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Most Common Sound in a Language X

  Tags: Pronunciation
 Language Learning Forum : General discussion Post Reply
12 messages over 2 pages: 1
Bruno87
Diglot
Groupie
Argentina
Joined 4191 days ago

49 posts - 72 votes 
Speaks: Spanish*, English
Studies: German, Portuguese

 
 Message 9 of 12
04 September 2013 at 3:11am | IP Logged 
Fuenf_Katzen wrote:
It seems as though the "r" sound is one of probably many that will
give somebody away as a non-native speaker. I have no idea how common either of these
sounds are, but at least for English, if you've mastered the "r" and the "th," you're
probably a pretty good speaker (as far as pronunciation goes).


Yep, but English's vowels are particularly tricky as well. You are doing well in
pronunciation if you are able to say "bitch" and "beach" without being misunderstood.
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garyb
Triglot
Senior Member
ScotlandRegistered users can see my Skype Name
Joined 5016 days ago

1468 posts - 2413 votes 
Speaks: English*, Italian, French
Studies: Spanish

 
 Message 10 of 12
04 September 2013 at 10:51am | IP Logged 
The "th" sounds are an interesting one. Neither French nor Italian has them, yet while French people infamously struggle with them, Italians seem to mostly pick them up quite easily. I've never understood why; maybe just a difference in teaching?

As for the beach/bitch distinction (/i/ vs. /ɪ/), despite having studied some phonetics, I don't even know how to explain that to people when they ask me. From the IPA chart, the latter is slightly more open and slightly more central, but in practice that doesn't seem to mean a lot, and a few successful learners have said that they see it as a difference in length rather than in the phoneme - /ɪ/ is "short i" and /i/ is "long i". Probably doesn't help that my Scottish /ɪ/ is more open than the English one, so non-native speakers often mishear it as an /ɛ/ even though to me they're very different sounds.
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tarvos
Super Polyglot
Winner TAC 2012
Senior Member
China
likeapolyglot.wordpr
Joined 4516 days ago

5310 posts - 9399 votes 
Speaks: Dutch*, English, Swedish, French, Russian, German, Italian, Norwegian, Mandarin, Romanian, Afrikaans
Studies: Greek, Modern Hebrew, Spanish, Portuguese, Czech, Korean, Esperanto, Finnish

 
 Message 11 of 12
04 September 2013 at 10:54am | IP Logged 
Italians don´t pick them up, they usually just go to d and t instead of s and z.

For most languages English needs to do a LOT of adapting because all their stops tend to
be so aspirated. I can transfer k, t, p nearly unchanged to another language because in
Dutch they are k t and p, and there is no aspiration.

Edited by tarvos on 04 September 2013 at 10:56am

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schoenewaelder
Diglot
Senior Member
Germany
Joined 5369 days ago

759 posts - 1197 votes 
Speaks: English*, French
Studies: German, Spanish, Dutch

 
 Message 12 of 12
04 September 2013 at 4:30pm | IP Logged 
garyb wrote:
As for the beach/bitch distinction (/i/ vs. /ɪ/), despite having studied
some phonetics, I don't even know how to explain that to people when they ask me.


I think the /ɪ/ is close enough to "é"

[edit] from an anglophone's point of view anyway, i.e a short "é" in the middle of an
english word will get categorised as a short "i" as being the only realistic
interpretation.

Edited by schoenewaelder on 05 September 2013 at 3:27pm



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