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Does anyone agree? I agree. Nevertheless, progress in both aspects seems to occur in parallel. I think improvement in one stimulates improvement in the other. When a student practices the correct pronunciation of grammatical sentences, both the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
califjim
81 days ago
Tenses, Past Tenses, Accents, Pronunciation, Sentences, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Training, Conversational
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The other thing that I was saying was that before /r\/, there is
no
contrast between tense and lax vowels in most definitions of General
American and approximate accents.
OK. But what I was saying was that what applies for /r\/
applies
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Hmm. Sorry for the confusion. Now I'm a little confused too. I was saying two different things:
1) The "ay" in play, is pronounced differently in different dialects. Such as a monophthong or something like or other variations. Some dialects
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Kooyeen, there is something that you should know. While it is true that North American English has tense-lax neutralization before /r\/, thus and are heard as the same, I would say that most speakers of General American English, use a vowel closer
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I believe this question is best answered by someone who sees it from the former learner's point of view because natives don't have to go through the seemingly impossible phases that the ESL learners must go through. To put it in perspectives I
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Hiya YC, It sure feels good that a native shows interest in how we perceive english... Let me try to understand the best I can...
Specific elements of language posing problem : I'm comfortable with tenses and conjugation. I find myself
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don groves infrared: Mike Connally infrared: We've discussed this one before, and there ... And I've never heard of anyone using a 'mild' pronunciation. Mizz-led? We WUSSes say Miss-led. Accent can be either way or none. Ah ... I
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Being a Korean-Chinese (More Korean Blood),
I find Chinese rather easy in a way, yet very difficult in the other. It's easy to learn for its simple structure. Chinese does not have a past tense - present tense - future tense law.
For example:
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What logic? Both 'pavilion' and 'canceled' follow normal spelling rules; a double L would be unnecessary in the first case, and wrong in the second. What spelling rules? In fact, why is it "spelling" why isn't this
alt.usage.english
by
alan jones
5 yr 106 days ago
American English, Accents, Spelling, Phonetics, Pronunciation, Tenses, Consonants, Past Tenses, Relationships, Friendships, United States, American, Usages, Writing, Friends
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It was a curious business. It made things very awkward for foreign businessmen who, when faced with a few stumbling words of French or German from their British counterparts, were put in the difficult position of deciding how to guide the
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