When you raise a voiced “th” with a consonant order “z” or “r” on the vowel shift.

What do I always find myself pronouncing with a

stopped sound intermediate between a “r” and the smoother (fricative)

sound of “th” in words such as father,

mother, brother, other, feather, dither, breathe, loathe, smooth?

I speak German a lot, putting the sound “r”, “dis, dat, deze, doze”. Some Americans still sound this thing, but many Americans still pronounce it that way. Is it true that the “D” must carry a particular “R”, and that the “‘R” should not go down in front of the mouth?

When is a gesture of consonant shift included in English?

Asked on February 27, 2021 in Other.
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1 Answer(s)

Is there evidence for chain shift? Ultimately, you would need to do careful measurements of though, doe, roe as said by: members of

  1. your childhood cohort who pronounce though with not , members of
  2. your childhood cohort who pronounce though with not , I’m mildly

doubtful of a chain shift because apico-dental and apico/lamino-coronal sounds can coexist in the same language, and to make things easier, you have affrication help to differentiate voice

What is the best answer I can give for the information?

What are some of the best cited examples?

Answered on February 27, 2021.
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