wrholt |
April 17, 2013 08:52 AM |
In everyday speech many native speakers habitually pronounce sequences of two or more identical vowels as a single instance of that vowel: "voy a hacer" sounds like /boyaser/, "voy a alquilar" sounds like /boyalkilar/, and both "va a ser" and "va a hacer" sound like /baser/. When confusion is possible some speakers may pronounce the vowel for double or triple the length of time, perhaps with a change in intonation from one segment to the next, and most speakers do this when they speak slowly and carefully. Most native speakers typically do not stop the voice between segments as we often do in English by using a glottal stop (the 'catch' that one sometimes hears in words like "bottle" in some regional varieties of English).
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