When non-Anglos try to pronounce words with "th" in them

>When non-Anglos try to pronounce words with "th" in them

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youtube.com/watch?v=beo1mezedJw
youtube.com/watch?v=EP2GMyQdw78
telegraph.co.uk/science/2016/09/28/th-sound-to-vanish-from-english-language-by-2066-because-of-mult/
twitter.com/AnonBabble

I wish I were anglo

>When Australians claim to be anglo but got defeated by a flock of birds

...

Count to three

it's just like the z in spanish, easy af

>When working class Boomers from the Rust Belt try to pronounce words with "th" in them

That's exactly how you aren't supposed to pronounce it

movies and else disagree with you

That's the same mistake the French make. Goodness, you romance speakers are dense.

really wish we would take back Þ

Isn't it just a D?

No, it's the sound you make when your tongue touches your top teeth.

Sz?

youtube.com/watch?v=beo1mezedJw

youtube.com/watch?v=EP2GMyQdw78

Easy

>american english pronunciation

Yeah if you want to sound like an uncouth ruffian.

is it supposed to be challenging?

3
2
1
leggo

>When burgers try to pronounce 'Ö'

oååuh

Oi ill bottle ya cunt ill bash year ead in i swear on me nans grave ill kings hit ya dirty paki cunt bangers and mash innit

> when burgers just ignore umlaut dots although they represent an "e" after the vowel they are placed on and can be written as such

Wan. Toe. Trie. Iezie.

a lisp?

When burgers talk about the hard G.

Who here can correctly pronounce "flute"?

When potato niggers try to say anything with "th" in it.

Dey ain't wit' it, lad.

We have objectively the best R

Closely followed by the slavs

>when humans try to pronounce ɰɾoe̞ʡ̮ɽr̥Hɒ̈ɑdɮkM̝̊ɭ̊ɒ˔ʎɺɵɤ

flaout

it's probably pronounced just like "loot" or something

fucking english

Protip for spanish speakers: the word donde has both of them.

It is

telegraph.co.uk/science/2016/09/28/th-sound-to-vanish-from-english-language-by-2066-because-of-mult/

>Visitors expecting to hear the Queen’s English spoken on the streets of London in 50 years may need to "fink" again.

holy shit my sides

The only people I hear saying fink are the working class. This article is probably about London though.

>50 years may need to "fink" again.
Since that was written in 2006 I can only assume they meant 5 not 50. Nobody in the Themes valley without an expensive education pronounces 'th' as anything but 'f' but will make fun of people for pronouncing it as anything other then 'f'.

what kind of th?

hard th as in "the"? soft th as in "thing"?

they/day I asume, the TH sound in thing is easy as fuck

Choir
Elite
Colonel
Greenwich
Lieutenant
Facade
Memoir
Draught
Leicestershire
Borough
Squirrel
Thorough

tell me how you pronounce these
ideally with vocaroo

cuoa
ailita
co ona
grinich
linant
fatsaid
memua
drof
leistashai
bora
squial
dora

Here it's your taco, señor. :DDDDDDDD

also the australian special:

Illawarra
Woolloomooloo
Lerderderg
Monegetta
Merriengah
Wonlaboork

>th
It exist in Arabic, you are not so special and unique cunt, you cunt.

>uncouf ruffyun

Sorry could you repeat that?

>Anglo trying to make fun of pronounciation

Common, you're the worst of all for this !