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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
by
anonymous
40 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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Jame is a very peculiar name, but you can contract it with is as you have done. The pronunciation of Spanish is and Spanish's is the same, so there's no point in using the apostrophe construction. Use the contraction only when the
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When she gets into the que question, she is a little misleading.
'applique' and' bouquet' are French words taken into English. The qu is pronounced /k/ in both words; the sound comes from the French ending (é in the first
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American-English was British-English, except that it was altered significantly by all of the various influences (immigrants/languages from other countries) that learned to speak it in America. Everyone in the UK knows how to communicate in English
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
54 days ago
Articles, British English, Dialects, Spelling, Learning English, Pronunciation, Writing, United States, Great Britain, Students, Speaking, American, Teaching, Languages, Expressions
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Apon is a Middle English spelling of upon . Many u- prefixes were spelt a- in Middle English. However after spellings were standardised, the a- prefix largely fell out of use. The correct spelling in Modern English is upon . Although, in many
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Hello I was wondering if there is any literature available on allophonic spelling of English words. Perhaps a book full of commonly heard phrases transcribed allophonically for people who wish to improve their pronunciation on an advanced level?
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Using “a” and “an” Before Words
Raphael asks: When should I use “a” and when should I use “an” before the different words? For example, should I say “a hour” or “an hour?” I stumble over this everytime and dont’t know if I’m getting it right, as
ESL, Learn Basic English Vocabulary
by
anonymous
95 days ago
Pronunciation, Vowels, Spelling, Abbreviations, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Writing, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Consonants
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Language is not static; it changes all the time. In fact, the t-sound used to be correct. Quote: "Often was pronounced with a t-sound until the 17th century, when a pronunciation without the /t/ came to predominate in the speech of the
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Phonics shows letter-sound correspondence patterns that exist in traditional spelling (what I call tradspel). It looks at letters and letter strings (letters in sequence) and shows how sounds are commonly spelled by them. Phonics is good for
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
tzurinskas
131 days ago
Spelling, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Phonics, Relationships, Writing, Jobs, Countries, Speaking, Speeches, Careers, Teaching, Languages, Reading, Children
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can someone please help me to correcting my work. i know there are many grammar mistakes please help me ,.i am posting my work here
Lesson / Activity
a) Objective
To learn and enforce new basic words according to the level of the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
anonymous
142 days ago
Vocabulary, Nouns, Spelling, Pronunciation, Writing, Activities, Students, Speaking, Mistakes, Teaching, Languages
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