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Hi,
she told me " i met professor shah at _ University". which article is applicable before "University" here?
and why?
options are
1)a Some particular university that has not yet been mentioned in the
ESL General English Grammar Questions
by
clive
46 days ago
Articles, Universities, Vowels, Sentences, Usages, Students, Speaking, Chat, Friendships, Schools, Conversational
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You can choose the one you hear the most or the one you like the most. In my opinion, it's not worth bothering with such a distinction, because it would be a useless effort, unless you really wanted to have a perfect accent where such a
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The examples I quoted above contradict Macmillan's logic. Seond I don't share the same terminology you do: for instance, to me, being reduced and being stressed are not synonomous. Lets look at the four possibilities. 1. Stressed,
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(S)he is probably speaking with Americans in a call center. The more American sounding, the better. The three biggest problems with Indian call centers are 1. there is too much background noise 2. the phone rep is speaking way too quickly 3.
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
anonymous
70 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, American English, Conversational, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Languages
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got suck at learning american accent cuz some vowel are difficult to pronounce.. What are those vowels that you find difficult? Just keep a set of words (as they are called lexical sets) which are representative of those dificult vowels. Then
English Audio: Speech & Pronunciation
by
raindoctor
76 days ago
Vowels, Accents, American Accents, Learning English, Speaking, Chat, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, United States, American, Speeches, Languages, Students
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Using “a” and “an” Before Words
Raphael asks: When should I use “a” and when should I use “an” before the different words? For example, should I say “a hour” or “an hour?” I stumble over this everytime and dont’t know if I’m getting it right, as
ESL, Learn Basic English Vocabulary
by
anonymous
94 days ago
Pronunciation, Vowels, Spelling, Abbreviations, Countries, United Kingdom, Great Britain, Friendships, Writing, Usages, Speaking, Chat, Languages, Consonants
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Strictly speaking, 'y' is a vowel letter: Vowel: a letter representing or usually representing a vowel, as, in English, a, e, i, o, u, and sometimes w and y.
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A vowel sound or a vowel letter? All English words have vowel sounds, but you could argue that 'rhythm' doesn't have a vowel letter, strictly speaking.
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I'm having an argument with my friend. He thinks that in "the wounded," the is pronounced "thee". He thinks because it is a vowel sound. I on the other hand don't think "w" is a vowel, and regardless of the
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This often happens when people are speaking extemporaneously, without a printed text from which to read. It becomes, in effect, a sort of "articulated pause + indefinite article". I have every confidence that he knows the difference
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