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reading

de invladimir, 21 de diciembre de 2006

Aportes: 10

Idioma: English

invladimir (Mostrar perfil) 21 de diciembre de 2006 12:26:01

I can't seem to find anything on how to read the words like,
"ree" or "scii", how are the "ee" pronounced? LIke we do in English, or do I say "e" twice?

Kwekubo (Mostrar perfil) 21 de diciembre de 2006 14:26:51

You pronounce the vowel twice; every letter and vowel sound in a word is pronounced fully in Esperanto.

Rough pronunciations:

ree = rey-ey

scii = s-tsee-ee

awake (Mostrar perfil) 21 de diciembre de 2006 15:31:49

Yes, though be careful about the e sound. The "ey" description might sound different in some parts of the world versus others. The quick way to check the pronounciation is to check

http://en.lernu.net/lernado/gramatiko/konciza/elpa...

which has some sound files with examples. Just remember that in esperanto every letter is pronounced and it is pronounced the same way (the only exceptions being the oj, ej, aj uj, eŭ, and aŭ dipthongs which have their own sounds).

so scii, for example is ss-ts-EE-ee. The ss-ts sound doesnt occur in english at the beginning of words as it can in Esperanto, but it does occur.

For example, say "must see" (as in "you must see that movie") take off the mu and you have the perfect s-ts-ee sound. add another ee and you have s-ts-ee=ee (scii)

There are a few other tricky combinations for english speakers:

kn (knabo) k and n must both be pronounced (kuh-NAH-bo)

kv (kvalito) -> kuh-val-EE-to

gv (gvido) -> guh-VEE-do

Kwekubo:You pronounce the vowel twice; every letter and vowel sound in a word is pronounced fully in Esperanto.

Rough pronunciations:

ree = rey-ey

scii = s-tsee-ee

erinja (Mostrar perfil) 22 de diciembre de 2006 14:19:22

awake:There are a few other tricky combinations for english speakers:

kn (knabo) k and n must both be pronounced (kuh-NAH-bo)

kv (kvalito) -> kuh-val-EE-to

gv (gvido) -> guh-VEE-do
I'm sure you know this, awake, but just so it's clear to everyone - the k and v in "kvalito" are not pronounced as separate syllables. I would transliterate perhaps as "k'vah-LEE-to" and "g'v-EE-do"; "kvalito" is a three syllable word, "gvido" is two-syllable. (the same way that "strange" is one syllable in English, even though str is all in a clump; we're just used to pronouncing them all as one since we speak English natively, but this str combination is very difficult for speakers of some languages)

pastorant (Mostrar perfil) 22 de diciembre de 2006 21:23:45

erinja: but this str combination is very difficult for speakers of some languages)
Hehe. I studied Squamish in graduate school (a Salishan North American Indian language), and it is known to make the best language acrobats cry. There are consonant cluster that will make a lingual contortionist cringe.

nəxʷsƛ̕áy̕əm̕ ƛ̕éʔ . sq̕ʷúŋiʔ x̣ə́ɬ čúxʷt
[Squamish is fun, but my head hurts]
rido.gif

RiotNrrd (Mostrar perfil) 22 de diciembre de 2006 23:25:25

pastorant:nəxʷsƛ̕áy̕əm̕ ƛ̕éʔ . sq̕ʷúŋiʔ x̣ə́ɬ čúxʷt
Many years ago I had a computer with a bad disk drive that apparently spoke Squamish from time to time. ridulo.gif

pastorant (Mostrar perfil) 23 de diciembre de 2006 09:23:31

RiotNrrd:
pastorant:nəxʷsƛ̕áy̕əm̕ ƛ̕éʔ . sq̕ʷúŋiʔ x̣ə́ɬ čúxʷt
Many years ago I had a computer with a bad disk drive that apparently spoke Squamish from time to time. ridulo.gif
Hehe rideto.gif

erinja (Mostrar perfil) 23 de diciembre de 2006 12:41:35

pastorant:
nəxʷsƛ̕áy̕əm̕ ƛ̕éʔ . sq̕ʷúŋiʔ x̣ə́ɬ čúxʷt
[Squamish is fun, but my head hurts]
rido.gif
These look like IPA phonetics; does Squamish not have its own alphabet?

Zumanto (Mostrar perfil) 23 de diciembre de 2006 13:58:29

erinja:
pastorant:
nəxʷsƛ̕áy̕əm̕ ƛ̕éʔ . sq̕ʷúŋiʔ x̣ə́ɬ čúxʷt
[Squamish is fun, but my head hurts]
rido.gif
These look like IPA phonetics; does Squamish not have its own alphabet?
A lot of indigenous languages have been given IPA-based alphabets. While those sorts of alphabets might be phonemically (and even phonetically) accurate, they're often not very aesthetically pleasing.

But, for most of these languages, they have few if any native speakers left and are in danger of extinction. Many groups are involved in language programs to try to save their languages. I worked in a group that took some data from the last speaker of a language. That was kind of weird.

Anyway, I think these alphabets are often more for the linguists than for the regular people. Look at some of the earlier romanisation systems for Chinese and you get the same thing (not surprisingly, the romanisation the Chinese chose for themselves is much more usable and natural-looking).

invladimir (Mostrar perfil) 27 de diciembre de 2006 13:43:44

Hey guys, thanks for giving me the attention I needed, this is one part of the language that I can't miss!
Thanks again,
Scott

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