Hi Mrs. Liz! It was such an incredible lesson indeed. I enjoyed it a lot and would like to thank you for all your great support and efforts you spent to facilitate the “ ea” pronunciation with the useful examples you introduced.
How lovely is it, with your mesmerizing way of learning,to allow words and things-to sound right and flow. Like beautiful music, that complements us-like a beautiful ornament.
Thank you for your kind words. Do let me know if there are any English pronunciation subjects you would like me to cover and I may be able to make a video for you. ❤️ Love & 🕊Peace. Liz
Happy day ma’am! You have a great teaching ,I am learning and also I have a Funny moments , you are amazing, thank you for your dedication to teaching.
Hi Blanca. Thank you for your lovely comments. You might want to check the spelling of 'Fanny moments'. I am guessing you wanted to say 'funny' as 'fanny' is an English slang word you probably don't want to use 😀. ❤️ Love & 🕊Peace. Liz
Hello and thanks for the video! The difference between the classic dipthong (pear, square) and the more modern one is so subtle. I don't think I'm even able to tell the difference
Thank you. It's great that you are listening so closely, as this is a key skill to perfecting great pronunciation. Phonemically, the difference is /peə/ /peˑ/. The ˑ after the ə denotes a slight elongation. ❤️ Love & 🕊Peace. Liz
Hi Quisco. /tʃɑː/ is not correct. It is an old English slang word for Tea. A cup of 'cha' or 'char'. Chair is /tʃeə/. What translator are you using? ❤️ Love & 🕊Peace. Liz
@@EnglishwithLiz When the student asks for information from the teacher, the teacher can, through that question, determine the student’s abilities in understanding, and through that, the teacher finds a loophole to deliver the information to the student’s mind.
As an EFL learner, I have depended on the Oxford English Dictionary for pronunciation for a long time ever since the time when there were not many audio-visual English education materials available, still less RU-vid. And most of the English dictionaries published in Britain still adhere to the traditional diphthong /eə/ rather than the long monophthong /ɛ:/, although it is said that /ɛ:/ is preferred by most of the younger speakers in Britain. So I am confused about it. Which of the two pronunciations is recommended to us EFL learners?
Hi Gabriel. Lovely to hear from you. We normally teach the dictionary entry for this pronunciation, although you will often hear it as a long sound without the closing schwa at the end. It's up to you how you say it, as long as you can be understood and you recognise the different ways it can be pronounced.❤️&🕊