This letter confuses, disturbs, and frightens the Frenchman.
This letter confuses, disturbs, and frightens the Frenchman
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A challenger appears
This letter confuses, disturbs, and frightens the Anglo and his Amerimutts descendants
literally any of these letters confuses the american
Hello, how are you doing today?
I'm having a great day! And you?
That's amazing to hear, Chile poster. What hope to wish to bring to Sup Forums today?
Personally, I would hope that humans allow me to teach them English without having to use the 'rape' concept/construct.
Honestly no i never met anyone having problems with this
The hardest for most people is Mostly because no one in school tell us how we do it so we just replace it with f or z
It's actually pretty easy though
Funny to think we actually had both those sounds long ago
Well it's almost 9 PM around here! So I probably won't be bringing much things to Sup Forums this day.
What is this 'rape' concept/construct that you talk about?
It is tongue angled up towards the top front teeth, air pushed through. The tongue should fall 'back' through the mouth to say, "thought."
The final 't' sound is made by the top pallet cleft.
[1] El crimen de violación es más serio cuando hay parentesco.
[2] El delito de violación es más grave cuando hay parentesco.
[3] The crime of rape is more serious when there is kinship.
Rape in English has become the opposite of 'peaceful sleep' when you translate it. So, I am trying to remove the 'rape' from 'language exchange'.
I wonder why I don't dislike the Th phoneme of English in words like Thunder or Thing while I dislike it in Spanish and makes me think of a list (for example the Despathito of Spaniards)
It must be purely psychological, what you got used to listening when you were a kid.
Words ending in 'th' are soothing.
Math
Path
But gets switched up with 'watch'
It is not because it is hard to pronounce it is because you tend to omit it instinctively as in French
what about it?
>name
I'm gonna push you bastard right back to the Great Wall if I have to
>Erb
fucking retarded
dumb dane
EVER TIME AAAAA
>the name of this animal enrages non-americans
Do French people pronounce Hance like Ance?
>a
>ä
>e
This kills the eternal Anglo
nothing is wrong here
>r
This kills the German
I can pronounce the German and French R's and roll R's
Not the Scots, they know the proper one.
They aren't the same, you [random insult]
aa, au, ee, eu, ie, ij, oo, oe, ou, uu, ui
All of these confuse, disturbs and frightens the Anglo
I didn't say they were you dumb polak I said I can pronounce both
You didn't?
>the German and French R's
Should that be "the German and French Rs" then?
no, you put an apostrophe after a letter like that because you don't right Rs you right R's as an S is being affixed awkwardly
you have low self esteem and subsequently try to point out Americans are being stupid
Pretty much
I'm not sure when to play the get shot or amerimutt card, I have some bears too but they're not great
Jokes aside, those are some of the harders phonemes to learn desu. Some people here learn the regular trill late as shit, as late as 6 years old sometimes
So props
I was just bullying but thanks
In English, especially most regional variants of American English we use very little of our mouths so producing sounds like that can be pretty difficult. I've spoken German as long as I remember though but I did struggle with French for a bit, it's hard to not sound as though you're saying wee instead of the french ree
Hmmmmmmm?