = Royal Academy of Dramatic Arts ). You can hear example in
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
anonymous
186 days ago
Accents, American Accents, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages, Arts, Students, Colours, Schools
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Hi Tom My pronunciation of "maximum" is apparently a little more "staccato" than yours, and there is definitely no Z sound. I might represent my pronunciation this way: macks-ih-mum The pronunciation in the M-W dictionary
ESL General English Grammar Questions
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yankee
217 days ago
American English, Accents, Pronunciation, American Accents, Countries, United States, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, American, Languages
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Weird problem. I'd just like to hear as many opinions as possible. I have learned a lot of stuff about pronunciation, and I like to learn as much as possible, to keep improving my English. However, I have never seriously practiced spoken English,
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
kooyeen
265 days ago
Accents, Dialects, Pronunciation, American English, British English, American Accents, British Accent, Countries, Great Britain, France, American, Speaking, Languages, Sentences, British Accents
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I'm undergoing accent neutralization training. My instructor says that when a word ends with a vowel sound and if the next word starts with a vowel sound, then I'm supposed to add an "r" in between to read that out. I'm a bit
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<Where are the books that teach spoken English ? I'm a go there? What a ya doin? Ah'll see ya domorrow. > They're on there way: English Pronunciation in Use Intermediate I doubt that's really comprehensive. I think I once took a look at that
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
kooyeen
289 days ago
Accents, Dialects, Pronunciation, Phonetics, British English, American Accents, Glottals, British Accent, Countries, Great Britain, American, Speaking, Animals, Languages, British Accents
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