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it is nice to have some illustrations on how the tongue and the lips should place to have those pronunciation.
A. tr-
B.dr-
C.tj-
D.dj-
E.tsh-
F.dz-

the phonetic symbols can hardly be typed.
i guess you would understand what phonetic symbols they are.

2007-02-05 03:48:20 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Languages

tj as in tutorial
dj as in during
tsh as in chair
dz as in judge

2007-02-05 05:22:46 · update #1

5 answers

A. tr- this is a combination of the sounds /t/ and /r/. both are articulated, that is, produced in the alveolar ridge. /t/ can be made with allowing the tip of one's tongue to touch the back of the teeth while doing a pulmonic eggressive airstream technique. as with /r/, it depends on which variety you choose to speak. If you are speaking the american variety, it is retroflex, meaning, the tongue slightly curls backwards in the production of the sound.if you want to make the /r/sound more distinct, use the trill by making the blade and tip vibrate while producing it.
B.dr- this is pretty much the same with /tr/. the only difference lies in /d/'s being voiced. just let your vocal cords vibrate while producing it.
C.tj-perhaps you mean the combination of /t/ and /y/ (as in yam)sounds here.because as far as english phonology is concerned, the sound /t/ cannot precede /dj/ (as in jam) except perhaps in syllable boundaries (e.g. ho/t/ /j/acket) because they now belong to different syllables. could u clarify this sound?
D.dj-as in "jam"?
E.tsh-as in "chair"?
F.dz-as in "azure"?

2007-02-05 04:06:37 · answer #1 · answered by no-namer 2 · 0 0

'Tj', 'dj', 'tsh' and 'dz' are not used as such in the English language.

'Tr' and 'dr' would be pronounced as separate sounds but blended. 'Sh' , on its own, is a digraph (two letters, one sound - tongue flat and air pushed over it and thdough closed teeth.)

For 't' the teeth are closed with the tongue initially behind them and the air is 'exploded' through the teeth as the tongue is moved - it is an unvoiced sound.

'D' is made in exactly the same way as 't' but is voiced.

To make 'r', the tongue is curled laterally and a 'growl' is emitted from the back of the mouth - it is voiced.

2007-02-05 12:13:08 · answer #2 · answered by Purple 8 4 · 0 0

Hi,
As parents, you're the most important first step in your children's journey into the wonderful world of reading. It is up to you to create the most supportive environment that turns your child on to reading - such as reading aloud to them often during the day and before bedtime, and placing age appropriate books for children around the house, so that the child will have access to plenty of books. Reading often to your child will help develop their interest in books and stories, and soon they will want to read stories on their own.

For a simple, step-by-step program that can help your child learn to read visit this site: http://readingprogram.toptips.org

2014-09-18 07:06:17 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

down load this software for free and it should help you with your english, or whatever language your trying to learn.

http://www.byki.com/download_FLS.pl?cod=P0xj91


also

truck
drive

but cdef- they don't exist in english,

2007-02-05 11:52:49 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

what language are these from?

2007-02-05 12:01:48 · answer #5 · answered by frogg135 5 · 0 0

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