Do you mean @ ? This is pronounced as at
For classical Latin, basically it is pronounced exactly like it would be in English, except the vowels are different. A is pronounced a long A as in "Ah ha!" E is pronounced as a short A, as in "Ale" I is pronounced as a long E as in "Easy" O is pronounced as a long O as in "Oh no" U is pronounced EW, as in "Jew"
Commonly written "Namaste", it is pronounced as "Namastay" with the first two a's as the first a in "America" and the ay as in "stay", but with the t pronounced soft with the area just behind the tip of the tongue pressing against the upper-front teeth with no air passing (as the t in "tamasha"). (see related video link)
"Samuel" in Spanish is pronounced the same way as in English.
Ephesians, a book in the New Testament of the Bible, is pronounced ee-FEE-shuhnz.
u-we-tsi-ge-ya means daughter in Cherokee tsi part is pronounced si. I am Cherokee. So you say it as it sounds but remember the tsi is pronounced si.
Well, circle= da-i-ra .. the 'i' is pronounced 'ee' .. da-ee-ra :)
I think it's pronounced like circle.
A Small Circle of Friends was created in 1980.
κύκλος (kyklos) - pronounced kiklo
Kύκλος (kyklos) pronounced: KEY-close
No. Every circle on the sphere whose center is also the center of the sphere is a great circle. If the circle's center is not also the center of the sphere, then the circle is a small circle.
The duration of A Small Circle of Friends is 1.88 hours.
circle = circulo (accent on the 'i') (Pronounced THEERcoolaw (Spain) ('TH' as in 'thin'; 'SEERcoolaw' in Latin America)
Outside of a Small Circle of Friends was created in 1966.
The circumference of the small circle would be 18.84.
YES. A small circle is simply a circle around the earth that does not fly over the direct opposite place on earth that a plane took off from. A great circle goes full circumference of earth, where a small circle does not. Being a circle they both fly in a constant direction.
go to insert, press symbols and there should be a small circle you can use for degrees