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Pronunciation of Sch-This is the place for questions about conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax and other grammar questions for English or Spanish. |
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#1
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Pronunciation of Sch-
This article is good practice in reading Spanish. This bit I find puzzling:
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#2
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I agree with you. Another common example, the word school. (pronounced, skuul). What are some other words that start with sch-? Schooner, for example.
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If you find something wrong with my Spanish, please correct it! |
#3
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I was thinking just of scho- like Scholes: scholar, school, scholium, etc. But even other words starting sch-: scheme; schism; schizophrenia; all with a hard k, except those imported directly from German, like schadenfreude. The only exception I can think of is schedule, which I think is quite amusing . But this one comes from French cédule, from Latin schedula, from the Greek for papyrus beginning in σχ, so it's their fault.
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#4
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I suppose that comes from German pronunciation (It's Schultz, it must be Scholes). Certainly /'ʃoles/ or /'ʃoləs/ may be the way they'd pronounce it here, or /ʃoʊls/ if they'd try "to play the Englishman", as they say.
It has to do with some expectation about how "our alphabet" is used within a foreign language and native aversion for syllables that start with two consonant sounds . I suppose English speakers do the same with what they also rightly call "our alphabet". |
#5
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Or Yiddish. Scheme schmeme.
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#6
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In the US we normally pronounce schedule with a hard k, unless someone is trying to imitate a British accent. The only sch- words I can think of that don't use the hard k sound are all German surnames-- Scholl, Schwab, Schubert, etc.
__________________
If you find something wrong with my Spanish, please correct it! |
#7
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My comment on Yiddish was provoked by seeing the following in a dictionary: schlemiel, schlep(p), schlock, schmaltz, schmooze, schmuck.
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#8
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Yes, you are all totally right from the viewpoint of the English phonetics. The author of the Spanish paper (I haven't read it yet) is talking from the viewpoint of the Espanish way to pronounce things... like Alec says.
An Italian "chiaro" ("claro", obvious, clear) is pronounced with "k" and even in some Latin classes, the name Cicero, was pronounced "Kikero" (even if in Spanish is pronounced "Thithero" or "Sisero"...) Espanish people need to go to Eskul... so these thzings get through our thzick Eskuls!
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Lo propio de la verdad es que se basta a sí misma, aquel que la posee no intenta convencer a nadie. "An enemy is somebody who flatters you. A friend is somebody who criticizes the living daylights out of you." |
#9
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They watch too many films made by Esteven Espielberg
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#10
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Get yourself an Oxford dictionary and you'll find a lot of Sch words.
Schism /sizəm, skizm/ --For this they gave two pronunciations. Schist /shist/ --And this one they gave a sh sound. |
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