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The title "My Fair Lady" derives primarily from the final line of the song "London Bridge is Falling Down". But it is more than that: it is the Cockney pronunciation of "Mayfair Lady", and while neither 27A Wimpole
ESL Vocabulary and Idioms
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anonymous
329 days ago
Pronunciation, Phonetics, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Business, References, Career, Music, Songs
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In le message del Mon, 04 Jul 2005 22:43:06 GMT, Cgao Coma ha scripte: Hi I recently jumped into this ancient english term, ANTANI, I don't know the meaning, neither the origin. It should concern the tuscan city of Florence (X-posted), but not
uk.culture.language.english
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4 yr 144 days ago
Dialects, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Business, Relationships, Chat, Friendships, Speaking, Countries, References, Career, Friends, Training, Languages, Genitives
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... } I don't know what song you're referring to; my interest in } the thread started with seeing "AH" used to represent a } pronunciation. The issue concerning the use of "ah" to } convey pronunciation will never be
alt.usage.english
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r j valentine
5 yr 150 days ago
Phonetics, Pronunciation, Paragraphs, Business, Relationships, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Writing, References, Career, Friends, Languages, Songs, Samples
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Many New York named streets were re-named once or more. And that's even without renaming having been directed by any foreign occupying forces. How 'bout the British? E.g. 'de Heerenstraat' => 'Broadway'. In some cases
alt.usage.english
by
areff
5 yr 182 days ago
Phonetics, Pronunciation, Consonants, Business, Countries, United States, American, Writing, References, Career, Languages, Numbers
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Irma > misc.education.language.english in Is there more than one phonetic alphabets? AFAIK, the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) is the international standard. If you are using a newsreader with Unicode support ("40tude Dialog"
misc.education.language.english
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usenet
5 yr 217 days ago
Pronunciation, Vowels, Consonants, Phonetics, Speaking, Sentences, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Careers, United States, References, Business, Career, Arts
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Once upon a 2/26/04 12:14 AM, in the land of (Email Removed), the good witch "Al Treacher" from (Email Removed) told the whole world all about how: Mentally wrestling with the correct usage of 'an' or 'a' before a word
alt.usage.english
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carmen l. abruzzi
5 yr 271 days ago
Articles, Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Business, Usages, Writing, References, Career, Teaching, Indefinite
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Or, more commonly, "zounds". AHD4 lists "'sblood", from "God's blood", ... had thought that they were supposed to be Jesus's hands. For a Christian, unless he is an Arianist (aka Unitarian), Jesus *is*
alt.usage.english
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pat durkin
5 yr 276 days ago
Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Nouns, Business, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, References, Career, Languages, Arts, Contractions
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Donald Duck quack-like. Midwest, in my hearing is ea . "Yeah" is ea, but only if it is prolonged: "Oh, yeah?" How do you write your cat, half, chat, that vowel, RF? I mean inyour phonetic description? You'd have to check
alt.usage.english
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pat durkin
5 yr 352 days ago
Phonetics, Pronunciation, Prepositions, Paragraphs, Business, Friendships, United States, American, Speaking, Chat, Writing, References, Career, Cartoons, Languages
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While it was 23/11/03 10:39 pm throughout the UK, Pat Durkin sprinkled little black dots on a white screen, and they fell thus: My practice: Standalone "A", if it is an adjective or ... converts to "an": An historical, an
alt.usage.english
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pat durkin
6 yr 3 days ago
Articles, Vowels, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Consonants, Business, Friendships, Colours, Speaking, Chat, References, Career, Adjectives, Languages
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In Received Pronunciation, "bother" is (bA.D@), "father" is (fA:D@). That ... "bother" is rounded, while the one in "father" is not. And the one in "bother" is noticeably shorter. Depends upon what
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