Page #: 133/233 |
@warded | 17 May 21 | |
all 2d sonic games rated.
|
||
@trunking | 19 May 21 | |
@trunking | 19 May 21 | |
@trunking | 19 May 21 | |
@trunking | 19 May 21 | |
Old English Language - Can American, Australian, and Non-Native English speaker understand it? I actually can understand this because of Afrikaans here. Which is Dutch. |
||
@trunking | 20 May 21 | |
|
||
@trunking | 20 May 21 | |
@trunking | 20 May 21 | |
I just don't get why we here pronounce castle differently to both American English and the British pronunciation I've heard. So weird. Also, the word eschew has 6 different pronunciations. Neither of which is accepted as the correct pronunciation. |
||
@trunking | 20 May 21 | |
@ trunking - 19.05.21 - 10:39pm RP (Received pronunciation) vs POSH ENGLISH The Differences and the HISTORY Explained. Only 3 percent of people in the world are RP speakers. The BBC is based on RP from early 20th Century. Pretty interesting. We use the 'ahh' sound a lot here, hence we're closer to RP than London accent. |
||
@trunking | 20 May 21 | |
* correction UK.. even more fascinating Also, there's a trend of black Africans in Southern Africa to aim for RP English to appear more Affluent (historically) but this is slowly eroding due to American media. Words such as 'dance'.. very different between White Africans, and the gradually growing number of Affluent black Africans. The older generation usually pronounces it with RP tone. It's so weird when you see exchanges between White and Black citizens pronouncing both differently within conversations. |
||