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That doesn't mean you have to post 18 times. You shuda combined them into a single post. Since we're preaching up proper English here, please, don't post "kind-of-chat" language here. I don't belong to the set
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The "l" of "bell" when it ends a word is kind of a "half l" when compared to the initial "l" in "love" which allows the "l" voicing to be completed by going to a vowel. Yet the
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
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anonymous
41 days ago
American English, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Spelling, Football, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Speeches, Languages, Sports
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The vowel in the English "family" is formed with the back of the tongue very high in the mouth (look in a mirror). The Spanish "a" is like the English in "Say 'AHHHH.'"
The location of the tongue in the
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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
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anonymous
48 days ago
Pronunciation, Phonetics, Phonics, Relationships, Speaking, Countries, Friendships, Languages, France, Friends, Teaching, Careers, Jobs, Children, Reading
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Hello, may I know more about the Spanish English in England? What is the difference of pronounciation and phonetic between the Spanish English with the British English? And do the Spanish English in England is much different than those in US?
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I've been away from this forum for a while, and meantime I've enrolled for a five-year (gulp!) degree in English (which includes grammar, literature, linguistics, and so on) at a distance university. Right now I'm starting to delve
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
colombo
58 days ago
Accents, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Literature, Online, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Friendships, Languages, China, Asia, British Accents, Degree
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well the English D and T sound like a Spanish R (not double R but just R) - the Spanish J sounds like a English H - the Spanish L and English L don't sound alike (they are different sounds), and the same happened with the Spanish and English T
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I'm sure they do compare -- somehow. But what is your question? Which 44 symbols are you talking about? Which Spanish sounds are you talking about? CJ
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the 44 English symbols compare with similarity of spanish sounds
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I'm not native but I do know that first of all you should learn the phonetic symbols and then with every word you look up you should try to pronounce it exactly.when you do this a lot then without any phonetic help you can read every word
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