In this thread, sounds the Anglo cannot pronounce. I'll start.
In this thread, sounds the Anglo cannot pronounce. I'll start
CHI
RR
GREN
ü
ح / خ / ص / ض / ع / غ / ق / ظ / ط
What's so hard about it? Just say EN-YEH.
ś
I've never met a native Anglophone who could pronounce it.
I learned it in high school spanish class.
I still don't know how to pronounce 'g' in spanish though. It seems like sometimes it's HEH and sometimes it's GEH?
There's a lot to complain about in spanish (inconsistent noun genders, having gendered nouns at all, etc.), the enyeh isn't one of them imo.
i think no
In Portuguese:
NH
LH
RR
R
Ã
Õ
Ô
É
-AM
-EM
-IM
-OM
-UM
-E
Nasal sounds are so much fun.
No it isn't.
How do you pronounce it then
nnn-yeh
"nh" = ñ : google.com
It has no "y" in the middle.
Vocaroo "España"
It's "gn" in Italian, same sound.
Vocaroo it:
1) Ы
2) P
3) Х
vocaroo.com
That's how it sounds in a word when there's an 'a' after it, but the letter itself is pronounced en-yeh. Like how the letter 'a' in English is pronounced different than how it sounds in the word 'track'.
You just killed my eardrums, thanks you
it's easy as shit, you could have at least posted
ע
ח
כ
R
ch
r
ö
ü
...I guess that's it for German sounds they have problems with.
...
whats so hard about this one? just pronounce a normal 'r' and put a crown on it.
What is El Salvador like ?
this retarded meme has to stop.
you're trying to hard to be a special snowflake, you retarded mestizo.
everyone in the world can make that sound, they just don't recognize the symbol.
like salty coins
:3
Ő
Dzs
kuRRRwa
Soft g before a, o and u
Hard g before i and e
If you want to make a soft g followed by an I or e, put a (silent) u between them
What's inconsistent about genders?
Not hard at all. You make this sound when you say "onion".
>What's inconsistent about genders?
To be fair they are fairly arbitrary, and not even Romance languages agree.
Milk in Portuguese is a male noun, for example.
Isn't it just a ny sound?
Proxy