KevinXu
Member
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2024
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Chinese
- Home Country
- China
- Current Location
- China
Hi.
According to this website, "there is very little real difference between and [j]. Both can be made with the tongue in the same position". "Essentially, [j] is simply an that is acting as a consonant instead of a vowel". "There is a similar relationship between the vowel and the consonant [w]". "A [w] is essentially an that is acting as a consonant rather a vowel."
If this is true, then how should I pronounce "yeast" and "woo"? Would it be correct if I just pronounce "yea" in "yeast" as a longer [iː] (longer than the "ea" sound in "east") and "woo" as a longer [uː] (longer than the "oo" sound in "ooze"? Thank you very much.
According to this website, "there is very little real difference between and [j]. Both can be made with the tongue in the same position". "Essentially, [j] is simply an that is acting as a consonant instead of a vowel". "There is a similar relationship between the vowel and the consonant [w]". "A [w] is essentially an that is acting as a consonant rather a vowel."
If this is true, then how should I pronounce "yeast" and "woo"? Would it be correct if I just pronounce "yea" in "yeast" as a longer [iː] (longer than the "ea" sound in "east") and "woo" as a longer [uː] (longer than the "oo" sound in "ooze"? Thank you very much.
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