"Bor^un", where the ^ is a glottal stop.
glottal stop
Aoo'Pronounce the "a" in father and hold the "o" together but longer. The ' is a glottal stop so at the end of the aoo' pronounciation, you pause as in the middle of "oh,oh."Try saying the English word "oat" and replace the t with a glottal stop.
That is a figure in Arabic orthography representing the sound of a glottal stop, transliterated in English as an apostrophe
T is a alveolar; pronounced using tongue and the ridge behind the upper teeth. However, many regional accents replace a T inside a word with a glottal stop, produced at the back of the mouth or entrance to the throat (glottis), as in Win'er, La'er, bo'om etc.
In Arabic script, a hamza is a diacritical mark placed over other letters, or a letter on its own indicating the presence of a glottal stop.
na'ídíkid The marks over the vowels are high tone. The mark after the a is a glottal stop consonant. The i is said like in the word "bit"
The Na'vi equivalent to the English word "moron" is skxawng, pronounced skʔouŋ (a ʔ is a glottal stop).
You would say "ʻO wau koʻu inoa" in Hawaiian to mean "my name is".
Glottal reflexes are the ones we use for swallowing. If these are impaired it would mean that the person is having difficulty in swallowing food.
In English, the apostrophe (') represents an abbreviation; if the end of the abbreviation is printed, such as 'll and 've, you pronounce the apostrophe as a glottal stop. A glottal stop feels like a catch in your throat, and sounds like the middle sound in uh-oh, or the way you probably say "mitten" without any /t/ sounds. The IPA symbol for this sound is ʔ. The IPA for each would be: ʔl and ʔv
Ekwáni or uweyv?i(v = uh like in huh, ? = glottal stop)