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Tefl article - TEFL Pronunciation differences between English and Americans #272 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				Introdution  English Pronunciation: How does it differ and why? We??re all native   English speakers aren??t we, what??s all this about sounding   different?   Everyone knows that a guy from the states sounds different to a   fellow from England. But, can we break it down? Can we state a few   simple rules that are continually repeating? Rules that a country??s   native always follow when pronouncing a word. The rules which  determine  their accent. Let??s try.  Main  Accents vary within countries, so as a starting point, let??s just   take the standard English that is spoken. This is considered to  be  ??General American?? for the US and ??Received Pronunciation?? for   England.  Rule 1: American is rhotic (i.e. pronouncing all r??s) and English  is  non-rhotic (pronouncing r??s only when...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Pronunciation differences between English and Americans Bernard Morrison - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 IntrodutionEnglish Pronunciation: How does it differ and why' We''re all native  English speakers aren''t we, what''s all this about sounding  different' Everyone knows that a guy from the states sounds different to a  fellow from England. But, can we break it down' Can we state a few  simple rules that are continually repeating' Rules that a country''s  native always follow when pronouncing a word. The rules which  determine their accent. Let''s try. MainAccents vary within countries, so as a starting point, let''s just  take the standard English that is spoken. This is considered to  be ''General American'' for the US and ''Received Pronunciation'' for  England.Rule 1: American is rhotic (i.e. pronouncing all r''s) and English is  non-rhotic (pronouncing r''s only when followed by a...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Pronunciation problems in Thailand Colleen Moffatt - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 During my first week at the TEFL course in Phuket, Thailand, I  began to notice that the pronunciation of the Thai students was  lacking a bit.  I do not blame this condition on the teachers, nor  on the students themselves, but the pronunciation predicament  immediately stuck out to me as a problem for which I would like to  find some resolution.  For this reason, I decided to look further  into the difficulties Thai students have when learning such a widely- used foreign language as English.  What I found was that most of the pronunciation problems stem from  the vast differences the two languages contain.  For many teachers  and students alike, the dissimilarities become so numerous that they  easily begin to overwhelm everyone involved in the process of  learning a new language.  But...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Tefl article - TEFL Pronunciation problems in Thailand #313 - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				During my first week at the TEFL course in Phuket, Thailand, I  began to  notice that the pronunciation of the Thai students was  lacking a bit.   I do not blame this condition on the teachers, nor  on the students  themselves, but the pronunciation predicament  immediately stuck out to  me as a problem for which I would like to  find some resolution.  For  this reason, I decided to look further  into the difficulties Thai  students have when learning such a widely- used foreign language as  English.    What I found was that most of the pronunciation problems stem from   the vast differences the two languages contain.  For many teachers  and  students alike, the dissimilarities become so numerous that they  easily  begin to overwhelm everyone involved in the process of  learning a new ...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			Phonetics: Differences between British and American English Aart v. Klaveren - ✔️ ✔️ ✔️ ITTT
				 During the late seventeenth century while James, Duke of York, was  renaming New Amsterdam. The vowel ' as in 'man' was lenghtening in  certain contexts. In words like 'laugh' and 'path' and 'pass' wich  end in unvoiced fricatives, in words like 'dance'and 'plant', which  end in a nasal and an s or t, and in words where the ' was followed  by r, that short vowel began to grow long. The older pronunciation  of 'dance was d'ns, wholly acceptable today to english speakers  outside the cultural area dominated by London, then it became d':ns.  It was not until the nineteenth century, that this long ' decided to  migrate to the back of the mout and become the α: which is  charachteristic of southern speech today. It is a source of mockery,  or reluctant admiration, among provincials and...					 [Read more]
			    
			    			
			


