My OER: Connected speech, features and examples (part 1)
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- Опубліковано 6 чер 2017
- This video (part 1) is part of the final task of the subject 'Open Language Learning', within the University Master's Degree in ICT for Language Teaching and Processing, at Spanish National Distance Education University (UNED).
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us! This will be very useful to study for my Phonetics and Phonology exam.
Thank you a million for putting together such a thorough tutorial.
Thank you for your feedback. I'm glad you liked it!
Well done!
Marvellous! I like your way of teaching!
Thank you very much for the lesson!
So intersting! Great video!
Thank You for sharing and caring.. very informative
Thaaaaanks very much👏👏 Like it !
Excellent explanations!
Excellent video.
Hello professor
Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance. I really appreciate your job. I love your way of teaching and excellent explanation. I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity.
Your Student from Algeria.
Thanks alot very informative and informative video sir
Thank you very much. This is a very useful and clear demonstration of the understanding of phonetics.
Thank you so much,I Am Thai. I can not speak English. I"m studying from your VDO,You do what i search.Thank you.
Thank you so much. I really liked it. Could you, please, add some more lessons?
It's very good video i've ever found.
EXCELELENT! THANK YOU!
well done, tks for the video.
Thank you for your feedback. :)
Excellent video!
Victoria Pereira Thanks a lot! :D
Thank you so much
Excellent lesson indeed .It's helpful.
Thank you!! :)
Thanks a lot
Well explained. Such a nice accent , liked it. ❤
Wow, thank you so much for your feedback!
how to put my OER in Crative Commons?
how can I apply for license?
Tnqq
As a native English speaker( not American English) I would NEVER EVER say " I saw-r -a film" unless I was very poorly educated. I would always say," I saw a film."
Apart from that found your video interesting.
Thank you for your feedback! :)
I got that example from here:
ua-cam.com/video/53Dh-I0_m5Y/v-deo.html
But definitely, you're right, I should have made it clear that "intrusive R" doesn't happen in all accents, that some native speakers consider using that 'intrusive R' is not the proper way to speak and, of course, insisted that my video is just a description of features of connected speech, which might help learners of British English as a Second/Foreign Language understand fluent speech better, not prescriptive at all. My bad.
Just a quick search for "connected speech", "intrusive R", "R-insertion" or "epenthetic R" and lots of videos by native speakers will come up talking about it and with examples, even one with "I saw(r) a good film last night":
ua-cam.com/video/ByuUt8fqZG4/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/gitG_03GaqI/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/DCJrFM3hdlg/v-deo.html
Once again, thanks for your comment!
Nice of teaching but video is incomplete.
Just get drunk and start slurring the words: if you do it fast enough you'll be 100% "native speaker" 🤣