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Learn Dutch - Pronuciation of R
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 2:56
- Published: 26 Mar 2011
- Uploaded: 22 Nov 2011
- Author: dutchforn00bs
In case the video wasn't clear on this: You can use any R anywhere, but NOT the American sounding one at the beginning of a syllable / preceding the vowel. Also. I make a distinction between the beginning and end of a word in the video. It should be a distinction between the beginning and the end of a SYLLABLE, or: preceding/following the vowel :). If you have any questions, feel free to ask them in the comments :)
http://wn.com/Learn_Dutch__Pronuciation_of_R
Alveolar Trill (Rolling R) tutorial in Cantonese (to be English subtitled soon)
Below is a brief translation done by a user MrPangutube, I hope this helps the English speakers. part 1 Introduction explains along the lines that this lesson is about the alveolar trill and the sound from the alveolar ridge doesn't exist for people who speak cantonese or english and so is difficult for the people of Hong Kong [who are mostly bilingual - cantonese\english] part 2 Within the diagram of the head (Fig 1), look at the alveolar ridge (presenter underlines in red). Where is it exactly? it is the bit at the top of the mouth which sticks out and where there is a little bit of a hard area and this is called the alveolar ridge. This is where the sound is produced from. How do you produce this sound then? I originally didn't know how to produce this sound. It is only when I was learning Italian which has this sound that I learnt how to do this. part 3 The sound that you produce when you snore is produced from the back of your mouth (presenter highlights in yellow) - ie produced from the yellow section and has this kind of sound (presenter gives 2 example sounds - both are ok) so it has a snoring sound. part 4 The second thing that you have to do. The tongue - where is the correct place to put it? (diagram 2 appears). When you pronounce the english "t" and "d" - the consonants, the position of the tongue is very similar. put the tip of your tongue on the alveolar ridge (presenter circles this position) part 5 There should be a gap between the tongue and the top <b>...</b>
http://wn.com/Alveolar_Trill_Rolling_R_tutorial_in_Cantonese_to_be_English_subtitled_soon
How to Roll your R's
www.youtube.com See link above. I added more info to the video. I wasn't able to roll my r's until I was about 22 years old. I was trying to learn Spanish and I was discouraged because I couldn't make the sound at all. I looked online for a video that told me how to do it, but I couldn't find anything helpful, so once I learned how to make the sound I decided to make a how-to-learn video. I learned two different ways to make the sound and I'm going to tell you how I learned them.
http://wn.com/How_to_Roll_your_R's
throat singing 2
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 1:34
- Published: 16 Jan 2008
- Uploaded: 25 Aug 2011
- Author: JesusFarted
combining throat singing with uvular trills. cuz trill niggaz neva die.
http://wn.com/throat_singing_2
IPA pronunciation: velar and uvular problems
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 5:43
- Published: 31 Oct 2010
- Uploaded: 06 Aug 2011
- Author: allughawei
This shows difficulties in pronouncing the uvular trill and the velar and uvula fricatives and comparing betweeen few languages. It requests help from others for more accurate pronunciation.There is also some phonetic criticism.
http://wn.com/IPA_pronunciation_velar_and_uvular_problems
German pronunciation of "r" part 2/2
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 7:13
- Published: 14 Feb 2009
- Uploaded: 20 Nov 2011
- Author: avredetaje
Due to a youtube user request...my poor tries to explain the german pronunciation of the letter "r" part 2/2
http://wn.com/German_pronunciation_of_r_part_2/2
How to Roll your R's (with captions)
I wasn't able to roll my r's until I was 22 years old. I was trying to learn Spanish and I was discouraged because I couldn't make the sound at all. I looked online for a video that told me how to do it, but I couldn't find anything helpful, so once I learned how to make the sound I decided to make a how-to-learn video. I learned two different ways to make the sound and I'm going to tell you how I learned them.
http://wn.com/How_to_Roll_your_R's_with_captions
IPA pronunciation - velar uvular palatal alveolar problems in different languages
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 11:23
- Published: 01 Nov 2010
- Uploaded: 04 Oct 2011
- Author: allughawei
Discussing the letters R, CH, X, J, G, خ and غ in Dutch, Arabic, English, French, German, Italian, Bugarian and Spanish and their phonetic symbols. Confusions are pinpointed.
http://wn.com/IPA_pronunciation__velar_uvular_palatal_alveolar_problems_in_different_languages
Alveolar Consonants
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 1:20
- Published: 18 Dec 2008
- Uploaded: 05 Oct 2011
- Author: KentLinguistics
The Phonetic Family
http://wn.com/Alveolar_Consonants
Pronunciation of the French R
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 1:47
- Published: 21 Sep 2007
- Uploaded: 23 Nov 2011
- Author: LeylaRandomness
Practice your pronunciation of the french R This is an annexe to "Learn French 6: French R". I get a lousy sound quality when I record with my mobile phone, so I made this audio version.
http://wn.com/Pronunciation_of_the_French_R
fricative sch
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 0:08
- Published: 19 May 2009
- Uploaded: 27 Aug 2010
- Author: speechtrainer
generated by www.speechtrainer.de
http://wn.com/fricative_sch
Learn Dutch - Pronuciation of R
Learn Dutch - Pronuciation of R
2:56
In case the video wasn't clear on this: You can use any R anywhere, but NOT the American sounding one at the beginning of a syllable / preceding the vowel. Also. I make a distinction between the beginning and end of a word in the video....
Alveolar Trill (Rolling R) tutorial in Cantonese (to be English subtitled soon)
Alveolar Trill (Rolling R) tutorial in Cantonese (to be English subtitled soon)
6:45
Below is a brief translation done by a user MrPangutube, I hope this helps the English speakers. part 1 Introduction explains along the lines that this lesson is about the alveolar trill and the sound from the alveolar ridge doesn&#...
IPA pronunciation: velar and uvular problems
IPA pronunciation: velar and uvular problems
5:43
This shows difficulties in pronouncing the uvular trill and the velar and uvula fricatives and comparing betweeen few languages. It requests help from others for more accurate pronunciation.There is also some phonetic criticism....
How to Roll your R's (with captions)
How to Roll your R's (with captions)
2:35
I wasn't able to roll my r's until I was 22 years old. I was trying to learn Spanish and I was discouraged because I couldn't make the sound at all. I looked online for a video that told me how to do it, but I couldn't find ...
IPA pronunciation - velar uvular palatal alveolar problems in different languages
IPA pronunciation - velar uvular palatal alveolar problems in different languages
11:23
Discussing the letters R, CH, X, J, G, خ and غ in Dutch, Arabic, English, French, German, Italian, Bugarian and Spanish and their phonetic symbols. Confusions are pinpointed....
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A Work in Progress
01 Dec 2011
American Spectator
By Gerald J. Russello on 12.1.11 @ 6:04AM The great Jacquez Barzun turned 105 yesterday. Jacques Barzun: Portrait of a Mind By Michael Murray (Frederic C. Beil, 302 pages, $26.95) Jacques Barzun, still going strong at 105, wrote recently of a study of his friend Lionel Trilling that the important...
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size: 5.3Kb
Saharan Anthems, Ethereal but Insistent
01 Dec 2011
The New York Times
The power of patience defines the Tuareg rock of Bombino, a guitarist and singer from Niger who brought his band to Le Poisson Rouge on Tuesday night. Bombino’s music is unhurried, undemonstrative, meditative and quietly adamant. It comes out of the Sahara, carrying the desert landscape in its...
size: 8.2Kb
size: 8.2Kb
'Uncertain outlook' for youth unemployment
16 Nov 2011
Jezebel
Research shows that people prefer listening to instructions from deep, rich baritones over nags from high tittering...
size: 0.8Kb
size: 0.8Kb
NYC Cafe Society comes to Southbank
17 Nov 2011
Liz Green: O, Devotion! – review
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Best Sellers-Audio
25 Nov 2011
Buffalo News
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size: 0.7Kb
Twitter Along with UnBeige
23 Nov 2011
mediabistro
Famed literary critic Lionel Trilling once described Henry James as a “social twitterer.” Sure, he meant it as...
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size: 0.8Kb
No thanks
27 Nov 2011
Boston Herald
I may have to call in the troops, morsels. Or at least release the hounds. Yours truly has been Occupied. It started off as a typical massive Martini Thanksgiving — turducken, Jell-O shots and a rousing game of Don’t Fall in the Tarpit. At midnight,...
size: 1.7Kb
size: 1.7Kb
The uvular trill is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is , a small capital R. The equivalent X-SAMPA symbol is R\. This consonant is one of several collectively called guttural R.
List of phonetics topics
Within Europe, the uvular trill seems to have originated in Standard French around the seventeenth century, spreading to standard varieties of German, Danish, as well as in parts of Dutch, Norwegian and Swedish; it is also present in other areas of Europe, but it's not all that clear if such pronunciations are due to French influence. In most cases, varieties have shifted this to a uvular fricative (). See guttural R for more information.
Features
Features of the uvular trill:
Occurrence
colspan="2" align="center" | Language !! Word !! IPA!! Meaning !! Notes | |||||
colspan="2" align="center" | French | align="center" | || | 'square' | Dialectal. More commonly a fricative . See French phonology | |
align="center" | Dutch | align="center"Some dialects|| | 'red' | See Dutch phonology | ||
align="center" | German | align="center"Standard || | 'turnip' | In free variation with a voiced uvular fricative. See German phonology | ||
colspan="2" align="center" | Hebrew | align="center"|| | 'green' | Voiced uvular fricative>fricative or approximant. See Modern Hebrew phonology | ||
rowspan="4" align="center" | Occitan | align="center"Southern Auvergnat || | 'son' | |||
align="center" | Eastern dialects | align="center"garric || | 'oak' | contrasts with alveolar trill ( 'cured') | ||
align="center" | Southeastern Limousin | align="center"filh || | 'son' | |||
align="center" | Provençal | align="center"parts || | 'parts' | |||
align="center" | Portuguese | align="center"European|| | 'car' | See Portuguese phonology | ||
align="center" | Romani | align="center"Some dialects|| | 'man' | Corresponds to in other dialects. | ||
align="center" | Sioux | align="center"Lakota||align="center"| || | 'it's brown' | Allophone of before . | ||
align="center" | Swedish | align="center"Southern Dialects|| | 'fox' | See Swedish phonology |
See also
References
Bibliography
Category:Trill consonants Category:Uvular consonants
als:Uvularer Vibrant br:Kensonenn huged dre froumal ca:Vibrant uvular sonora cs:Uvulární vibranta de:Stimmhafter uvularer Vibrant fr:Consonne roulée uvulaire voisée gd:Coireall na cìche-shluagain ko:구개수 전동음 it:Vibrante uvulare ms:Getaran uvular nl:Uvulaire tril ja:口蓋垂ふるえ音 pl:Spółgłoska drżąca języczkowa pt:Vibrante múltipla uvular ru:Увулярный дрожащий согласный sv:Uvular tremulant uk:Язичковий дрижачий приголосний zh:小舌顫音This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.