The word comes from the French word.
It is pronounced "bree-wat."
It is pronounced "dah-zine."
It is pronounced "day nah-dah" with the stress on the first syllable.
The Italian word "stradale" is pronounced as "strah-DAH-leh." In Italian pronunciation, the stress is typically on the second-to-last syllable, which in this case is "DAH." The "str" is pronounced as in "street" in English, and the "le" at the end is pronounced as "leh."
The word "dacha" is pronounced as DAH-chuh.
The first half is pronounced "Dah-Dah", and then the ending is pronounced the regular way: "Dah-Dah" ism "Dah-Dah" ist "Dah-Dah" istic etcetera.
Ibrida in the feminine and ibrido in the masculine are Italian equivalents of the English word "hybrid".Specifically, the word is an adjective in its singular form. The feminine form is pronounced "EE-bree-dah". The masculine form is pronounced "EE-bree-doh" in Italian.
The US pronunciation of the word debris (wreckage, ruins) is (deh-BREE) or more commonly (duh-BREE). The UK version may have a long A, as (day-BREE).
Sajdah is pronounced SAHJ- dah
It is pronounced dah-YAHN or dah-YEN
klah-dah
'CAT-ih-bree
It is pronounced "bree-wat."
It is pronounced (Bree-tuh)
It is pronounced "dah-zine."
It is a simple fact that a great many words in any language do not have a single pronunciation. There is usually no hard and fast rule for which pronunciation is correct. Furthermore, how one pronounces words will vary depending on his or her country of origin, and the region from which they come within that country.The word "debris" should not be pronounced with an "s". If Ms Gillard wishes to pronounce it "day-bree" instead of "de-bree", there are no rules to say this is incorrect.
It is pronounced "day nah-dah" with the stress on the first syllable.