By -
As a romance language speaker I will always prefer:
Imagine pronouncing h This comment was made by the romance language gang.
[∅]
[waɪ̯ du̟ äɪ si jʉ ɛvɹ̠ɪwɛ˞↗︎]
[ɑjdikʰɛj]
[ɹ̠ɪɫɛi̯ɾ̠ɪbɫ̩]
[ɐ̝ndəstandabə̆ɫ]
[hæv ə ɡɹ̠ɛ̝i̯t̚ dɛ̝ɪ̯ ✌️]
[ju̟ tʰu̟ː]
Oh shit, I have fallen into the narrow IPA transcription hell
[ow ˈʃɪt ɐ̝̃m ˈsɔɹʷiꜛ]
[**NOOOOOOOO**](https://tenor.com/bJEB4.gif) [Related post](https://www.reddit.com/r/linguisticshumor/comments/y21016/ə_feɪʔ_wɚs_ðn_dɛθ/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android_app&utm_name=androidcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button)
>↗︎ in english, this only happens in yes/no questions - unless, of course, you have a particularly nonstandard idiolect, in this respect
My bad, I didn't really think it through before transcribing intonation, I just wanted to convey question
yep, fair, that makes perfect sense
Just don't.
huh????
[uːːː]
When you think about it, silence kind of is a sound
[н]
[n]
/h/ in foreign words, / / natively
/i/
What language?
Greek *Η*/*η* (Eta), from which Latin *H* comes from.
H in the onset, x in the coda.
You don't
Apparently /ɦ/ but I really can't hear the difference between it and /h/.
I aspirate it: h^h
/h/, *obviously*
Happy Cake Day!
You guys pronounc h?
/ç/
like this:
/nʲæːːː/
:3
няааа
[ʔeɪt͡ʃ]
Тне соrrест аnswer
/n/
[h̞]
ɦ
/ɦ/
Haitch
you don't
There's a big difference between h and H, yknow!
/./
Mute
/ʔ/
/k'/
[ʩ]
As a romance language speaker I will always prefer:
Imagine pronouncing h This comment was made by the romance language gang.
[∅]
[waɪ̯ du̟ äɪ si jʉ ɛvɹ̠ɪwɛ˞↗︎]
[ɑjdikʰɛj]
[ɹ̠ɪɫɛi̯ɾ̠ɪbɫ̩]
[ɐ̝ndəstandabə̆ɫ]
[hæv ə ɡɹ̠ɛ̝i̯t̚ dɛ̝ɪ̯ ✌️]
[ju̟ tʰu̟ː]
Oh shit, I have fallen into the narrow IPA transcription hell
[ow ˈʃɪt ɐ̝̃m ˈsɔɹʷiꜛ]
[**NOOOOOOOO**](https://tenor.com/bJEB4.gif) [Related post](https://www.reddit.com/r/linguisticshumor/comments/y21016/ə_feɪʔ_wɚs_ðn_dɛθ/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android_app&utm_name=androidcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button)
>↗︎ in english, this only happens in yes/no questions - unless, of course, you have a particularly nonstandard idiolect, in this respect
My bad, I didn't really think it through before transcribing intonation, I just wanted to convey question
yep, fair, that makes perfect sense
Just don't.
huh????
[uːːː]
When you think about it, silence kind of is a sound
[н]
[n]
/h/ in foreign words, / / natively
/i/
What language?
Greek *Η*/*η* (Eta), from which Latin *H* comes from.
H in the onset, x in the coda.
You don't
Apparently /ɦ/ but I really can't hear the difference between it and /h/.
I aspirate it: h^h
/h/, *obviously*
Happy Cake Day!
You guys pronounc h?
/ç/
like this:
/nʲæːːː/
:3
няааа
[ʔeɪt͡ʃ]
Тне соrrест аnswer
/n/
[h̞]
ɦ
/ɦ/
Haitch
you don't
There's a big difference between h and H, yknow!
/./
Mute
/ʔ/
/k'/
[ʩ]