Meddelelser: 9
Sprog: English
Bemused (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 05.31.03
Does anyone have any tips on how to say "sur" without it sounding like "sewer"?
Cheers
cFlat7 (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 07.54.31
Miland (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 12.04.06
cFlat7 (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 16.27.17
Miland:If this helps, try making the "r" more definite, as Scots might, without saying it like "uh".Good point. It would be useful if there was a YouTube video/recording of this distinction.
robinast (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 16.49.14
sudanglo (Vise profilen) 1. jan. 2012 23.27.11
I wonder if it would be helpful to suggest practising with the word 'urso' first, as with this word an English speaker might be less tempted into a dipthong.
robinast (Vise profilen) 2. jan. 2012 11.40.00
sudanglo:The 'ur' sounds fine in the link, Robinast, but the speaker seems to be pronouncing the 's' more like Esperanto's 'c'.Yes? My ear catches a clear difference... Indeed, the 's' sounds pretty hard - but as much as I can hear, not too hard and clearly distinct from Esperanto's 'c'. True enough, I have not heard spoken Esperanto that much - mainly by Esperanta Retradio, so I can not be counted as an expert.
erinja (Vise profilen) 2. jan. 2012 14.11.13
The pure u in "sur" isn't frequently found in English but some words seem to have it, regardless of accent. lose, Susie, ruse.
cFlat7 (Vise profilen) 2. jan. 2012 15.45.42
erinja:Surely one must only pronounce the name of Suri Cruise, without the i and the end, and rolling the r, right? Or pronounce "ruse" backwards.Of course, "ruse" backwards would be pronounced "zur" so remember to convert the "z" to "s".
The pure u in "sur" isn't frequently found in English but some words seem to have it, regardless of accent. lose, Susie, ruse.