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I would pronounce it as . (ee-moh-tee-kahn). (In my particular dialect "o" is generally a monophthong)
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Certain dialects in the Upper Midwest with a German substratum will sometimes devoice final consonants, therefore 'of' would sound something like rather than
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It depends on the dialect. Most varieties of American English, for example would say , whereas most speakers of Canadian English said (in IPA:
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I myself usually say rather than .
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If you're aiming for a British accent, the vowel sound in the words can and are very different. In North American English, the vowel is the same for both, but /t/ is usually realised as a glottal stop at the end of "can't".
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I believe I actually do not say a at all, but rather realise the /d/ as a glottal stop. Thus .
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Using / /'s imply that you're using phonemic IPA or XSAMPA transcription. If this is the case then that means that you pronounce "jaguar" as /jagwar/, which written in fauxnetics would be approximately "yahgwahr". Somehow I don't think you meant
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