prononciation
prononciation
Hello every body, i am creating a conlang and i am just starting. I would like to have it with sounds which do not necessarily appear in my mother tongue or in English, so I checked the wikipedia article about International alphabet in which you can hear a example but i don't find it very relevant alone furthermore, if i would like to learn how to pronounce it, if think it is hard with what i found in wiki. So if anyone has a website in where i could hear the sounds in different situations (like after a "t" a "d" a "n" for a vowel or before a "a", a "e", a "i" ... for a consonant) and in which they teach you how to pronounce. I don't care if it is in French because i speak it fluently ( better than English)
Re: prononciation
I don't think there's one where you can hear it after every vowel, but here's the one I use:
http://www.paulmeier.com/ipa/charts.html
http://www.paulmeier.com/ipa/charts.html
Re: prononciation
http://web.uvic.ca/ling/resources/ipa/c ... IPAlab.htm
Not sure that it's exactly what you're looking for, but it definitely helps.
Not sure that it's exactly what you're looking for, but it definitely helps.
Native | Almost Fluent | :zho: Intermediate | Interested | :kat: :cym: Very interested.
- Maximillian
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Re: prononciation
That's a great site. ;-)abi wrote:http://www.paulmeier.com/ipa/charts.html
UNUS•ET•UNICUS
Re: prononciation
Thanks every body, but is it normal that i don't hear the difference between some of them especially the one which are not in English or in French? Or that I fell like they are the exact same thing than one I know?
- Ossicone
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Re: prononciation
That's completely normal. If don't use it you lose it. It just takes practice and patience to get it back.vandlival wrote:Thanks every body, but is it normal that i don't hear the difference between some of them especially the one which are not in English or in French? Or that I fell like they are the exact same thing than one I know?
Re: prononciation
How can i get it?
And I have another question, do you (anyone who would like to response) hear the difference and if you do is it different an off that you can use it as the only difference between two identical words ex: if two letters that i thing sound the same like x1 and x2 (exemples) and i use them in my conlang like this : x1+a+b+a (xaba) and x2+a+b+a (xaba) can they be two completly different words ( like apple and car) or should they be the same word pronunced with 2 different accent?
And I have another question, do you (anyone who would like to response) hear the difference and if you do is it different an off that you can use it as the only difference between two identical words ex: if two letters that i thing sound the same like x1 and x2 (exemples) and i use them in my conlang like this : x1+a+b+a (xaba) and x2+a+b+a (xaba) can they be two completly different words ( like apple and car) or should they be the same word pronunced with 2 different accent?
- Ossicone
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Re: prononciation
To learn to distinguish sounds, you have to listen and compare.vandlival wrote:How can i get it?
And I have another question, do you (anyone who would like to response) hear the difference and if you do is it different an off that you can use it as the only difference between two identical words ex: if two letters that i thing sound the same like x1 and x2 (exemples) and i use them in my conlang like this : x1+a+b+a (xaba) and x2+a+b+a (xaba) can they be two completly different words ( like apple and car) or should they be the same word pronunced with 2 different accent?
For me to know if I can tell the difference you'll have to tell me the sounds.
If I understand you correct than both x1aba and x2aba can be completely different words.
1. Words sounding EXACTLY the same can mean different things. Ex - but and butt
2. Just because they sound the same to you doesn't mean the do everyone. A lot of my students have trouble distinguishing /i/ and /ɪ/. But English makes use of the distinction. (sheep vs. ship)
3. Some languages make use of three way aspiration distinctions, which can differ by mere milliseconds.
4. If a sound is part of IPA it is because it contrasts with a similar sound.
- Ossicone
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Re: prononciation
Or they can be two different accents of the same word. Either option is possible.
Re: prononciation
thanks