You may find may find good list of baby names in babynology, this site has facility of pronunciation for names.
No, English and Italian names may be pronounced quite differently in the respective languages. Sometimes, native speakers try to preserve the original language's pronunciation rules. Other times, they adapt the word to their own language's pronunciation rules. So Italian names that follow Italian speaking emigrants/immigrants may be pronounced so differently that the spelling changes over time in the new homeland.
No. The EA pair has a long E sound (ee-zee).
Maybe Sam, Jack, Bob, Fred. Hope this helps.
Ehrlich - you pronounce the ch as "k" Well, maybe because this is the ENGLISH spelling and pronunciation subcategory, and the name Ehrlich is GERMAN.
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 pronunciation of share is shair!!!!! Very EASY!!!!!!!!!!!!!
You can listen to the pronunciation of any word in any language on Acapela.Check the related link below.
G. E. Kaltenbach has written: 'Dictionary of pronunciation of artists' names' -- subject(s): Artists, Dictionaries, Personal Names, Pronunciation, Registers
A pronunciation guide is a guide that helps a person sound out easy and difficult words. The words are listed alphabetically for easy searching, along with ways to pronounce the word next to it.
A pronunciation guide is a guide that helps a person sound out easy and difficult words. The words are listed alphabetically for easy searching, along with ways to pronounce the word next to it.
Storm Whaley has written: 'They call it' -- subject(s): Geographical Names, Names, Pronunciation
http://inogolo.com/guides/countries
Sherilyn. Names don't change in Spanish just the pronunciation
No, English and Italian names may be pronounced quite differently in the respective languages. Sometimes, native speakers try to preserve the original language's pronunciation rules. Other times, they adapt the word to their own language's pronunciation rules. So Italian names that follow Italian speaking emigrants/immigrants may be pronounced so differently that the spelling changes over time in the new homeland.
George M. Stokes has written: 'A guide to the pronunciation of Texas towns' -- subject(s): Geographical Names, Pronunciation
Names do not change by language. They may change pronunciation.
spelling, pronunciation, gender specification and derivation