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American-English was British-English, except that it was altered significantly by all of the various influences (immigrants/languages from other countries) that learned to speak it in America. Everyone in the UK knows how to communicate in English
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
52 days ago
Articles, British English, Dialects, Spelling, Learning English, Pronunciation, Writing, United States, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, American, Teaching, Languages, Expressions
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Pter - the pronunciation of words depends heavily on a person's dialect. k in asked - variable pronunciation - I say - askt (some dialects say "axt") t in acts, ducts, students - I pronounce the "t", but very muted. l in
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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
183 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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I remember at school there was a combined volume of "Billy Liar" and "The Loneliness of The Long Distance Runner" ubiquitous to the "English Rooms". I thought the latter to be the better story, better written; but
uk.culture.language.english
by
fcs
1 yr 88 days ago
Accents, Universities, Dialects, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Animals, Students, Schools, Styles, Languages, Diphthongs
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David schrieb: David schrieb: I find the last sentence incomprehensible, if ... could interpret for those of us who don't come Yorkshire. Well, even the trolling "blue sow" managed to pick out that I'd made a transposition error
uk.culture.language.english
by
einde o'callaghan
2 yr 194 days ago
Nouns, Dialects, Pronunciation, Mistakes, Relationships, ESL, Speaking, Colours, Animals, Students, Marriage, Apologies, Languages, Learning English, Genitives
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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
by
cybercypher
5 yr 4 days ago
Numbers, Difference Between, Dialects, Spelling, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Context, Students, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Writing, Teaching, Languages, ESL
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Are you near a large city? Look in the yellow pages of the phone book under "Speech therapy", "Public speaking" ... specialize in these things, working with folks who stutter, or who have speech impediments, or who have a
misc.education.language.english
by
mxsmanic
5 yr 105 days ago
Dialects, Pronunciation, Accents, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Countries, Colours, United States, Speeches
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When people write to me addressing me as "Graham", I usually reply with "who?" That might work for the spoken name, too. Have you tried that on US speakers that call you "Gram"? Or is that pronunciation only used when
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rewboss infrared: In American English there are fairly significant differences among different accents in how /&/ and /E/ are pronounced. And for many foreign students (Germans certainly) the difference is infinitesimal. In a long-ago thread
alt.usage.english
by
peter moylan
5 yr 176 days ago
Vowels, American English, Accents, Dialects, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Students, Languages
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I have no regional accent that I'm aware of - ... believe it's a regional thing that's causing me this dispute. It's not quite as simple as that. There isn't one, uniform general American accent. There's plenty of room for
alt.usage.english
by
meg anne
5 yr 285 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Dialects, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Translation, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Students, American Accents, Training
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