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But they are usually speaking French and German, not English.
Not wishing to create divisions here, but northerners, Scots and Welsh generally open their mouths when speaking English, as do French, German, Spanish, Polish and Italians when speaking our language. (Even the Americans do. Quick exit. )
Er, yes. Though my point was that those whose native language is not English will tend to do when speaking English what they do when speaking their own language - in this particular respect to which you draw attention. But I'm not too bothered: we speak with different accents from how people used to speak 500 years ago. Nothing stands still. We may notice it but are unlikely to be able to turn the tide back.
I have, though, noticed that when I get an automated call from my bank asking for verification that I have indeed just set up a new online payment recipient, the robot (if such it/she is) always signs off with: "Gid-bye." And "Gid-bye", I always reply…
Not wishing to create divisions here, but northerners, Scots and Welsh generally open their mouths when speaking English, as do French, German, Spanish, Polish and Italians when speaking our language. (Even the Americans do. Quick exit. )
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
I have, though, noticed that when I get an automated call from my bank asking for verification that I have indeed just set up a new online payment recipient, the robot (if such it/she is) always signs off with: "Gid-bye." And "Gid-bye", I always reply…
Thus Trafalgar is regular - stress on last syllable, no accent required. ...
I would pronounce it TrafAlgar in English, e.g when referring to the battle, Trafalgar Day....but the Spanish way in, er, Spanish, obviously.
Seem to recall that there are English folk songs (or are they modern quasi-folk songs?) in which Trafalgar is stressed as Traf'lGAR. The example that comes to mind is something about 'the night of Trafalgar'.
I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
Several times recently I've heard something called 'assthetics' spoken about. Is this practised by assthetes and if so how do they differ from athletes?
Seem to recall that there are English folk songs (or are they modern quasi-folk songs?) in which Trafalgar is stressed as Traf'lGAR. The example that comes to mind is something about 'the night of Trafalgar'.
Trafalgar House at Downton, S Wilts gets the same treatment.
Having recently betrayed my northern roots by emigrating to Devon, I was expecting a change in general pronunciation, due to the different regional accents. However, what surprised me most was the way many Yorkshire people speak from the the back of the mouth, giving a persistent nasal effect, but in Devon, most sounds are voiced from the front of the mouth - essential for the regional twang.
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