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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
234 days ago
Numbers, Vowels, Consonants, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Diphthongs, Writing, Animals, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Speeches, Languages
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This debate really seems to be about two different things, spelling and pronunciation. The letter w (and y) is often used with other vowels (and sometimes alone as well) in spelling to reperesent a vowel sound . In the words hi and by , the letter
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
missmandy
1 yr 61 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, Writing, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Teaching, Languages
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I quite understand why rhotic people would find the usual ... in the language where the combination "uh" represents this sound? Good point, "uh" doesn't really appear in traditional English words, does it? Searching on in
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If such considerations are of any importance, you should know it isn't possible for a city's people to 'mispronounce' the name of their city, Known as the Shrewsbury Rule. Is it? The only hit I got from Google for "Shrewsbury
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How many Americans are aware that the "long 'o'"of Received Pronunciation is different from the American "long 'o'"? Some American accents have a "long 'o'" that is similar to the "long
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 130 days ago
Vowels, American English, Accents, Spelling, Pronunciation, Diphthongs, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, American Accents
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I stopped reading Katherine Kerr when the same mistake was perpetuated in her 3rd or 4th book: she gave 'thin' ... of an o - I like to call it a smiley - so %u means a smiley over the u. That diacritic is called a "breve" in
alt.usage.english
by
raymond s. wise
5 yr 130 days ago
Vowels, American English, Spelling, Pronunciation, Whom, Diphthongs, Mistakes, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Writing, Friends
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A.u.e: Does anyone else have these two different "-ire"s? Consciously or unconsciously? With the same distribution as mine or different? When I come to think about it, it appears that words in your first list are slightly shorter sounds.
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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 155 days ago
Spelling, Vowels, Dialects, Pronunciation, Speaking, United States, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, Diphthongs, Tips
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A spelling tip: words like table and noble have what the Americans call a long vowel (tay, noh). Isn't it diphtongs? Spelling tip number two... Diphthongs has more Hs than you'd expect. Maybe you could visualize some "different
alt.usage.english
by
donna richoux
5 yr 156 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, British People, Diphthongs, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Writing, Languages, Tips, Numbers
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