Ghoti `fish
I believe it's [smir]
shep-erd
Most Americans say something like "wuzz," using a long schwa vowel. It is long because it ends in a voiced consonant. The great dialectical and regional variety in the treatment of English vowel sounds has made the definitive phonetic transcription of common English words impossible. No single phonetic spelling is necessarily the correct one.
In the word "chocolate," the primary stress is on the first syllable: "CHOC-o-late." The stress pattern can be denoted as /ˈtʃɒk.ə.lɪt/ in phonetic transcription. This means that the "CHO" part is emphasized more than the other syllables.
The phonetic transcription of "usually" is /ˈjuːʒəli/.
The phonetic transcription of "regime" is /rɪˈʒiːm/.
The phonetic transcription for the word "French" in French is /fs/.
ædmɚˈeɪ̯ʃən thats how
Ghoti `fish
I believe it's [smir]
shep-erd
`chäp-ˌstik
The phonetic transcription for "goat" is /ɡoʊt/.
The French phonetic transcription for the keyword "croissant" is kwas.
Phonemic transcription focuses on the distinctive sounds of a language, while phonetic transcription details the actual sounds produced by a speaker. Phonemic transcription simplifies sounds into broad categories, while phonetic transcription captures specific variations in pronunciation.
The phonetic transcription of "the walrus and the carpenter" is /ðə ˈwɔl.rəs ənd ðə ˈkɑrpəntər/.