Because the English alphabet contains only single-character characters.
There are two main 'phonetic' alphabets:# The 'NATO phonetic alphabet' used in telephony when spelling a word out loud by using commonly understood alternative words for the letters, e.g. Alpha = A, Bravo = B, Charlie = C, Delta = D etc. The word 'day' is spoken as 'delta alpha yankee'.# The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) used as a guide for pronunciation of foreign words. The words are converted to a group of symbols that represent the appropriate consonant, vowel and dipthong (two vowel) sounds.The IPA symbol set for English pronunciation does not contain a symbol that looks like the letter 'C'.In English words the letter 'c' is pronounced differently in different words.The following examples show this (without using IPA symbols):* hard c: cat is pronounced kat * like s, but hissed!: licence = lyssenss (not lykenz!) * like the ch in 'church': cello = chellowWhen the letter c is combined with another consonant, sometimes a new sound is required:* soft ch = 'ch' as in church * guttural aspirated 'ch', as in loch (Scottish)* hard ch = k: chronology = kronology* ch = sh: champagne = shampain, chateau = shatow, chalet = shalaySometimes the letter 'c' is silent, or obsolete:* pick = pikIN VIEW OF THE FACT that the English pronunciation of many letters and words is inconsistent, it is very useful for learners of English to see the words written phonetically. In this way they can see how each word should be pronounced, rather than be misled by how they are spelt/spelled!
Swahili is an African language spoken in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and many other countries in Africa. There are two alphabets in use. One is derived from the English or Latin alphabet, the other from the Arabic.English: The Swahili alphabet has 24 letters and uses the same alphabet as English. The letter C is unnecessary and is only used with other letters. All letters are used except X and Q.Arabic: There are 32 consonants and several diacritics to modify consonants into vowels in use when writing Swahili in Arabic script.
they actually have an alphabet to help people pronounce the signs. it consists of: A O E I U Ü B P M F D T N L G K H J Q X R ZH CH SH Z C S Y W
The Russian alphabet consists of 33 letters. Some letters resemble English letters, while others have different sounds. Examples of how Russian letters look in English include: А (A), Б (B), В (V), Г (G), Д (D), Е (E/YE), Ё (YO), Ж (ZH), З (Z), И (I), Й (Y), К (K), Л (L), М (M), Н (N), О (O), П (P), Р (R), С (S), Т (T), У (U), Ф (F), Х (KH), Ц (TS), Ч (CH), Ш (SH), Щ (SHCH), Ъ (hard sign), Ы (Y), Ь (soft sign), Э (E), Ю (YU), Я (YA).
Sh*t??
In French, the "ch" can be pronounced in different ways depending on the word. It can be pronounced as a hard "sh" sound, as in "chocolat," or as a guttural sound, as in "château." It is important to listen to native speakers and practice to get the pronunciation right.
An English Setter named Sh Ch. Starlite Express at Valsett.
The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) uses the letter "ʃ" to represent the "sh" sound in English words like "ship" or "sheep."
The letters ch, ph, and sometimes s can make the same sound as sh.
You can't really do this. The Hebrew letters don't line up evenly with English letters. Here's the closest I can come:א = silent letter, sometimes pronounced like a glottal stopב = b or vג = gד = dה = h or silentו = o, u, or vז = zח = guttural fricative not found in English. Similar to the ch in German.ט = tי = yכ = k or a guttural fricative not found in English. Similar to the ch in German.ל = lמ = mנ = nס = sע = silent letter, or sometimes pronounced like a gagging sound.פ = p or fצ = tsק = kר = rש = sh or sת = t
In the Spanish alphabet, the letter "x" can make two sounds. It can make a "ks" sound as in the word "taxi" or it can make a "h" sound as in the word "México."
In IPA spelling, it's written: [diç] There is no English equivalent of the ch sound, but it is close to sh.
It uses a latin alphabet without W, Y, X and Q because of redundancy (Croatian is 100% phonetic) and uses some other symbols, such as a LJ, NJ, Š (sh), Č (ch), Ć (softer ch), Ž (zh, 'g' in genre), DŽ ('J' in English) and Đ (softer J)
Lie-cht-ess Bloot. Lie as in the word to lie, ess as in the letter s, and bloot as with the word shoot. The German ch- sound is similar to an English sh- sound produced with an open mouth.
machetti?
Lie-cht-ess Bloot. Lie as in the word to lie, ess as in the letter s, and bloot as with the word shoot. The German ch- sound is similar to an English sh- sound produced with an open mouth.
There are two main 'phonetic' alphabets:# The 'NATO phonetic alphabet' used in telephony when spelling a word out loud by using commonly understood alternative words for the letters, e.g. Alpha = A, Bravo = B, Charlie = C, Delta = D etc. The word 'day' is spoken as 'delta alpha yankee'.# The International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) used as a guide for pronunciation of foreign words. The words are converted to a group of symbols that represent the appropriate consonant, vowel and dipthong (two vowel) sounds.The IPA symbol set for English pronunciation does not contain a symbol that looks like the letter 'C'.In English words the letter 'c' is pronounced differently in different words.The following examples show this (without using IPA symbols):* hard c: cat is pronounced kat * like s, but hissed!: licence = lyssenss (not lykenz!) * like the ch in 'church': cello = chellowWhen the letter c is combined with another consonant, sometimes a new sound is required:* soft ch = 'ch' as in church * guttural aspirated 'ch', as in loch (Scottish)* hard ch = k: chronology = kronology* ch = sh: champagne = shampain, chateau = shatow, chalet = shalaySometimes the letter 'c' is silent, or obsolete:* pick = pikIN VIEW OF THE FACT that the English pronunciation of many letters and words is inconsistent, it is very useful for learners of English to see the words written phonetically. In this way they can see how each word should be pronounced, rather than be misled by how they are spelt/spelled!