Excuse me you have conflicting evidence were Source #2 is clearly pronounced in a completely different way than all the other sources. How do I pronounce this?
Hi Tim Ho! This video is intended to be a representative sample of the pronunciation of "tsk" in American popular culture. Our analysis indicates that source #2 is the minority accepted pronunciation. The other examples are the majority pronunciation. Hope that helps!
In this video, the ones who pronounce, or shall we say, express it properly, are the ones who produce it as more of a short and clipped clicking sound, rather than that of the repetition of a one syllable word, i.e. “tisk tisk”. From what I’ve gathered reading up on this, is that the misapplication came from the perhaps less versed, who didn’t realize just what they were looking at, or understand what it was meant to express when seeing it in written form. This sounds right to me, I’ve never, and I mean never heard anyone speak it as a short, one syllable word, but for all I know, the writers of the stuff I read may have been full of sh*t.🫤
Know someone who pronounces "Tsk" differently? Think any of the pronunciations in this video are wrong? Let us know by commenting below!
the tsk sound is common in the Caribbean 😂😂
yeah hispanics use it al lot lol
I think I'm in love. Who's that girl who says excuse me?!
I love this word!
NEEEDD!!!!!
MOHAMMED AVDOL
*YES , I AM!*
@@blackfriezaonyocrib.4418 No. Friggin. Way.
I loved the Fine Brothers React video!
it’s “cık” in my language😂
Çık or cık?
Excuse me you have conflicting evidence were Source #2 is clearly pronounced in a completely different way than all the other sources. How do I pronounce this?
Hi Tim Ho! This video is intended to be a representative sample of the pronunciation of "tsk" in American popular culture. Our analysis indicates that source #2 is the minority accepted pronunciation. The other examples are the majority pronunciation. Hope that helps!
Thats because source #2 isn't a "tsk" sound, its a "tut", which is different.
Esta en inglés y yo no Leo taka taka
It’s the oldest language in the world… The clicking sound is used by the oldest people on earth in South Africa the San, #YAPDNA
#YAP #sanpeople
In this video, the ones who pronounce, or shall we say, express it properly, are the ones who produce it as more of a short and clipped clicking sound, rather than that of the repetition of a one syllable word, i.e. “tisk tisk”. From what I’ve gathered reading up on this, is that the misapplication came from the perhaps less versed, who didn’t realize just what they were looking at, or understand what it was meant to express when seeing it in written form. This sounds right to me, I’ve never, and I mean never heard anyone speak it as a short, one syllable word, but for all I know, the writers of the stuff I read may have been full of sh*t.🫤