👉 What are allophones?⚡️ You ask, I answer. 🤔💬
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- Опубліковано 27 лип 2024
- Billie English - the UA-cam channel to help you improve your English pronunciation, speaking and fluency! Billie is a certified CELTA English teacher trainer and has over 17 years of teaching experience.
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Billie is a pronunciation coach and content creator based in Barcelona, Spain. Her main focus is English pronunciation, phonology and helping learners speak more fluently. Billie has a degree in Communication Research & Phonology, a PGCE in Primary Education, a Trinity College Cert & DiplomaTESOL and over 17 years of teaching experience. She also works as a CELTA teacher trainer, Cambridge examiner and educational advisor. Billie has a second UA-cam channel called Billie English where she focuses on pronunciation and phonology. Her videos have been featured in the Google funded AI app ELSA speak.
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very good explanation, could you make a more complex video on the subject please? :)
Thanks madam a lot you really help me ❤
More info on what you mean by non contrastive
Thank You ❤
you're amazing
I want you to explain about maximum onset principle and syllabification please
this was awesome thank you! could you make a video on allographs please :)
Also /m/ and /n/ or /k/ and /g/
1-voicing
2-manner
wow
very nice explain ☺️
Which of these is an example of an allophone? /w/ and /v/ or /l/ and /t/
1- Voicing
2- place
3-manner
ooooh thank you so much!!
Have a good job ma'am.
what's the difference between allophone and allomorph
Thank you!
Thank you
Please include phone in the same example......
Allophone and phone are so confusing......as Both deal with change in phoneme
Wouldn't the smallest unit be a phone? A disnct speech sound. Where a phoneme is a distinct speech that distinguishes a word.
So we find phonemes in phonemic transcription , allophones in phoneti😊c transcription ?
what is the different to phonetic variation?
Great!❤😂😮😅😊
Technically, the unaspirated /t/ in the word STOP and the aspirated /t/ as in the word TOP are actually /d/ and /t/ respectably, in the Broad transcription. In English, the /d/ phoneme is not voiced in syllable onset. It can be narrowly transcribed as [t] while /t/ can be transcribed as [tʰ]. Speaking of voicing, English voice stops do not undergo prevoicing as they do in many other languages such as Romance and Slavic languages. This phenomenon is called Voice Onset Time.
Transcribing the /sp/, /st, and /sk/ cluster as such can create confusion among learners of English as they erroneously aspirate the stops after /s/. A better approach is to transcribe them as /sb/, /sd/, and /sg/ in the narrow transcription.
Whether to use the Broad Transcription (sb, sd, and sg) or Narrow Transcription ([sp, st, sk]) depend on the learner's first language. For example, Speakers of Slavic languages, which allow for clusters such as [zb, zd, and zg], it is best to use the Narrow Transcription to avoid erroneous pronunciation of such when using the Broad Transcription. Speakers of Chinese languages, which most of them contrast stop consonants based on aspiration, it is best to use the Narrow Transcription.
Sound is same but the meaning is different??
The other way around: different sound (= a variant) but same meaning.
thanks, tho I didn't get it.
I don't get it