I agree with TATY. Послушайте меня, я сдала экзамен ("из"?) фонетики с пяточкой :D[/quote]
I love you.
Type: Posts; User: TATY; Keyword(s):
I agree with TATY. Послушайте меня, я сдала экзамен ("из"?) фонетики с пяточкой :D[/quote]
I love you.
Ж0) Cool, thanks. Yes I am very interested in all phonetics, but particularly Russian.
I'm sure linguists agree with what you hear, it's just maybe you are not 100% sure on the technical side of...
From a Russian site:
Ещё 4 буквы: Ю, i, Я, Е представляют собой краткое обозначение буквосочетаний:
1.. ЬУ, ЬО, ЬА, ЬЭ после согласной, где Ь - мягкий знак - не бывает разделительным, или ...
No, they don't. In "Тя" & etc. there is a "y" sound before the vowel (й, as Rtyom already said). The constructions you have written as their equivalents (Тьа, etc) sound Chinese to me...[/quote]
...
"Фёдор" and "фьорд" sound different because Фьорд is a foreign word from Fjord, which is pronounced Фьйорд in it's original languages. This isn't a very good example.
What I am trying to say, is
...
At the beginning of a word, after a ь/ъ, й or vowel,
Я, Е, Ё, Ю, = иа, йэ, йо, йо йу.
After a consonant they are: ьа, ьэ, ьо, ьу
Яна = Йана
Дядя = Дьадьа (не дйадйа)
Ё in её is not the...
The first one is:
Фьёдор / Фьйодор.
After a consonant Ё = ьо
Just as Я = ья, Е = ьэ etc.
Фьо and Фё are exactly the same sounds.
From Wikipedia:
[quote=Rtyom][quote=TATY][quote=Rtyom][quote=chaika]I speak middle-American English (grew up in Illinois), and the first syllable in "survive" sounds exactly like the vowel in "sir".
Can you say...
[quote=Rtyom][quote=chaika]I speak middle-American English (grew up in Illinois), and the first syllable in "survive" sounds exactly like the vowel in "sir".
Can you say "Yoda"? Put an /f/ in...
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