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- pronunciation - How is æ supposed to be pronounced? - English . . .
As I said, you have to distinguish English spelling from pronunciation There's no difference between the letters"ae" together and the "æ" ligature; and there's no rule for how to pronounce them, either -- every word is different The words encyclopædia, encyclopedia, and encyclopaedia are all pronounced the same, however you pronounce them I pronounce that vowel as i , myself
- When do I use æ? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
It is an ancient grapheme sometimes used in literary historical contexts I don’t think you will need to use it in current common language Æ (minuscule: æ) is a grapheme named æsc or ash,*** formed from the letters a and e, originally a ligature representing the Latin diphthong ae In English æ is often eschewed in favour of the digraph ae Usage experts often consider that incorrect
- How is Æ pronounced at the beginning of a word? Or is that simply a . . .
To expand on your first bullet point a bit, <ae> is pronounced various ways because of the long history of pronunciations for Latin It corresponds to Old Latin <ai>, which was almost certainly something like [aj], [ai] or [aɪ]; however, this ended up changing to the monophthong [ɛː] eventually, and the use of the spelling <ae> in the Classical period suggests that an intermediate step in
- Interweaving A and E (e. g. , æ) in written words
2 In English, the ae ligature (Æ æ) is simply a typographic variant of ae, and generally does not signal anything different about pronunciation vs the separate letters; in American usage, words that use ae (or, historically, æ) are often (but not always) respelled to use e instead of ae See Wikipedia on Æ
- When is the old english letter Æ æ modernised to A, E and AE?
In both cases the grapheme Æ æ developed from an original sequence of the letters a and e, ae, but in Old English this was considered its own letter (unlike in Latin)
- meaning - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
The meaning of almost everywhere according to Wolfram Math World: A property of x is said to hold almost everywhere if the set of points in x where this property fails is contained in a set that has measure zero
- phonetics - What is the difference between a and æ ? - English . . .
I listened to google's pronunciation (add) and I must conclude that the sound is faithful to the transcription: this a is an allophone of the French a (meaning "very similar" to it) One problem is the lack of reference to any accent (Is that international English? I don't know )
- How does one pronounce words ending in “‑ae”?
Usually words ending in -ae are the plural form form of a word ending in -a, e g puella - girl puellae - girls Italian, the modern day successor or Latin is using -a and -e for female singular and plural: ragazza - girl ragazze - girls But you can clearly see that the pronunciation -e is closer to -ae than -ay
- pronunciation - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
Honestly, I wouldn't worry too much about it It's exceedingly rare for those learning a second language later in life to achieve native-like pronunciation Yet people still get along just fine Probably not worth the untold hours of practice it would require
- Does the casual use of a la ___ in English preserve the French meaning?
Very interesting question! Maybe worth noting that in French it’s ‘à la…’ (with a grave accent on the ‘a’), and even in the English casual use the accent is quite often retained
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