Pronunciation that affects












0















When we elide "t" sound from words like "accidents", how native English speakers speak it, as "accidens" or "accidenz"?










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  • 1





    Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

    – tchrist
    yesterday











  • Bro, can you answer one of them?

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

    – tchrist
    yesterday













  • Noted, thank you.

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

    – michael_timofeev
    yesterday
















0















When we elide "t" sound from words like "accidents", how native English speakers speak it, as "accidens" or "accidenz"?










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

    – tchrist
    yesterday











  • Bro, can you answer one of them?

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

    – tchrist
    yesterday













  • Noted, thank you.

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

    – michael_timofeev
    yesterday














0












0








0








When we elide "t" sound from words like "accidents", how native English speakers speak it, as "accidens" or "accidenz"?










share|improve this question
















When we elide "t" sound from words like "accidents", how native English speakers speak it, as "accidens" or "accidenz"?







pronunciation






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









tchrist

109k30295472




109k30295472










asked yesterday









Vinayak KaleVinayak Kale

143




143








  • 1





    Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

    – tchrist
    yesterday











  • Bro, can you answer one of them?

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

    – tchrist
    yesterday













  • Noted, thank you.

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

    – michael_timofeev
    yesterday














  • 1





    Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

    – tchrist
    yesterday











  • Bro, can you answer one of them?

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

    – tchrist
    yesterday













  • Noted, thank you.

    – Vinayak Kale
    yesterday











  • When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

    – michael_timofeev
    yesterday








1




1





Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

– tchrist
yesterday





Consider that prints and prince are homophones.

– tchrist
yesterday













Bro, can you answer one of them?

– Vinayak Kale
yesterday





Bro, can you answer one of them?

– Vinayak Kale
yesterday













Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

– tchrist
yesterday







Using hailnames like bro on a stranger is just as inappropriate and unwelcome as using ones like my love or honey-bunch. You do not know me, sir: I am not your intimate acquaintance and bosom chum. Therefore having a stranger use that style of highly informal address comes off as aggressive and in rather a bad way.

– tchrist
yesterday















Noted, thank you.

– Vinayak Kale
yesterday





Noted, thank you.

– Vinayak Kale
yesterday













When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

– michael_timofeev
yesterday





When you say “native speaker” who are you referencing? British, American, Australian, Canadian, New Zealand?

– michael_timofeev
yesterday










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