The ng (ŋ) sound (as in running) and the ny(ɳ) sound (as in canyon).
T-A-NG-EEthe NG sound in this word is formed by pressing the tongue sides up against the side of the mouth. the tongue tip does not touch the mouth.
There is no standard collective noun for a group of junk. However, collective nouns are an informal part of language, any noun that fits the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, a heap of junk, a pile of junk, a hoard of junk, etc. Another type of junk might be a flotilla of junks (Chinese boats).
In the word "hang", it may look like the G is silent, but it's not really silent. If you remove the G, then the N sound would change. NG is an ending consonant digraph, and the G sound is just swallowed by the N, which makes the N stressing accent sounding like G. To put it another way, the terminal 'ng' is actually a separate sound from either n or g. The NG digraph is usually found in progressive present verb endings. where we usually add the "ing" suffix to progressive present verbs.
Junk entered English around the 15th Century but its origin is unknown.
junkfoods
No, the word "junk" has a short vowel sound for the letter "u," which is pronounced as /ʌ/ (similar to the "u" sound in "cup").
Kuh
Agma
Yes, the word "angry" does have the short a sound, as in "cat" or "sand".
Because I bought it from a junk yard!
like funk but with a "j" sound at the beginning instead like the j in Jaguar.
This is how you say I love you. "Ng'kwaagala". The "ng" sound is the same sound when your saying "coming" or "doing". The sound made at the "ng" part of the word is the sound you use at the beginning of the word "ng'kwaagala" Merry Christmas is Ssekukulu "ng'kwaagaliza Ssekukulu e'nunji. That's in the language
ca ng
clung
It is pronounced as "koong", with the "u" having a short "oo" sound like in "book" and the "ng" sound at the end.
Cuong is pronounced as "koo-ng" - with the "oo" sound similar to "cook" and the "ng" similar to the end of "sing".