ITT: Letters from your language/Dialect that most people don't know how to pronounce

ITT: Letters from your language/Dialect that most people don't know how to pronounce.
I'll start for Algerian Berber/ Arabic dialect:
Dz
Dj
Jz
Djz
'cher
Ts's
Ts'ch
Nyg
Ngy
Nsu
Tzu
O'ou

Other urls found in this thread:

ivona.com/pl/
ivona.com/us/
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

Forgot: A'aeyia

Ofc I don't know how to pronounce these things, use international phonetic alphabet instead of just latin letters.

Too lazy to.
Also how do you pronounce the "cz"

[ʧ] or just like ch in chips

Now it makes sense.
So your pic says Scheuchen?

No,sz is [ʃ] lub sh like shower

Okay so Shcheuchen.
I always thought the z was pronounced as a solid z

either use English orthography or IPA, am I supposed to guess what letter means what?

>lub
*or
No, it's not like that.
ivona.com/pl/
try listening to this, it's better than google

I don't know how to use it.
For example Dj would be like Dʃʒ.

forgot "?" at the end.

soft G and then french J?

Wew that sounds too heavy.

No like a soft d then sh then soft G/French J mix.

D and then Sh? that's a soft G(like George

no like a quicker version of the word Dish

propably, but that guy has stupid voice, change the lector to a girl, here's the english version of this site
ivona.com/us/

is there a vowel or not?
is it
D-SH-ZH

it's hard to explain because you can't understand our moonrunes.
"Dj" is like ⴵ

Yes

Now it sounds better.

Use vocaroo already

this is way to difficult to describe with English, I blame the French

No Mic.
Also how do you pronounce the h at the end of Delah? is it a normal h?

How do Poles pronounce Gdansk and Wroclaw?

Polish has very regular ortography

"G" is always pronounced as in "good", "d" is just "d", as in "domino" or "dude", "a" is always as in "are", "ń" is tricky since it doesn't appear in English but it sounds like "ñ" in "señor", "s" as in "as", "k" as in "Kate"

so it's just G-d-a-ñ-s-k

"W" in Polish is always pronounced as "v" and "Ł" is the English "W" sound, "c" sounds like "ts", "r" is hard and rolling like in Spanish, "o" is short like in "on"

so it's V-r-o-ts-w-a-v

if the word has more than one syllable you almost always put the accent on the second one from the end:

GdAńsk, WrOcław

Breslau and Danzig are much better names desu

R
Looking at all the anglos.

Do you use rolled R or ʁ?

Rolled R, and there are 2 ways to roll it.

oh
I can't do that

I find the english R to be annoying to use, it always ends up slurring the word and it sounds like I have a speech impediment or like I'm drunk.

Ehh I don't think there is. Cuz sudanese dialect is basically evolved hijazi dialect.