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#1 |
Person who doesn't update the user title
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Southern California
Posts: 6,674
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What truly marks the foreigner speaking English is the vowels. Somebody raised in a language that is mainly pure vowels needs either long experience and an acute ear, or else detailed instruction, to deal with English's diphthongal glides. English has few pure vowels; they are most often either iotized or they are mainly one vowel with a faint tail of another, e.g. the English long "O" finishes up with a tiny "U" at its end, and conversely trying to get English speakers to deliver a pure "O" sound European-style can be quite the struggle -- they don't necessarily hear that U tail-off because we think long O is one sound.
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#2 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 8,360
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Quote:
Yo hablo espanol. Hmmm . . . cool. 2)Labret from Merriam-Webster: Main Entry: la·bret Pronunciation: 'lA-br&t Function: noun Etymology: Latin labrum : an ornament worn in a perforation of the lip
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