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There are phonetic and structural differences between Indian accents and American or British ones. The way Indians join words, the intonation patterns and weak/strong forms are all different. Phonetically Indians do not use long sounds or
English Audio: Speech and Pronunciation
by
anonymous
191 days ago
Intonations, Accents, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Languages
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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
198 days ago
Accents, Dialects, Diphthongs, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, France, United States, American, Languages
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syllable Segment of speech usually consisting of a vowel with or without accompanying consonant sounds (e.g., a , I , out , too , cap , snap , check ). A syllabic consonant, like the final n sound in button and widen , also constitutes a syllable.
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
danielrams07
231 days ago
Numbers, Vowels, Consonants, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Diphthongs, Writing, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Speeches, Languages
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Samuraifingers: I'm sorry if I made it seem like I was expecting a professional assessment of my pronunciation. I am really only looking for brief comments such as "this or that vowel has the wrong quality" or "too much
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In article But the collapsed diphthong - in which a diphthong is formed to provide minimal phonetic cues to a longer word ... reliable acculturated BBC anchor or links man would be expected to know off pat and deliver without missing a beat. So
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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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As per phonetics theory, I've been told one should use the indefinite article "a" before words beginning with a consonant and "an" before words beginning with a vowel or a diphthong. And the sound "y" ( or / j /
uk.culture.language.english
by
paul
1 yr 157 days ago
Vowels, Consonants, Articles, Universities, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Usages, Students, Schools, Indefinite, Diphthongs
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I suppose demicjusz is interested in how those words are pronounced by people who speak English, so I don't think my opinion here would be useful, since my spoken English doesn't contain many sounds apart from those that belong also to Spanish (so
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Hello everyone,
The standard British (RP) pronunciation is: /I'moutIkon/, whereas the General American pronunciation is /I'moudiKa:n/.
I am very sorry for the clumsy 'phonetics' I've used. As you can see, I haven't yet figured out how to
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Yes, but John Hall implied that he heard this in ... (using SAMPA notation) but I've never noticed this. (SAMPA: http://www.phon.ucl.ac.uk/home/sampa/english.htm) SAMPA is itself quite confusing since it offers two different symbols (V and U)
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