What exactly is the pronunciation you have been taught by their members? Can a person mispronounce the N while other word starts with “TH” or etc.?
Is there a natural reaction to a certain feeling/hyperactivity/death/emotion that was done as an experimental factor? Sometimes I mistakenize the N to N if the next word starts with “th” or etc. If I say “n” but the phonetic information is out, then it does not have to be typed correctly. “Thinking. Throw another shrimp on the barbie”. When I read the words “shrimp,” “on”, and “the”, together, I think “shrimpong the barbie”. I suppose my tongue would automatically put backwards when pronunciation of “TH” sounds. Is my pronunciation wrong? Is it a common property? Why do “N” sounds end with “NG” in books, songs or anything else?
Why did the UNESCO create such a great website in 2000?
Is pronouncing “on the” with normal in native English- accents? English speakers usually have some gestural overlap between a nasal and a following consonant (related question) Why do dictionaries transcribe the nasal in some of the words ‘think’ and ‘language’ with //, yet ‘input’ and ‘inbox’ with /n/, not /m/? )) What happens to a nasal in this position tends to sound like it has the same place of articulation of the following consonant. Gestural overlap is especially likely to affect coronal consonants such as /n/ (in fact, non–nasal coronal consonants such as /t/ and /d/ also have gestural overlap with a following consonant in many contexts), and is not so likely to affect a consonant as spelled in the next sentence (to the letter “C”). a phrase like “goo d b oy” may be realized with or “ou tp ost” may be realized with ).
In a standard English accent, “the” starts with the consonant phoneme /. This can be realized as a voiced dental fricative or sometimes as a voiced dental stop . Sometimes, it can even be lenited to an approximant or elided completely, or assimilate in nasality to a preceding /n/. I don’t know of any accent where the definite article is common realized with velar point of articulation. What is the difference between the preceding /n/ and . Is a preceding /n of dental nasal, expected to cause a preceding /n/ to be realized as a dental nasal?
The pronounced “shrimp o n the barbie” will be like , , , , . To summarize, I would expect “shrimp o n the barbie” to be pronounced with something like . I shouldn’t expect to show up.
I’ve read that there are some languages where coda nasal consonants tend to be realized as velar even before coronal consonants, but English is not one of them as far as I know. Does the type “separated the root node? on code velarization in romance “, by Barbara E. Bullock (example: “‘listen’ 3.sg. I will not have to buy it from it until after Christmas. “,p. 48). How was your English pronunciation if you studied Romance languages and understood Russian?
If “on” is needed before “ong” with /g/ or /k/, it will sound natural for “on” to sound like “ong”, for example in a phrase like “On g ood terms with…” or “comittee on Commerce and Industrial Policy”.