#digraphs
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hislittleraincloud · 7 months ago
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E.g. (📱)
"I NEED TO BORROW YOUR PH —" vs.
"I NEED TO BORROW YOUR P —"
Hello I would like to make a fanfiction complaint.
When someone is saying a word that starts with a digraph but they get cut off at the beginning of the word you have to include the whole digraph or else the sound is different and it doesn't read the same.
Ok thanks.
I love you.
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magistralucis · 1 year ago
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pronouncing the necron 'sz': personal rating list*
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broke: /s/ only ('seras')
woke: /z/ only ('zeras')
provoke: /s/ and /z/ pronounced separately ('s-ze-ras')
bespoke: /ʂ/ or /ʃ/ ('scheras')
invoke: tensed fricative /s͈/ ('sseras')
misspoke: /s/ but evil ('ßeras')
(* Further notes in tags.)
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robiberon · 27 days ago
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hi hello i just saw one too many bad meme making fun of the french language so here is a PSA in the form of angry texts i sent my gc at 3am <3
(for context, this is abt the tumblr post that said that the word "oiseaux" (pronounced "wazo") makes no sense)
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like ik it's a lot, and idk if all of it makes sense, but i'm kind of a nerd for linguistics so i felt the need to defend my language lol
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velaraffricate · 1 year ago
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god i wish latin'd had /ʃ/ so we could have a proper letter for it in our alphabet
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o-wise-corvid · 1 year ago
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Dathomir Daily
Tunorr su nī sho thol’onzhul. (Look me in the eye.)
(Toonorr soo neye shah thahl-onzh-ool.)
This is a statement used like “give it to me straight” or “come clean”. Eye contact isn’t usually done outside of intimate relationships of family or close loved ones. Otherwise it’s seen as threatening.
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Tag list: @alexeithegoat @thesitharts @crc-jedi-knight-serushna @hotshot9 @smoooothbrain @gran-maul-seizure @foreverchangingfandomsao3 @herbalinz-of-yesteryear @justalittletomato @stardustbee @storm89 @by-the-primes @ohboi @and-claudia @eloquentmoon
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kelasian · 6 months ago
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yorév sëbán gháziriyer dathá ḫáwasësaḥ yóqir búrm ahah
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hanaasbananas · 7 months ago
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said "sup guys" to my spelling group today and was immediately humbled by an eight year old going "miss said 'sup!' Miss are you trying to do slang?" followed up five minutes later-while I'm trying to teach 'ei' words- with "miss were you being cool?" while I'm just stood there in my pink hello kitty jumper, grey love heart hijab and rainbow platform converse like "am I NOT???"
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sera-wasnever · 9 months ago
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Bless this random 1684 woman hand writing her recipe book for including a legend for the abbreviations she uses :')
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szaalek-czaje · 2 years ago
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you are no longer tea D:
I'M STILL CUP OF TEA! Just in Czech* now.
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natequarter · 2 years ago
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is it me or is the english /u/ a radically different sound to the french /u/
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deliasamed · 2 years ago
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The Phonics rules in English
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15  phonics rules 
  Vowels in Syllables: Vowels can be short (like a in cat) or long (like a in cake). Vowels can also be found in different types of syllables (closed, open, etc.).     Short and Long Vowels: English vowels can often be pronounced differently in different words based on whether they are short or long, affecting the word's meaning (bit vs. bite).     Silent E: The presence of a silent e at the end of a word can change the preceding vowel sound from short to long (mat vs mate).     Consonant Blends and Digraphs: Consonant blends are groups of two or more consonants with their individual sounds (bl in blue), while digraphs are pairs of letters representing one sound (sh in ship).     Vowel Digraphs: Vowel digraphs are two vowels together that make a single sound (ai in rain).     R-Controlled Vowels: When a vowel is followed by the letter r, it often changes the way the vowel is pronounced (ar in car).     Schwa Sound: The schwa sound is a reduced vowel sound often heard in unstressed syllables (a in sofa)( a in about)( o in havoc)( u in supply)     Soft C and G, Hard C and G: The letters c and g can have soft sounds (like c in cent or g in giant) and hard sounds (like c in cat or g in go).     Fizzle Rule: When a one-syllable word ends with a single vowel followed by a single consonant, double the final consonant when adding a suffix( l, f, s, and z: still, staff, bill, jazz, floss).     Ending in K and CK: Generally, use k at the end of a one-syllable word with long vowel and ck after a short vowel ( beak, seek, break – chick, crack, stick)     J and CH Sound: J often makes the j sound (jelly) ,(judge) while ch can make the ch sound (chat) or a k sound (chemist).     Drop the E with -ING: When adding -ing to a word ending in silent e, drop the e (take + ing = taking).   Doubling: When adding suffixes to words with one syllable or accented final syllable, double the final consonant if the syllable is stressed and ends in a single vowel followed by a single consonant (big + er = bigger).     Plurals: Add -s or -es for regular plurals (cat to cats, box to boxes).     Y Rules and Exceptions: When y is a vowel (e.g., cry), it often changes to i when adding a suffix (cry + ing = crying). However, there are exceptions (play + ing = playing).                   click hereThe Phonics rules in English click here The Alphabet names in English click here The International Phonetic Alphabet symbols for English phonemes click here About English Alphabet click here Auditory Phonetics click here Acoustic Phonetics click here Articulatory Phonetics click here English Phonetics click here About Phonetics Read the full article
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jurph · 2 years ago
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phonescreen-daydream · 1 month ago
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horrifyingly plummeting literacy rates aside that phonics post reminded me of work :')
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thekillingmoonmoon · 3 months ago
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teaching digraphs to my 11 year old today and... I'm so sorry ESL speakers
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softgrungeprophet · 5 months ago
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number one way to piss me off instantly is to trot out the wine dark sea as "evidence" that the ancient greeks "couldn't see blue"
first of all "wine dark" is not a literal translation, it's an interpretation of a metaphor that doesn't mention color at all and is comparing the choppiness of the sea to intoxication/drunkenness, not to the literal dark tone of red wine
second of all, if you think lacking a base word for blue is evidence of an inability to see blue, you don't understand how language works and are making ridiculous assumptions about people's biology and color vision from only a couple thousand years ago, based on a non-literal translation of one specific work
third of all they literally did have ways to discuss the color blue. but even if they didn't, not everything is identical to the american english language approach anyway, and there is generally no such thing as a universal trait in linguistics, so even something you take for granted being absent in another language isn't actually evidence for some kind of fundamental biological difference (frankly that veers too close to eugenics for my liking), and is just a different approach to contextualizing reality.
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vicinity-proximity · 5 months ago
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