1Likes -
Re: Plural th
Both are correct according to OED:
swath |swɑθ|(also swathe ||)
noun ( pl. swaths || or swathes |swāT͟Hz| )
By the way, I found this cool site with pronunciations:
Pronunciation of swathes - how to pronounce swathes correctly.
I still find it a bit hard to produce the 'ths' sound, if someone could offer some tips I would appreciate it.
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Re: Plural th

Originally Posted by
fivejedjon
You are over-generalising. Most of us native speakers in the
TEFL world who are professional teachers teach the natural pronunciation of words.The
LPD, which gives commonly accepted forms gives, as I do, /mʌnθs/ - with /mʌn(t)s/ as an alternative. the
EPD gives only /mʌn
tθs/.
There is no evidence for your claim
: "You don't hear voiceless th at all, unless you wanna sound foreign or sound academic".
Dictionaries, dictionaries, dictionaries, dictionaries. There is a guy from your country, who has a lot to say about dictionaries and citation forms. And he is Claudefield, and his work
"Streaming Speech: Listening and Pronunciation for Advanced Learners of English" says a lot!
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Re: Plural th

Originally Posted by
raindoctor
Dictionaries, dictionaries, dictionaries, dictionaries. There is a guy from your country, who has a lot to say about dictionaries and citation forms. And he is Claudefield, and his work
"Streaming Speech: Listening and Pronunciation for Advanced Learners of English" says a lot!
What about dictionaries?
The only reference I can find to "Streaming Speech: Listening and Pronunciation for Advanced Learners of English" is by Richard Thomas Caudwell, not Claudefield. Is that who you meant?
It is not very helpful to those of us who do not possess this book to be told that it 'says a lot'. Can you give an idea of some of the main points he makes, if they are relevant to this discussion?
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Re: Plural th
This must be a very high level discussion because I don't know what's going on here lol.
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Re: Plural th

Originally Posted by
pizza
I still find it a bit hard to produce the 'ths' sound, if someone could offer some tips I would appreciate it.
Can you try to describe how you say it, or record it?
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Re: Plural th
@Tdol Thanks for the suggestion, I will when I get back from work.
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Re: Plural th

Originally Posted by
pizza
This must be a very high level discussion because I don't know what's going on here lol.
Sorry if the 'high-level' discussion confused you. If you can record your version we will try to help you, as Tdol said.
In the meantime, pronouncing months as munts, clothes as close (the verb) and swathes as sways will be very close to the way many British speakers produce the words in normal conversation.
Many speakers even pronounce five sixths in normal conversation as though it were spelt simply five six.
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Re: Plural th
Well if I can add something to the high level discussion, I would say you can't rely in just one single dictionary. Use them all, Cambridge, Longman, Merriam-Webster, Oxford. Not only is enlightening reading different definitions of the same thing but you get a second and a third opinion on pronunciation which is always cool.
Here is my recording of:
Month, months.
Swath, swathes.
Cloth, Clothes.
Download th.mp3 from Sendspace.com - send big files the easy way
By the way I noticed that pronouncing an | ā | in swathes instead of an | ä | makes it a little bit easier, but I had already recorded and uploaded it the way suggested by OED which is what I would have guessed anyway.
Thanks.
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Re: Plural th

Originally Posted by
pizza
Sorry, pizza, but I could not get that loud enough for me to hear clearly. If you wait a little, someone with sharper hearing will soon turn up.
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Re: Plural th
By the way, a couple of English teachers friends told me that they remove the th when pronouncing ths, or put another way, ths becomes z.
Therefore, clothes becomes an homophone of close (as in close the door not as in near which has an unvoiced s).
To make matters clear:
(1) close: a short distance away /kloʊs/
(2) close: cover an opening /kloʊz/
According to my friends mentioned above, clothes is pronounced just like (2), incidentally, all /ths/ become /z/ so:
months /mənz/
swath /swɑz/ or /sweɪz/
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