Dear all,
Are there words in English that begins with the /ʒ/ sound? All I have found is /dʒ/ sound, and it seems to me that there is no /ʒ/ at the begining.
I will be waiting for your reply.
Thanks a lot.
genre can be pronounced with /ʒ/
Last edited by nyota; 07-Mar-2011 at 15:43.
I am not a teacher.
English has some French words and terms in it that have retained their French pronunciation to some extent. "Mot juste" is one, and the "juste" starts that way. Zsa Zsa Gabor, too. I can't think of any regular English word that begins with that sound.
From French we also have "au jus".
It depends what you mean by 'English word'. We've already had 'genre'. (I know that's French, but where do you draw the line? If you define 'regular' as 'conforming to the rules' [regula = 'rule] then what...? But it remains true that if you did a Wug test - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia with nonsense words starting with a g or a j you'd never hear a /ð/ - or at least very rarely {if the nonsense word looked as though it might be foreign})
b
'Fully anglicized' works for me
b
hey! I've got a question. few weeks ago I had had a test in English phonetics and phonology, I was asked about "ʒ" distibution and had no idea what to say, I tried to find some info on Internet but I failed and haven't found anything. :(
is it
Free variation
Complementary distribution
Contrastive distribution
and why
(I continued researching, found this ;)