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Ok, lol... then... I don't know if I understand your problem, but you are right, transcriptions in dictionaries are not accurate. But I don't know what to say, because it varies from dictionary to dictionary...I'll just give you a few
ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
by
kooyeen
202 days ago
Accents, Dialects, Diphthongs, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, France, United States, American, Languages
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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 91 days ago
Accents, Universities, Dialects, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Colours, Animals, Students, Schools, Styles, Languages, Diphthongs
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I've always wanted to ask Marvin what kind of accent that is. The pronunciation of diphthongs as monophthongs is known, but I've never heard of a bag-bang-beg-vague merger. Maybe it's some southern dialect, or a feature of some Ebonics varieties,
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Thank you for your replies.
these days I'm trying to improve my pronunciation a little (I'm reading "American Accent Training" by Ann Cook, I also have the audio files)
CalifJim wrote: As for the second component, it is often some
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I have come to the sudden realization that I don't ... and I can't say (wVjr). -Aaron J. Dinkin Dr. Whom I pronounce them all in the same way. But I have heard others pronounce them differently, as you say. Fi-uhr, with a schwa. But no one
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You have a dialect where, say, "bird" is (bV"Id) and ... they say (oIst@) or (V"Ist@), they replace it with (V"rst@). I see. I saw it differently. Using (V) for the vowel in "but," (@) for the vowel in
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This I don't understand. What rule do you have in mind which might, when misapplied, lead to "erster" from "oyster"? You have a dialect where, say, "bird" is (bV"Id) and it starts to get ridiculed
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 151 days ago
Vowels, Accents, Spelling, Dialects, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Countries, United States, Speaking, Writing
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(snip) I see it as a pronunciation spelling for those who pronounce the word as (drO:) and that includes rhotic AmE speakers in my experience (it may be a Midland phenomenon). MWCD11 includes (drO) as a dialectal pronunciation of
uk.culture.language.english
by
odysseus
5 yr 156 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, United States, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Diphthongs, Tips
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I have no luck in vowel discussions. All I can ... put in such a word. I'd call theirs a diphthong, Chances are yours is also a diphthong, though it may be a different diphthong from that which most BrE speakers ... seems to me to be
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Interesting examples. Those are one (sic) syllable words for me. . . . Two syllables for me; no diphthong. But they all have about the same quantity! so to say that has oneof something but has two ... to say that Miss Moore's syllable-count
alt.usage.english
by
jonathan jordan
5 yr 183 days ago
Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Difference Between, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Languages, Arts, Poetry, Numbers
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