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ekzample(s) for clear esperanto pronouncation

od qwertz, 14. februára 2010

Príspevky: 56

Jazyk: English

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 26. marca 2010 14:44:27

I can understand Reza from Iran very well. I can not hear any accent which would be helpful to determine where he is from just by hearing. For me it sounds very familar like Hochdeutsch. I would mismatch guessing means would say at first hearing that he is from Germany. But he isn't.

LyzTyphone (Zobraziť profil) 27. marca 2010 7:49:50

S-ro Reza!!

He now resides in Kaosiong, Taiwan. I feel lucky enough to have met him on my trip back to Taiwan just last weekend~ He does speak Esperanto very well, I agree.

And a little about Iran. In fact the last Sunday on which I met him was the 1st day of a new year on Iranian calendar! He shared with us La Nobla Korano and the 7 objects with name starting with "S" that Iranians put up to celebrate the No'Ruz ("new year" in persian, I believe.)

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 27. marca 2010 8:26:54

I believe his page at ipernity is: reza.torabi. Some pictures of his picture gallery contain the tehranlive.org webpage adresse.

Edit: Okay, I got the hint that this is another Reza. okulumo.gif

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 12. mája 2010 15:02:07

some interviews with esperanto speakers from several european countries can be found at www.podcasto.net

Ĉina Radio Internacia podcast: Here you could compare chinese e-on pronouncation and german e-on pronouncation. (25 minutes) Leo (de germana esperanto junularo). Click the headphone symbol underneath the picture to start the audio stream. Should work at least with the VLC player

LyzTyphone (Zobraziť profil) 13. mája 2010 1:57:26

Ĉina Radio Internacia podcast: Here you could compare chinese e-on pronouncation and german e-on pronouncation. (25 minutes) Leo (de germana esperanto junularo). Click the headphone symbol underneath the picture to start the audio stream. Should work at least with the VLC player
Eufonia~! (<-fanboy mode)

Now seriously, Leo's proununciation sounds to me a little Japanese, notice the way he sometimes prounounces the "s", which is really like what I heard during my trip to Tokyo.
Maybe that's because he learnt his Esperanto from his father?

ceigered (Zobraziť profil) 13. mája 2010 8:23:28

LyzTyphone:
Ĉina Radio Internacia podcast: Here you could compare chinese e-on pronouncation and german e-on pronouncation. (25 minutes) Leo (de germana esperanto junularo). Click the headphone symbol underneath the picture to start the audio stream. Should work at least with the VLC player
Eufonia~! (<-fanboy mode)

Now seriously, Leo's proununciation sounds to me a little Japanese, notice the way he sometimes prounounces the "s", which is really like what I heard during my trip to Tokyo.
Maybe that's because he learnt his Esperanto from his father?
I can't notice anything Japanese about the s (don't we all pronounce our 's's likewise? lango.gif ) but he definitely has a Japanese colouring to his accent. It's that pan-asia thing, where many eastern asian accents have this either sing-songy feel to them, or they have this sort of crispy vowel length and stress/tone* thing happening. It's a very nice accent.

*I say "stress/tone" because it's the same thing as stress only rather than just lengthening the vowel and making it louder, the intonation instead goes up a bit. Very nice sounding (also nice to listen to are some chinese accents when the tones that would otherwise be used to differentiate between different words are allowed to run free in their speech, sounds very interesting to listen to ridulo.gif)

(Also interesting is how European vowels always seem to have a bit of colouring and often sound a bit more "diphthongy", even in languages not dominated by them, than their Japanese counterparts).

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 11. júna 2010 8:00:04

ceigered:
I can't notice anything Japanese about the s (don't we all pronounce our 's's likewise? lango.gif ) but he definitely has a Japanese colouring to his accent. It's that pan-asia thing, where many eastern asian accents have this either sing-songy feel to them, or they have this sort of crispy vowel length and stress/tone* thing happening. It's a very nice accent.
I know that the Thuringian also put a very strong sing-song into their speech. (Maybe in Franconia, too.) Not directly at the borderline to Saxony in the east. But generaly across Thuringia. So there exist at least one German accent which sounds sing-songy, too. Leo grews up in north Bavaria which isn't located that far away from Thuringia. Even if there was the death strip/Todesstreifen between for some times. (very less dialect mixup evolution)

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 24. júna 2010 15:02:27

It's slightly off-topic. But it's interesting to pick up the e-o words from a korean esperanto course. So I understand 1 minute absolutly nothing and than - oops - cool - an e-o word rideto.gif.

On www.esperanto.or.kr there is also a korean-esperanto course. Just to dive into korean okulumo.gif

ceigered (Zobraziť profil) 24. júna 2010 15:48:06

qwertz:www.esperanto.or.kr there is also a korean-esperanto course. Just to dive into korean okulumo.gif
Belega retpaĝo! It'd be interesting to know whether the website is reflective of the size of the Esperanto speaker base in Korea, maybe Esperanto is becoming more and more popular over there? rideto.gif

qwertz (Zobraziť profil) 3. júla 2010 12:11:00

Recently pepkantis de MasorisEo:

e-o | korean online vortaro with english explanations

Nahor