You're from Australia and you won't understand. You need to spend a week in America or Canada.
Until then, toodles. XOXXO
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I'm only trying to help non-English speakers because that's how we speak in North America and everybody knows that American English is the way to go!
Virtually every song and film I've watched is from the USA and personally many Americans have spoken to me before like. The accent is not unknown to me. And the spelling of words does not solely depend on its pronunciation. The eff are you talking about.
Come on, ks, do you really always pronounce the H in "him", "her" and "he"? Do you always enunciate the article "a" as in "Ay", or the article "an" as if it rhymed with "fan"?
Virtually every song and film I've watched is from the USA and personally many Americans have spoken to me before like. The accent is not unknown to me. And the spelling of words does not solely depend on its pronunciation. The eff are you talking about.
Bye. You need help.
Quote:
Originally posted by TheRoofInhabitant
You're acting as if Australians were some illiterate tribe or something, they do contract the pronunciation of some words like all English speakers.
Come on, ks, do you really always pronounce the H in "him", "her" and "he"? Do you always enunciate the article "a" as in "Ay", or the article "an" as if it rhymed with "fan"?
Of course not, ks_dollar is the only Australian that gets on my nerve. He's reaching for the stars.
Really? It's never sounded like that to me
As Shakira Stan suggested do you really pronounce the h in "Tell him"?
For me, it depends on the context. I'm more likely to say "can you tell'er to hurry?" rather than "can you tell HER to hurry?". If it's "his car's damaged", then I'd pronounce the H.