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In the spoken language, these are pronounced differently; the "have" of possession has a soft V, and the "have to" meaning "must" has a strong F. Haff. (In the past tense, we don't even get that clue.) What is it
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alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
6 yr 3 days ago
Vowels, Spelling, Dialects, Pronunciation, Whom, Fricatives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Speaking, Writing, Languages, Grammar
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) I'm tentatively describing that as "tense a" rather than "ah": ... that have a split short-a system have their tense /& ^/. By Jove, I think you're right! Well, or at least it's a proper subset of that /&
alt.usage.english
by
aaron j. dinkin
6 yr 35 days ago
Regards, Vowels, Accents, Pronunciation, Whom, Tenses, Fricatives, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, United States, American, Speaking, Languages
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