thank you so much my Prof, this month,i follow you in foot steps,every moment you are with me with your great description. I prepare my self to obtain Master Degree in Linguistics
Thank you for your lecture Professor! It was very interesting. I am from Uzbekistan. We always use your video lectures during teaching Phonetics to students.
11:54 Is the transcription of the first vowel in “thirteen” a mistake? [ɛː] might be used in a limited number of accents with the SQUARE-NURSE merger, but the standard symbol for RP (the accent upon which the professor seems to be basing his English) is [ɜː], and I’m sure a central pronunciation is more common than a fully front one.
Your videos are so helpful. Many thanks. One question : Depending on which word the stress falls on in a sentence (in English) can change the meaning of that sentence? Or rather, can allude to different questions (if the sentence were an answer to a question.) E.g. "i SAW a pink elephant" - question "did you hear or see a pink elephant?" "i saw a PINK elephant" question - what colour was the elephant you saw?" "i saw a pink ELEPHANT" - question "what was the pink animal you saw?" Is this actually a change in meaning and if so would it be classed as shift stress? Many thanks
1. What are the levels in phonetics and phonology? Explain by giving examples of your own. 2. What does phonetics study about? 3. What does phonology study about?
Sorry, I have a question. I would like to use the illustrated video (i don't know how to describe) to present the way a phone is created in speech organs (like 3:46) . Where can I find it and how i can use it for my presentation? Thank you so much. (Sorry for my bad English)
+The Virtual Linguistics Campus thank you so much for the video, I finally understand the difference. Also, +dychui that's exactly what I was looking for thanks!
Create your (free) account on oer-vlc.de and become a member of the Virtual Linguistics Campus where you have free access to all courses, to the largest language data collection and huge multimedial glossaries. See you there!
I've been trying to figure this out for ages on my own and you effortlessly showed me in a matter of 5 minutes. Vielen Dank
thank you so much my Prof, this month,i follow you in foot steps,every moment you are with me with your great description.
I prepare my self to obtain Master Degree in Linguistics
thank you so much, professor. i've been struggling to figure this out but i can completely understand.
Thank you for your lecture Professor! It was very interesting. I am from Uzbekistan. We always use your video lectures during teaching Phonetics to students.
I am doing masters in informatics and language engineering. All your lectures helps me lot and gives very clear understanding
11:54 Is the transcription of the first vowel in “thirteen” a mistake? [ɛː] might be used in a limited number of accents with the SQUARE-NURSE merger, but the standard symbol for RP (the accent upon which the professor seems to be basing his English) is [ɜː], and I’m sure a central pronunciation is more common than a fully front one.
Thank you sir, it was very informative! I'm taking a course on phonology this semester and this video is really helpful for introductory base.
Thanks for such way of teaching.
Highly appreciable.
You are amazing sir
Illuminating!....grateful to you
Great lecture, it made things clear! Thank you
Awesome lecture man! Thanks!
Wonderfully clear explication !
Explanation
Your videos are so helpful. Many thanks. One question : Depending on which word the stress falls on in a sentence (in English) can change the meaning of that sentence? Or rather, can allude to different questions (if the sentence were an answer to a question.) E.g. "i SAW a pink elephant" - question "did you hear or see a pink elephant?" "i saw a PINK elephant" question - what colour was the elephant you saw?" "i saw a pink ELEPHANT" - question "what was the pink animal you saw?"
Is this actually a change in meaning and if so would it be classed as shift stress?
Many thanks
Thanks for your engouraging comments. This video should help to answer your question: ua-cam.com/video/TtH_JBiaKkM/v-deo.html
1. What are the levels in phonetics and phonology? Explain by giving examples of your own.
2. What does phonetics study about?
3. What does phonology study about?
David Crystal was his prof? How cool!
Sorry, I have a question. I would like to use the illustrated video (i don't know how to describe) to present the way a phone is created in speech organs (like 3:46) . Where can I find it and how i can use it for my presentation? Thank you so much. (Sorry for my bad English)
I am not quite sure what you want. The video can be used for free anyway.
LCĐ Ngữ văn Try the IOWA Phonetics webpage
dychui Here is our Video: "The Anatomy of Speech": ua-cam.com/video/-m-gudHhLxc/v-deo.html
+The Virtual Linguistics Campus thank you so much for the video, I finally understand the difference. Also,
+dychui that's exactly what I was looking for thanks!
how utterance can give meaning ?
phonetics is the hard and complex phenomena in english language. but i like it.
could you show me the more detaiiy than for the english stress/
thank you so much sir, i try to learn so that i can understand
Lovely content
Create your (free) account on oer-vlc.de and become a member of the Virtual Linguistics Campus where you have free access to all courses, to the largest language data collection and huge multimedial glossaries. See you there!
great !
Thank you! x
thank you so much that was soooooo helpful
Good one!
thanku really helpful
# Crux !
Phonetics gathers the raw material. Phonemics cooks it. 🔥
My man here secretly listens to Jethro Tull
Not secretely at all:
ua-cam.com/video/t4ZnB-gTyhA/v-deo.html
ıf ı have any tıme ı love watching to u my respectful lecture. ı need to study but u re perfect one thankkk for all vodeos.
*_Obrigada_*
Thank you
Nice
Thank u
waaaaw you made it so easy, great thanks 👍
Thanks!
Take pitch!
DOPE
👍🌹🌹🌹
German is your mother tongue?? No way! You speak English like a native speaker! :o
You are lovely
An American flag to represent the Queen's English sacrilege!
Thank you