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The noun, in the first sentence, has the accent on the first syllable. PRAW-gress. (American pronunciation)
The verb, in the second sentence, has the accent on the second syllable. pruh-GRESS. (Also American)
Did you mean pronunciation, or
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Hi, what your name? What you waiting for? I don't know if this is a matter of pronunciation, but it's strange. I often hear seantences like those as: Whuch your name? - Instead of "what's your name" Whuch you waiting for? - Instead of "what are
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Hi, Kooyeen,
Kooyeen wrote: I know you won't like my answer, but... what's wrong? That part of speech was ok. My goal is to talk like that. Ok, not really like that, but that was not "non-English", so it was ok in the end (I guess).
I
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8. Why do you say “She is a one-eyed teacher” and not “ She’s an one eyed teacher”? (Focus on a phonetic explanation) The article an is used before vowel sounds, not vowel letters. The word one is pronounced wun . The w is not a vowel sound even
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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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English people DO have trouble with Greek accents. One interesting problem is the difference in intonation. In Greek, a sentence will always end with the voice rising in tone if it is a question. In English this is not always so. In fact if you
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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:
- English Test
How to Write a Letter Idioms Formal Letter Graduation Songs
Who sings a certain song
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