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5 answers

Bo duh lair
In French each syllable is accented equally.
Unless there is an accent mark over the e, it is barely pronounced.

2007-03-22 15:19:01 · answer #1 · answered by Lynci 7 · 2 0

There is not a trouble with English as it's. a million) "Phonetic" spelling. First of all, which dialect are you going to make use of because the mannequin? You can best have ONE dialect because the normal for a "phonetic" spelling process. So all of the different humans who talk English natively are out of success. Second, you are going to lose touch with the hundreds of thousands of pages of English that has been written over the final 10 centuries by way of replacing the spelling. Children might ought to be trained to learn TWO exceptional languages with the intention to learn present components and literature from the beyond. That's impractical. Third, the sounds of each and every language are regularly replacing. Once a few generations go, the "phonetic" spelling process is not phonetic. You both ought to reform the process each and every 2 or 3 generations or have a "phonetic" process that ceases to be phonetic. two) English grammar is regularly replacing. That's simply the character of language. You can get rid of all of the exceptions and inconsistencies of language in these days and they'll get replaced by way of new exceptions and inconsistencies inside 2 or 3 generations. English is not more and no much less "inconsistent" and "illogical" than another language. As languages difference through the years, those matters input the language. That's simply the character of language difference. Inconsistencies and irregularies are simply the leftovers of beyond steady grammar. Also, there are practically a limiteless style of distinctive matters to be observed on the planet's languages, however they don't consistently paintings good in combination. And, ultimately, languages MUST function with a special quantity of redundancy. Communication might grind to a halt with out redundancy.

2016-09-05 12:40:22 · answer #2 · answered by wojtowicz 4 · 0 0

Baudelaire |ˌbōdəˈle(ə)r; -dlˈe(ə)r| Baudelaire, Charles (Pierre)(1821–67), French poet and critic. He is noted for Les Fleurs du mal (1857), a series of 101 lyrics that explore his isolation and melancholy and the attraction of evil and the macabre.

Pronounced, simply put, Bow-dey-lare (lare, rhyming here with "glare")

2007-03-22 15:18:17 · answer #3 · answered by smiksmak 3 · 1 0

You spelled it right. It would be prounced Bo de lair. Just like it looks. Pax - C.

2007-03-22 15:19:32 · answer #4 · answered by Persiphone_Hellecat 7 · 1 0

Two ways:

Bow (like bow and arrow) duh lair

Or,

Bod (as in he has a hot bod) lair

either way swallow the r sound- when you are saying the r stop your breath, don't finish the sound completely.

2007-03-22 22:46:39 · answer #5 · answered by ophelliaz 4 · 0 0

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