🚀 Improve Your English with Billie’s Expert Classes! 🌟 📅 Sign up now and start your journey to English proficiency today! 👉 billie-english.com/classes/ 🔹 Pronunciation Mastery: Speak clearly and confidently. 🔹 Effective Communication: Enhance your fluency and interaction. 🔹 Cambridge Exam Prep: Achieve top scores with my strategic guidance. Book one of my classes and elevate your skills to the next level! 📚✨
As a foreign English university student (abroad it's a very "prestigious" degree): I love you from the bottom of my heart. I had been having so many issues with phonology until now but your videos have been helping a lot. Hope I'll pass xoxo
I have some questions need your help to answer. Why does the native speaker usually speaker wrong way with syllable division in dictionary? For example: the word 'city', in Cambridge Dictionary write /ˈsɪt.i/ but native speaker always speak /ˈsɪ.ti/, they don't blend the /t/ sound in the first syllable, they speak /si/ instead /sit/ for the first syllable. Could you explain more about this one? Thank you so much for your time!
Hello! I have separate videos on sentence stress & weak forms on my channel, you can find them by going on my main channel and then using the channel search bar there 😊
"stardust" (/ˈstɑːr.dʌst/) consists of 2 syllables. They are 'star' and 'dust' 'star' consists of st-a-r (/st/ /ɑː/ /r/; CCVC) 'dust' consists of d-u-st (/d/ /ʌ/ /st/; CVCC) So stardust as a whole has the structure CCVC'CVCC. I hope I could help you :)
This word has 2 syllables! 👉 first syllable: /st/ is the onset and the /a:/ the nucleus, there is no coda 👉 second syllable /d/ = onset, /ʌ/ = nucleus, /st/ = coda
Hello Dear Billie, I have troubles with linguistics,i'd like you help me,(what is common between synchronic and diachronic study? What is common between syntagmatic and paradigmatic?)
Hello! I have several videos on my channel page about 'word stress'. Have a look at these here: Word Stress Part 1: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-tPD2pDHxrW4.html Word stress Part 2: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YpDv_XNQew8.html The 3 Types of Word Stress: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-xKncWiMbNQw.html
If you provide a vedieo on pre inetial, inetial,and post inetial+ inetial final , inetial final 2 inetial final 3 ,and inetial final 4 up till 9.00 caus I have paper tomorrow 😢😢 not too long just short .
Send her this message. Syllabic consonants, I believe, are assumed in the theory just to save the collapsing umiversal principle that a syllable must have a voclic nucleus. Send her this message. Syllabic consonants, I believe, are assumed in the theory just to save the collapsing umiversal principle that a syllable must have a voclic nucleus.
@@BillieEnglish Thank you for your reply. I wanted to say that the word 'Stalinist' begins with the /st/ onset & ends with the /st/ coda just like the word 'stardust'.
Understanding syllable structure is not necessary to speak English fluently. I am teaching this because many of my viewers study English phonology to design speech systems and for that purpose this is important!
Hi, I need your help, may be could you help me explaining how we can divide phonology a syllable in English please, I gonna have my phonetics exam 🥲🥲 Please 🥹🥹
That's the thing: there are no examples! There are no English words that end in the sound /h/ (not the letter H!). It's the only sound that cannot come last in a word.
Excellent explanations. You are probably the best (stranger) teacher😅. I did my exams after going through these and I'm proud I passed. Thank you so much💙
Will you clear me about consonant cluster The consonant letter have same manner of articulation but different places of articulations are only form consonant then how Pl in play