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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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These are OK: You want to let me help you?-- Very casual. Do you want to let me help you? Do not use ' wanna' (or gonna, coulda, woulda . etc) in ANY written English unless you are actually transcribing speech (i.e. writing dialogue). It is not
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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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I have been taking advantage of another text reader to improve English pronunciation and listeing, I installed panopreter which is a free text-to-speech software, it reads with default Microsoft voices on Windows, I run it on Windows Vista, so I
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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
132 days ago
Spelling, Pronunciation, Phonetics, Phonics, Relationships, Writing, Jobs, Countries, Speaking, Speeches, Careers, Teaching, Languages, Reading, Children
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The received pronunciation mode of speech lends an air of ... America where such natural phenomena things tend to get "corrected." I know, I know! I just thought I'd play the straight man and set up all the inevitable US responses.
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The received pronunciation mode of speech lends an air of refinement, and you really do see more crowded mouthfuls of uneven discoloured choppers in the UK than in North America where such natural phenomena things tend to get
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It's refined and has bad teeth? In all seriousness, where does this ridiculous stereotype come from? The received pronunciation mode of speech lends an air of refinement, and you really do see more crowded mouthfuls of uneven discoloured
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I was researching the pattern of silent letters and was about to post a question on this forum when I found this site: http://www.eleaston.com/pr/sl-pat-pb.html After going through the list, I was surprised that there are so many. I pronounce
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