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Listen for unexpected similarities between familiar sounds.
Socialiniai darbuotojai prašo valdžios geriau užtikrinti jų saugumą.Lietuvos prezidentas per pirmąją kalbą Jungtinių Tautų Generalinėje Asamblėjoje atkreipė dėmesį į besitęsiančią Rusijos agresiją.Konferencija Druskininkuose „Atliekų tvarkymas 2019“. Mirė buvęs Prancūzijos prezidentas Žakas Širakas.Vienas garsiausių pasaulio tenorų Plasidas Domingas dėl kaltinimų seksualiniu priekabiavimu baigia karjerą Metropoliteno teatre.Vilniaus Adomo Mickevičiaus bibliotekoje bus pristatyta Sound Change the city iniciatyva. Sportas. Ved. Živilė Kropaitė.
Žinios iš Lietuvos ir pasaulio. JAV ir Ukrainos prezidentų susitikimas. Ar galimas apkaltos procesas Donaldui Trampui? Vilniaus Paveikslų galerijoje antra paroda iš ciklo, skirto Vilniaus gatvėms. „Didžioji gatvė“. Vilniaus A.Mickevičiaus bibliotekoje projekto Sound change the city/Sound change the planet prezentacija. Vilniaus, Rygos, Talino ir Berlino garsai atkreips žmonių dėmesį į ekologijos problemas.
In written English, there is space between words: What is her name?In spoken English, there is no space between words: Whatsername?Words in a thought group are linked or joined together and often sound like one long word. It is sometimes difficult to tell the end of one word from the beginning of the next. When words are connected, sounds may change. Learning to recognize common sound changes will improve your ability to understand conversational English, and learning to make a smooth connection from the end of the word to the beginning of the next will improve your fluency.Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/arseniosesllearningPodcast on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7hdzplWx6xB8mhwDJYiP6f?si=5vUca3p2QGuWPZbhzCRwBwPodcast on FM: https://player.fm/series/2288534Podcast on TuneIn: https://tunein.com/podcasts/Language-Learning-Podcasts/Arsenios-ESL-p1117391/Podcast on ListenNote: https://www.listennotes.com/c/778cf3cfd2564ba5b01f693bfebc96de/arsenio-s-esl-podcast/Podcast on CastBox: https://castbox.fm/channel/Arsenio's-ESL-Podcast-id1251433?country=usFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/Arseniobuck/?ref=bookmarksYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIzp4EdbJVMhhSnq_0u4ntAWebsite: https://thearseniobuckshow.com/Q & A: ArsenioBuck@icloud.comLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/arsenio-buck-9692a6119/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thearseniobuckshow/?hl=enBuzz sprout: https://www.buzzsprout.com/165390Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/arseniosesllearning)
Lietuvos ekonomika kitais metais augs gerokai lėčiau nei šiemet. Tokias tendencijas pristatė Lietuvos bankas.Jungtinių Tautų Generalinės Asamblėjos kuluaruose Linas Linkevičius su Baltarusijos diplomatijos vadovu Vladimiru Makėjumi aptarė ekonominius šalių ryšius bei augančią Rusiją įtaką Baltarusijoje.Jungtinių Tautų Generalinėje Asamblėjoje pirmąją kalbą sakęs prezidentas Gitanas Nausėda daugiausia dėmesio skyrė Rusijos agresijai bei situacijos destabiliavimui regione. Kaip savo galvoje vienu metu išlaikyti ne vieną ar dvi, o kelias dešimtis kalbų? Šiandien dėl nesaugių darbo sąlygų socialiniai darbuotojai prie Vyriausybės rengs akciją „Kiek galime gintis rankinėmis?“.Baltijos šalyse dirbant tūkstančiams ukrainiečių, Estijos vidaus reikalų ministras siūlo panaikinti bevizį rėžimą su Ukraina.Šiandien pasaulyje minima Kontracepcijos diena, kuria siekiama skatinti žmones daugiau domėtis kontracepcija. „Ryto garsų“ studijoje – prezidento patarėjas, Aplinkos ir infarstruktūros grupės vadovas Jaroslavas Neverovičius. Tęsiantis savaitei už klimatą, šiandien Vilniaus Adomo Mickevičiaus bibliotekoje bus pristatyta „Sound Change the city“ iniciatyva.Koncertas Liublino unijos 450-osioms metinėms. Taip pat laidoje – orų, spaudos ir sporto apžvalga. Kaip rytą pradeda virtuvės šefas Deivydas Praspliauskas? Ką rekomenduoja skaityti serialo „Černobylis” prodiuserė Lietuvoje Lineta Mišeikytė? R. Urbonaitės komentaras. Ved. Rūta Kupetytė.
On the Mytholinguistic Significance of Butterflies; by Mary Hadlitt-Lamb; From Volume CLXXI, Number 4, of Speculative Grammarian, December 2014 — A remarkable cross-linguistic pattern can be observed in the words for “butterfly”. While these words seldom appear to be cognate even in closely related languages, they are surprisingly similar between apparently unrelated languages. (Read by Trey Jones.)
IL #31: "Marry merry Mary" o "Merry merry Merry"?Donde hablaré sobre la convergencia de ciertas vocales canadienses ante R intervocálica, o de cuando "Marry merry Mary" suena a "Merry merry Merry" y "I'm horribly sorry" suena a "I'm whoreibly sorey". Para saber más al respecto: I'm Hoarably Sorey en Dialect BlogThe Atlas of North American English: Phonetics, Phonology, and Sound Change : a Multimedia Reference Tool, Volume 1, capítulo 15. CanadaEnglish-language vowel changes before historic /r/, Mary–marry–merry merger, en WikipediaMúsica del podcast de Ergo Phizmiz. Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.
IL #29: Sobre el desplazamiento vocálico del inglés de Canadá.Para saber más:The Atlas of North American English: Phonetics, Phonology, and Sound Change : a Multimedia Reference Tool, Volume 1, capítulo 15. CanadaReshaping the Vowel System: An Index of Phonetic Innovation in Canadian English, de Charles BobergCanadian Shift, artículo en WikipediaNorthern Cities Vowel Shift vs. Canadian Accents, artículo en Dialect BlogMúsica del podcast de Ergo Phizmiz. Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.
IL #28: out and about, o oat and aboat? o oot and aboot?Para saber más:The Atlas of North American English: Phonetics, Phonology, and Sound Change : a Multimedia Reference Tool, Volume 1, capítulo 15. CanadaCanadian raising, artículo de WikipediaCanadian Raising: Nobody says “Aboot”, artículo de Dialect BlogCanadian raising and other oddities, de Taylor Robert de York UniversityMúsica del podcast de Ergo Phizmiz. Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.
If you say "wooder ice" when you order a water ice treat or cheer "Go Iggles!" when the Eagles football team is playing, chances are you're from Philadelphia or "Fluffya." A new Penn linguistics study shows that traditional Southern inflections associated with Philadelphia native-born speakers are being affected by Northern influences. "A Hundred Years of Sound Change," published in the March issue of the journal Language, documents Philadelphia's changing accent through an analysis of speech patterns of city residents spanning more than a century. The study is co-authored by William Labov, professor of linguistics and director of Penn's Linguistics Laboratory; Josef Fruehwald, a doctoral candidate in linguistics and Ingrid Rosenfelder, who worked on the National Science Foundation supported study as a postdoctoral student at Penn. The team developed new computational methods to research how Philadelphian's pronounce vowels and applied the computations to years of language data, which Labov's students first began collecting in 1973. "This is a breathtaking view of language change over a long period of time," Labov says. Approximately 1,000 people were involved in the study with 380 analyzed so far. Nearly a million measurements show that two-thirds of the Philadelphia vowels are in the process of change. In one instance, the vowel used in the word "ate" has steadily moved closer to the vowel of "eat," as shown by the speaker's date of birth from 1888 to 1992. This results in the word "day" pronounced "dee" as in "Sundee" rather than Sunday. The change in progress affects equally people of all educational levels, both men and women. "A 'snake' in the grass becomes a 'sneak' in the grass as the long vowel 'a' is pronounced with the speaker's jaw in a higher position," Labov says. The vowel of "out" and "down" has reversed direction, after moving toward a distinctively different Philadelphia sound for the first half of the century. For those born in the '50s and later, this vowel moved progressively back towards its position in 1900. In the earlier period, many Philadelphia features resembled those found in Southern dialects, and these are the changes that have reversed direction. Those that have not are movements towards patterns heard in the Northern dialects of western New England, New York state and the Great Lakes Region. The "Northernization" of the Philadelphia region is related to other findings on the direction of linguistic change in North America. The full study is available at http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/language....