• teft
    link
    English
    291 year ago

    You would probably just sound like a non-native speaker. I assume it would be similar to weak forms and how weak forms are usually absent from non-native english speech.

    • @NoRodent
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      English
      251 year ago

      As a non-native speaker, I was kinda confused at first by this comic because in my head the vowels definitely didn’t sound all the same. But I personally consider pronunciation of vowels in English to be one of the greatest mysteries in the universe, so no wonder.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        English
        191 year ago

        As a native English speaker and Spanish learner, consistent vowel pronunciation is so incredible. 🥺 Just looking at a word and knowing how to pronounce it… amazing stuff. Kind of wild that in some languages you don’t have the ‘curse of the self educated’ (randomly mispronouncing words you’ve only read, not heard spoken).

        • @WoahWoah
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          English
          81 year ago

          Yeah that blew my mind about Spanish. I was like, “WHAT DO YOU MEAN ALL THESE VOWELS ALWAYS HAVE THE SAME SOUND??? YOU ARE ALLOWED TO DO THAT!??”

          Then I started trying to learn to conjugate verbs and I was like ohhhhh, ok, so fuck me.

    • @WoahWoah
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      English
      41 year ago

      Non-native to where? These aren’t all schwa in all English-speaking nations. They’re not even all schwa in all US dialects.

      Language is crazy.