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Winter's day - Page 2Grammar questions– conjugations, verb tenses, adverbs, adjectives, word order, syntax, etc. |
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#23
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If Steven Spielberg were to be divided in Spanish syllables, it should be:
S·te·ven S·piel·berg "S" alone is unthinkable and impossible to pronounce for a Spanish speaker with no training in foreign languages, so the first impulse is to add an "e" to that lonely "s".
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#24
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Quote:
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
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#27
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No it's not, it's very easy.
![]() ![]() .In English, you can have more consonants in one syllable, for example scream is one syllable. (So is chthonic, but that doesn't really count) But thanks anyway for the explantions.
Last edited by Perikles; December 06, 2009 at 02:46 AM. |
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#28
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Quote:
![]() But... chthonic? Does it exist?
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#29
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I've never heard the word "chthonic" either, but if you type "define:chthonic" into Google, you'll get some interesting definitions. And ...... it seems to be closely related to a Greek word, so I'm not sure that Perikles is playing fair when he uses that as an example of an English word with a bunch of consonants in one syllable..........
![]() I also found this website that says the word for you: http://www.howjsay.com/index.php?wor...&submit=Submit - sounds like it doesn't even pronounce the initial "ch" sound........
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- Lou Ann, de Washington, DC, USA Específicamente quiero recibir ayuda con el español de latinoamerica. ¡Muchísimas gracias! |
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#33
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Of course it does! An adjective relating to the Earth.
Quote:
It (of course) derives from Greek χθόνος which has two consonants at the beginning. But you need two consonants in the Roman alphabet for χ=ch and two for θ=thSo it really only counts as 2 consonants. By the way, this is the reason that you get 'h' letters in English words which don't get pronounced, because they derive from Greek consonants which need 2 letters in the Latin alphabet. So (Jesus) Christ from χριστος
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#34
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Actually, I have just found the same word contained in a word in Spanish: autóctonos except that the spelling has been modified so that the ch-> c and the th-> t.
This simplified spelling hides a lot of things, for example tanatorio where the first t hides a th but the second one doesn't.
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