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accent: a way of speaking typical of a particular group of people and especially of the natives or residents of a region
dialect: a regional variety of language distinguished by features of vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation from other
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So hey people, I am new to this forums, and I hope to learn a lot during my time here. I wonder if I could get some help on accents. Recently my interest in them has grown, but I also suck at it! I can't hear the difference between accents, may it
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Hwat for what is the original pronunciation and was the only form used in Middle English. In Modern English, many dialects lost the wine-whine distinction, and began pronouncing words spelled "wh" as simply "w", rather thn "hw". The original,
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Hi, Kooyeen,
Kooyeen wrote: I know you won't like my answer, but... what's wrong? That part of speech was ok. My goal is to talk like that. Ok, not really like that, but that was not "non-English", so it was ok in the end (I guess).
I
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Nope, a complete vowel merger means that you can neither produce nor perceive a difference between two or more vowels in a certain environment or all environments. In my dialect, the vowels and are merged in all environments so I cannot produce
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Well, at this point I really don't know what to say... It seems it's even a matter of "hearing" and "recognizing" the sounds, because of what we are used to say and hear. It might well be so. However, I still can't understand how it is possible
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What I meant by there's no contrast is that there are no minimal pairs (in General American). Tense and lax vowels never contrast: /Er\/ and /er\/ both mean "air". In fact, I can't even *hear* the difference between /Er\/ and /er\/ at all. They
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Don Myers wrote on 20 Nov 2004: Teachers tell students to practice reading. Students then run across many words they've never heard pronounced. As they see the ... quickly pick out the word in a list be helpful even though there is no meaning
misc.education.language.english
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cybercypher
5 yr 6 days ago
Numbers, Difference Between, Dialects, Spelling, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Context, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Writing, Teaching, Languages, ESL
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But how come two different tutors said the same thing. They do not know each other. They both have the misfortune of being incorrect. Some incorrect beliefs are widespead. They told me in my pronunciation there is no difference between
misc.education.language.english
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mxsmanic
5 yr 108 days ago
American English, Difference Between, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, Teaching, American, Languages, Fricatives
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For that dialect, yes. Take me, for example. In my idiolect "piano" and "chianti" have two syllables. I have gathered that for the vast majority of English speakers these are three-syllable words that such speakers are
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 147 days ago
Dialects, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Consonants, Idiolect, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Writing, Numbers
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