It could be subjective, but countries with challenging names to pronounce for non-native speakers include Kyrgyzstan, Azerbaijan, and Niue. These countries have unique pronunciation rules or unfamiliar sounds that can make their names difficult to say correctly.
The capital of Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek, is considered to be one of the capitals that are hardest to pronounce for non-native speakers.
While there is no single "Hardest word to pronounce" (you might not be able to pronounce the word easily, while others might), there are quite a few words that are so long you probably can't pronounce them. Follow the Related Link below to view some of those words.
She struggled to pronounce the foreign name correctly.
You would pronounce "my name is" as "meu nome é" in Portuguese.
You pronounce it Lootsyouv. It's Ukrainian.
The capital of Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek, is considered to be one of the capitals that are hardest to pronounce for non-native speakers.
The longest ones, such as Liechtenstein or the unfamiliar ones such as Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
While there is no single "Hardest word to pronounce" (you might not be able to pronounce the word easily, while others might), there are quite a few words that are so long you probably can't pronounce them. Follow the Related Link below to view some of those words.
The name of the hardest solid is a diamond; it is the hardest object known to humankind.
Soo-ree-nahm is the way in which the natives of Suriname pronounce their country's name.
There is no country name that can be spelled with the letters 'jyqlramejiwv'.
Scotland obviously
ACCA
The Haitians and the French pronounce the name of the country as three syllables: ah-ee-TEE. In English, the pronunciation is usually as two syllables: HAY-tee.
ah-mar-tia i wondered the same and had it answered by someone who had the name native to the country.
This is how you pronounce 'country': cun-try
In French, that would be 'Suisse', which is pronounce, "sweese" In English, the name of that country is 'Switzerland', which is from German. In German, it is pronounced, "sveets-air-lont"