Re: I believe the term here is "Pshaw".
Eric Sleator, on host 68.7.40.26
Friday, November 29, 2002, at 21:05:00
Re: I believe the term here is "Pshaw". posted by Fuzzpilz on Friday, November 29, 2002, at 17:28:53:
> I don't know exactly where the ks in English > are pronounced, but if it's anything like > German, there are two different ones selected > intuitively: a palatal and a velar.
The k is velar, except when before /j/, in which case it's palatal.
> > Oh, uvular r... How I hate you, uvular r... > > > I could say the same about the alveolar trilled > r. I am completely unable to pronounce anything > *but* the uvular trilled r (or, sometimes, an > untrilled rascalization thereof that results in > a [x]) or the soft English r.
I think I've finally got the uvular r down, although it still gives me hell when I want to say a word that starts with "ru", like "Ruhe". The alveolar trilled r (like the "rr" in Spanish) is pretty easy for me, as I grew up in southern California. (What do you mean by "soft English r"?)
I'd hate to be a non-English-speaker trying to learn how to say the American r.
-Eric Sleator Fri 29 Nov A.D. 2002
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