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Dear friend, glides are sounds produced with little or no obstruction of the
airstream that are preceded or followed by a vowel. If they are followed by vowels, they are called on-glides , as in woo, where /w/ is an on-glide. If these sounds are
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Normal 0 false false false RU X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Hello, Raja, It goes without saying that there is no blame in being a non-native speaker and a layperson in linguistic science, so
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
10 days ago
Regards, Clauses, Pronouns, Adverbs, Intonations, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Relationships, Writing, Sentences, Friendships, Friends, Semantics, Expressions, Numbers
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Dear friend, else's - Charles' - - even though there is not -'s in writing, it is generally pronounced. boys' - - the suffix is neither written nor pronounced with regular plurals (unlike irregular ones, cf children's - )
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Hello I'm having a problem to pronounce words ending in CH followed by T or D, for example: There's not mu CH D ifference I like to wat CH T V It happens when I'm talking fastly, the sound of CH sounds like SH, "watch"
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Hello The other day I was talking to a friend of mine, and he started talking about words that have the same spell, but different pronunciation, the Homographs. Then I realized that I didn't know much about it, so I'm here to ask you if
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'Could of done' is not good grammar. It is a misunderstanding of the pronunciation of 'could have done', which in normal conversation is pronounced ' could've done'.
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Dear friend, for singular names ending in -s, the regular genitive is usual: Davis's , Charles's . Sometimes these nouns are treated as if they were plural: Davis' , Charles' - in this case the ending -s is still pronounced even
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
gleb_chebrikoff
36 days ago
Plurals, Nouns, Punctuation, Spelling, Apostrophes, Pronunciation, Genitives, Relationships, Writing, Speaking, Friendships, Friends
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The correct pronunication of your friend's last name is how HE pronounces it. The same is true for any name.
For what it's worth, however, I have always pronounced McElroy as "Mackle-roy", just as your friend does. Even
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
anonymous
48 days ago
Pronunciation, Phonetics, Phonics, Relationships, Speaking, Countries, Friendships, Languages, France, Friends, Teaching, Careers, Jobs, Children, Reading
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The correct pronunication of your friend's last name is how HE pronounces it. The same is true for any name.
For what it's worth, however, I have always pronounced McElroy as "Mackle-roy", just as your friend does.
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Hi, let me help you, I am Canadian. First of all, there is the correct way to say numbers, and the everyday/slang way. The proper way is " and" means a decimal. You NEVER use "and" unless denoting a decimal.
How about
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
anonymous
53 days ago
Pronunciation, Universities, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Writing, United States, American, Languages, Students, Schools, Numbers
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