Lulzz
polish/Polish
Lol :p:p:ppp:p::p:p:pp:p:p:p:p:
H is the same in Hawaiian as it is in English. The only difference is, in Hawaiian the letter H always has to have a vowel after it.
The Old English letter "r" played a significant role in the development of the English language by influencing pronunciation and spelling changes. Its presence or absence in words affected how they were pronounced and eventually led to shifts in the language's phonetics and orthography.
English is a partially phonetic language. While it is not completely phonetic, meaning that the same letter or letter combination can be pronounced differently in different words, there are consistent patterns and rules that determine pronunciation.
There can be some confusion as Russian has a letter С, which is analogous to the Latin (and English) S. It is always pronounced as "s". It also has the letter Ц, which is analogous to the Latin (though not the English) C. This letter is pronounced as "ts". с = 's' as in see ц = 'ts' as in cats
The letter "i" in the Spanish alphabet is pronounced the same as the name of the letter "E" in the English alphabet.
The answer is the word WRONG - this is a five-letter word that is always pronounced as "wrong."
The pronunciation of words is determined by language rules and conventions. In English, the "x" in "xylophone" is not pronounced as a "ks" sound because it follows the rules of the letter combination "xy" which is typically pronounced as a "z" sound.
The letter "Y" is pronounced as "why" in English.
No. In English words the letter q is only used in the digraph qu-, usually pronounced KW- initially. Only foreign words may have q without u. In the transliteration of Arabic words, the q alone stands for a sound that is not heard in English. Silly commercial spellings like Qantas are pronounced as if the u were in place. No one pronounces Qantas as Kantas, but always as Kwantas.qat, qis, qua3 words found.
The German letter 'i' is pronounced like the English letter 'e'