Since then is pronounced 'since then.'
One pronoun that changed since Old English is "thou," which was singular and informal, and is no longer commonly used in Modern English.
The Scottish translation of brother is brathair. It is pronounced as braa'her since 'the' in Scottish is pronounced like an 'h' in English.
Guy Herbert is American. His name is pronounced just as you'd say it in English, but the announcer at Hamilton College used to say his name with a French accent as a joke, and since then, people have mistakenly pronounced his name like that.
It's pronounced the same as in English (since it's not a Hebrew name).
It's pronounced the same as in English, since it's not a Hebrew name.
Since "Tzeirem" is not an English word, you would have to tell how it is pronounced in order for anyone who speaks English to know what rhymes with it.
"baguette" is pronounced like "bag heyte". "bagget" does not exist in English, it is spelled and pronounced the same as in French, since it is a French name originally.
Peter is pronounced exactly the same in Hebrew as it is in English, since it's not a Hebrew name.
Since English is a Germanic language , and the German word for quiet is schweigen , and pronounced
Well, first you would invent a language and call it American, since Americans speak English, not American. Then, since it's a German word, you would pronounce it the way they do in Germany.
'Hello' can be pronounced as either 'heh-low,' 'Aa-w,' or 'Bon-ju.'
I think he is an American writer since I got this in the test question correct answer was an American writer)