Share aspects of Avestan that are relevant to the discussion(s) in this video! Avestan is the language of the Avesta (the Zoroastrian Bible) and, if I'm not wrong, a sister/cousin language of ancient Latin, ancient Greek and Sanskrit.
I wish you gave a few examples from Russian, 'hard' vs 'soft' version of the same sound, examples from English are lacking and mock Russian accent seems beside the point.
The cute example really opened up my ears. Thanks a lot!
Thanks you, you explained it better than my professor
great, I am a master student in linguistics, and this video is very useful for me.
This is amazing video and in this time 3:14 in this video, i hope you make two or three examples for diacritics in English phonetics.
I am learning a more obscure dead language which had this (Avestan) and there was no audible explanations of this phenomenon. So this helps immensely.
Share aspects of Avestan that are relevant to the discussion(s) in this video!
Avestan is the language of the Avesta (the Zoroastrian Bible) and, if I'm not wrong, a sister/cousin language of ancient Latin, ancient Greek and Sanskrit.
Oh I didn't Know such thing exists in Avestan I'm Iranian
Great video!!! Thanks from Argentina.
This was so helpful. Keep making more videos🙏
Good Work !
Thanks for video
Very informative
Thanks
Actually Russians can pronounce consonants with /ɛ/ without palatalization, but this /ɛ/ moves slightly back.
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Thank you!
Thank you ❤️ ❤️❤️
You began to speak russian at the end) it was really вэрьи рашн )
LOL Glad to hear that!
I have no idea how to make my tongue that shape.
j - in IPA it's y-sound, as in "yong".
I wish you gave a few examples from Russian, 'hard' vs 'soft' version of the same sound, examples from English are lacking and mock Russian accent seems beside the point.
Please feel free to share more examples from Russian here in the comment section.
Wdym? Doesn't English have palatalization too?
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This video isn't exactly correct. @5:50 if you did all these changes then you'd get "pljechjer" and @6:40 "shjeplji"
5:46 Why does it sound like пидор?
he used the alveolar tap instead of the plosive