Pronunciation of “a”
Why is the letter A English? What is difference between “a” and “a”? When it is single, we read it like dwelling on it, like /e/. In a sentence, it sounds interruptedly. What is the cause of being here?
Why did it take so long to become an influencer on the news media?
What is always the impending after the end of an indefinite article from our point of view? Was schwa pronounced in normal speech. When ” ” is pronounced only on the words that the emphasised word is on the words “@” If any of us is qualified to explain the reason itself, then the time and space that would be needed to explain it
will always be in your hands.
The letter a has several different pronunciations, which can make it difficult to learn if their language only has one, like for example, Spanish:
car -//, cat – / /, what – //, play -/e/, and of course the schwa – / / as in a book,
I don’t think there’s much relationship between how letters are said in the alphabet, which is I think what you mean by Is it the indirect article or what?
On the second question, also the question of weak or strong stress: Normal stress – ” a book” (//), but strong stress – “I said a book, not two books!” ” (/ e/). ”
And whether it is a stressed or unstressed syllable in a word, eg: marginal – first a stressed – (/ /), the second unstressed – (/ /)
Mastering English pronunciation is just one of those little joys of learning this particular language!
Where we are in this story?
What all letters have names and what “mojo” does as the letter signifying”? When we say each letter individually, for example when we want to spell a word, we use the “name” of each letter, like /e/ for a, /b:/ for b, /s:/ for c, etc. Why is the letter “A” used as a word in a sentence? as the indefinite article, its pronunciation is // from the “name” isn’t used any more. What do we mean by e when we have to emphasize the article? Why a different letter in a word is used in a single word does not matter to me, no matter where I am from.