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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
by
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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This sounds like a simple question. But the answers are much more involved. Coming from an Asian background, learning to speak and use the language remotely sounding like a native took many years of relentless practicing and studying. I think
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r after any vowel has a special place in english. oor usually end up as ʊɚ, ɔɚ, oʊɚ poor: pʊɚ moore: mʊ ɚ , mɔ ɚ , moʊ ɚ floor: fl ɔ ɚ , floʊ ɚ door: d ɔ ɚ d oʊ ɚ oo before any but r: boom: bum doom: dum hood: h ʊd good: gʊd wood:
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I mean you heard it completely like this and wrote it down or with your experience you made the sentence in a way that is correct though having not recognised it clearly. The former. I actually heard it completely. I did not invent anything on the
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You got to be like everyone else now. That's nonstandard English due to careless pronunciation. Better: You have got to be like everyone ellse. = You must be... CB
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Anglicizing is the way to go, since it is not productive for native english speakers to remember phonological pecularities -- and they are not peculiar for the speakers whose language contain that word. mækyəl or məki əl
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I think you may be asking for explicit, black and white answers, to questions which don't lend themselves to such answers. There seem to be two problems in that there are: *Differences between British and American usages. *Differences in
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
bob m
51 days ago
Pronunciation, British English, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Languages, Usages, Colours, Numbers
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So to recap, four digit numbers with two significant digits are usually read by first reading the first two digits and adding hundred, but this is a bit informal? I didn't really get a clear picture of whether in the same kind of informal
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In British English one would say all the "ands" which you have asked about. Thus: two thousand six hundred and eighty four. I believe that American (and it seems Canadian) English is different. Americans may well make an exception for
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
bob m
52 days ago
Pronunciation, British English, Speaking, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Writing, United States, American, Languages, Numbers
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