Actually it's called a schwa sound - ə.
Which, incidentally, is also the name of a fancy restaurant in Chicago (?) that I have heard has excellent pigeon egg ravioli and is near impossible to get a reservation in.
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sonicfan12p wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
Those are american websites xD
And yes, I pronounce it: cons(you)merism.I can attest to that, people do pronounce it like that. I've heard it on Top Gear, and other British shows, and apparently Australians do it too.
We stress R; they say "consYOOOOOUUUUUUmerism"
They always seem so awkward pronouncing the y into it.
Last edited by soupoftomato (2012-09-19 19:40:01)
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when it's obviously derrrehhhhckshun؟
Last edited by veggieman001 (2012-09-19 19:47:51)
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Well I felt like it was a particularly scathing remark so it needed some way to signify it was sarcastic
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A lot of vowel sounds are pronounced differently (but not neccesarily wrongly) by Americans.
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Our pronunciations are often more like what's actually written, IMO.
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I don't actually think so. There are many words that I can't even explain the reason of the way it's pronounced.
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Now, now, don't start saying one is better than another.
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ProgrammingFreak wrote:
I don't actually think so. There are many words that I can't even explain the reason of the way it's pronounced.
As opposed to a British or Australian or other English accent? Exempli gratia, please.
Last edited by veggieman001 (2012-09-19 21:04:03)
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CheeseMunchy wrote:
Now, now, don't start saying one is better than another.
Just what I was about to say
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jji7skyline wrote:
CheeseMunchy wrote:
Now, now, don't start saying one is better than another.
Just what I was about to say
Who's doing that? Me??
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veggieman001 wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
CheeseMunchy wrote:
Now, now, don't start saying one is better than another.
Just what I was about to say
Who's doing that? Me??
Just don't start
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But I wasn't :'(
hey out of curiosity can you record yourself saying "R"??
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Just the letter R?
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jackrulez wrote:
jji7skyline wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
I'll record something later i suppose
@skyline: I do Australian accents sometimes, so I hope we're cool as a dingo riding a crocodile on the barbie, mateSure folks. Whaaateverr yer say. Man! Accents arrre cool.
Plus, as a saaide paaaoint, let's naawwt turrrn this in da nationalistic argerment da other tawwwpic becameWhat American accent are you even imitating? There's like 50 of them.
Only like 11
And most non-Americans need a trained ear to tell the difference between two of them
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I suppose it matters where you come from. I have heard Americans who have accents pretty close to mine. I've also heard people who are from the deep south (in America) who talk really slowly (kinda like skyline's example :p).
I'm a Canadian who hasn't met a large number of Americans though so I think it might be hard to say that this post holds a whole ton of truth.
Last edited by slinger (2012-09-20 12:28:35)
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I'd be happy to do a British one for you but my god-forsaken microphone is being a shot to the knee.
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jji7skyline wrote:
soupoftomato wrote:
I'll record something later i suppose
@skyline: I do Australian accents sometimes, so I hope we're cool as a dingo riding a crocodile on the barbie, mateSure folks. Whaaateverr yer say. Man! Accents arrre cool.
Plus, as a saaide paaaoint, let's naawwt turrrn this in da nationalistic argerment da other tawwwpic became
Americans don't actually sound like that. Right?
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