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International pronunciation is very interesting. I've been watching the Moto GP and hear some
English people struggle with 'Jorge'. They mostly /try/ to get it right though - unlike the
Italians I've heard say the name. They don't even try and just say 'Yorg'.
I remain mystified as to how one could hear a name being pronounced one
way, and then say it a completely different way, but what do I know, I'm
a Texan who was once told that I spoke German with a Czech accent.
The fact the letters look the same fool us into thinking we know how to >pronounce the words.
On Fri, 19 Jul 2024 09:45:47 -0000 (UTC), Mark <mpconmy@gmail.com>
wrote:
The fact the letters look the same fool us into thinking we know how to >>pronounce the words.
Well, southern Slavic languages such as Croatian (my native), Serbian, >Bosnian, Montenegrian are much simpler in that regard: the main rule
is "read as it is written", letter by letter. So everything is written >fonetically.
The main complication with those languages is very complicated grammar
and word forms with lots of prefixes, sufixes, etc.
Aactually all those languages are almost the same with more than 90%
common words and rules, so we can understand each other normally. Only >politicians and nationalists insist on differences (Serbian is not
Croatian and vice versa).
On Fri, 19 Jul 2024 09:45:47 -0000 (UTC), Mark <mpconmy@gmail.com>
wrote:
The fact the letters look the same fool us into thinking we know how to >>pronounce the words.
Well, southern Slavic languages such as Croatian (my native), Serbian, Bosnian, Montenegrian are much simpler in that regard: the main rule
is "read as it is written", letter by letter. So everything is written fonetically.
... So everything is written
fonetically.
Oi!
Check what newsgroup you're posting to; here we spell that "f1tically"!
Phil