This sound stumps the Germanic

this sound stumps the Germanic

Other urls found in this thread:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceless_dental_fricative
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_dental_fricative
twitter.com/SFWRedditVideos

Icelandic and Faroese both use that sound. Also, are you forgetting that English is a Germanic language and has ALWAYS used that sound?

Why so mad
are you Swedish or someding?

R

this sound confuses and enrages the anglo

No, I'm just not retarded.

>Romanians roll every R sound with their throat

Anglos can't even pronounce th properly, instead you lisp

Slavs say it like an S.

it stumps everyone

Excuse me? Don't be ridiculous, I can tell the difference between the sound S and two sounds combined just fine, thank you.

>two sounds combined
I'm guessing your spoken English isn't very good.

I'll have you know I received 100% on the national exam in English, which would not be possible had my skills in spoken English not been up to date.

>two sounds combined
PLEASE EXPLAIN

Letters are not sounds mate. Not in English, not in any language. The central facet of "th" is putting your tongue on the edge of your top teeth (lightly) and forcing air through and around it.

"th" in English is (almost always) either one of these two:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiceless_dental_fricative
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voiced_dental_fricative
>One thing to note is that some English speakers pronounce /ð/ and /θ/ as allophones, likely due to their identical orthography. At the beginning and middle of words, it becomes voiced /θJn/ and /θJŋ/ (thin and thing) becoming /ðJn/ and /ðJŋ/, respectively. At the end of words, it remains unvoiced.

They are starting to pronounce it like an F anyway.

>rare toad
Can I save oh keeper of Easter?

You mean it confuses and enrages everyone but the anglo-american

Th is a Germanic sound.

Linguistics are fascinating

the english language is 1/3 germanic 1/3 latin and 1/3 french

its like esperanto

>pronounce this as d
really makes me feel so bad...

Save whatever the fuck you want, my son.

Þ or ð? Which one is supposed to stump me?

Me too