This kills the Anglo

>this kills the Anglo
>this kills the French, the Dutch, some Germans, the Israeli
>this kills the Chinese, the Vietnamese

Please elaborate.

This kills no one :D

wish we pronounced it again

Th.

we have it in ayyrabic

feels bad.... my nose and throat are always kind of clogged a bit so the R comes out so awkardly, people rarely understand what im trying to say which pretty much fucked up my entire life, wish i could say this letter.

Turn off the light and all niggers are alike

this one kills me, especially at the end of the words, like in цapь

I know that feel like Anglos trying to pronounce Hard R in Spanish.

I don't understand how this is hard to do
Latin Americans don't pronounce it, because they would need a self concious effort of memorization due to being used to always using the s sound, but I dont know anyone who can't pronounce the sound when imitating how Spaniards speak.

Everybody should be able to say Tharagotha without much trouble.

Why do you think R is problematic for us?

There are two 'th' sounds: the Spanish sound is only one of them.

ð and θ, both are easy to pronounce

the other th sound is an alophone of D in Spanish. In Spanish sometimes you use the Day sound for D, and sometimes the THe sound.

it is always used in the word Dedo (finger) for the second D, for example.

Not by foreigners.

The letter to surpass metal Rrrrrr

Ř

What R do you mean? The R you make at the back of your throat or the R you make with your teeth like in Spanish?

Damn right you are

*The R that makes a cock at the back of your throat or the R you make with your teeth like in Spanish?

ftfy

Only Aussies and a few Brits can't pronounce their Rs.

It's a stereotype.

In Slavic countries the western "r" and "th" sounds are used mostly among retards. So yes, retards can hide in western countries.

Struggled more with ^ and schwa than any English consonant.


Eth is not a 'th'-sound, though.

It's the same sound, just voiced rather than unvoiced. What are you on about?

Eth is more like a 'dh'-sound, or as I like to see it; a middle sound between 'th' and 'd'.

We have a rolling R in the Netherlands.