General statistics
List of Youtube channels
Youtube commenter search
Distinguished comments
About
Юра Н
RobWords
comments
Comments by "Юра Н" (@user-bi4eo3ys1f) on "Why E̱NGLISH shoul̆d start ūsing accėnt màrks" video.
@HenryLoenwind With such definition Russian has umlauts too. "звезда" - "звёзды" /zvezda - zvyozdy/ (star - stars), "пчела" - "пчёлы" /pchela - pcholy/ (bee - bees), "дитя" - "дети" /ditya - deti/ (child - children), "чёрт" - "черти" /chort - cherti/ (heck - hecks).
3
N is nasal itself!
2
5:12 I have looked at a vocabulary. There the word "brother" is shown as ['brʌðǝ]. No shwa in the first syllabe. However, other languages may sound as shwa too. For instance, the tatar phrase "сораулар бармы?" /soraular barmı ?/ (Do questions exist?) is pronounced by someone as "сэрэлэр бэрмэ?" /sǝrǝlǝr bǝrmǝ?/. And there is a town named "Тэргэвэй" /Tergevey/, which is the changed Russian word "торговый" /torgovıy/ (trade). And as a Russian, , I noticed that the word "my" sounds exactly as the Russian word "май" (May month), despite Russian has no dyphtongs (really it depends on how to count).
2
@santumChannelYes It is similar to Russian Й letter, its breve doesn't appear above any other letter too.
1
@JohnDlugosz The letters U, V, W and Y are the same letter because they all are Greek ipsilon.
1
@davidlloyd7597 Stressed е in Russian appears more often than ё. And there are words, where meaning depends on which letter is used. "все" /vse/ = all, everybody (plural), "всё" /vsyo/ = all, entire, everithing (single). "мел" /mel/ = chalk, "мёл" /myol/ = (he) was sweaping. "берет" /beret/ = beret, "берёт" /beryot/ = takes.
1