メッセージ: 101
言語: English
IvoG (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 19:45:44

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first question: what does "hxitina" mean? it's not in the Vortaro

tommjames (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 19:51:25
Miland (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 20:41:02
Ĥitina or kitina thus means "Chitinous" or "from Chitin". The adjective might be applied to products used in its agricultural, industrial and medical applications, e.g. kitina grasumo (fertiliser), kitina kirurgia fadeno (surgical thread).
IvoG (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 20:46:07
Miland (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 21:03:02
IvoG:is "hx" a more guttural version of "h"?Yes, it's like the "ch" in the Scottish "loch" or German "reich".
IvoG (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月6日 21:08:13
tommjames:You can download a zip file from lernu.net containing mp3 files for each letter of the Esperanto alphabet, here.yeah, i was just going over the alphabet - can't hear much of a difference b/w "h" and "hx" though

erinja (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月7日 2:37:54
The only word I can think of that is exactly the same except for the letters h or ĥ is horo/ĥoro.
horo = hour
ĥoro = choir
Some people pronounce the difference very clearly, and some people do not. But I think it shouldn't be a problem.
ĥ is pronounced like the letter х in the Cyrillic alphabet.
h is pronounced the same as the English letter h.
If you can pronounce English, Bulgarian, and Russian, then pronouncing the difference between h and ĥ should not be a problem for you

darkweasel (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月7日 5:16:23
It sounds similar to the sound a cat makes when it's angry.

ceigered (プロフィールを表示) 2011年7月7日 9:54:33
(then again, the same guttural raspy sound appears in vowels too occasionally in the same emphatic speech, which I guess could be confusing in Esperanto)