Ujumbe: 11
Lugha: English
Skully101 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 2:59:44 asubuhi
Roch (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 4:39:55 asubuhi
Like quick notes, then reducing to ickno...
bartlett22183 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 6:34:46 alasiri
Vestitor (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 8:19:48 alasiri
Roch:I already read linking words, posted here...That might not work. The 'ck' in 'quick notes' is a glottal stop.
Like quick notes, then reducing to ickno...
Vestitor (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 8:22:21 alasiri
Skully101:I am having a problem pronouncing the "kn" sound in words like "knabo" or "knabino". I know the k is not silent, but i can't seem the say the k in the word. I just end up saying "nabo". Can someone help? thank you!Have you never said: 'knackwurst/knockwurst'? If so, it's the same as that.
Skully101 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 13 Machi 2017 9:07:54 alasiri
Skully101 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Machi 2017 4:09:58 asubuhi
david_uk (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Machi 2017 2:15:47 alasiri
Skully101 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 15 Machi 2017 10:37:13 alasiri
bartlett22183 (Wasifu wa mtumiaji) 16 Machi 2017 7:11:53 alasiri
Granted, this is not likely to happen any time soon, so in the interim there is the question of widespread learning and use by adolescents or adults for whom proficient language learning is more difficult. As I mentioned before, I myself find E-o 'kn' and 'ĥ' almost ridiculously easy to pronounce, but at the same time I acknowledge, much to my puzzlement, that some of my fellow native anglophones may find them difficult.
Any design for a constructed international auxiliary language, such as Esperanto, involves numerous tradeoffs. There simply is no such thing as a "perfect" auxlang (whatever that might mean), or even an "optimal" one (again, whatever that might mean). There just is not enough linguistic "material" common to all or nearly all of the world's languages as "least common denominator" to devise a workable constructed auxiliary language which will not discomfit somebody. Sad, but this is one of the facts of reality.
What that means in practice is that when it comes to adult learners, somebody somewhere somehow at some time, is just going to have to struggle to master and use something. There is no way around this.