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Chthonic confesses: "Only last year did I discover why the lids of things in tubes have a recessed pointy bit built into them." Tell us about the facepalm moment when you realised you were doing something wrong.
( , Thu 15 Jul 2010, 13:23)
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While working as an EFL teacher in a language school near Bournemouth, I once had to teach a class of Thai teenagers. One of them was called Unn.
I pronounced the initial u as in put. After two weeks of teaching him, I found out that it should have been like the u in gun. And I was also told that the way I said it was the Thai word for "fart"*. And the poor kid had been too polite to correct his teacher.
*I am open to correction on this from anyone here who knows Thai.
( , Sun 18 Jul 2010, 18:34, 9 replies)
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Surely the 'u' in "put" is the same as the one in "gun"? I know there are subtle differences in the way that, for example, the two 'u's in "shut up" are pronounced -- but even then it's only a very subtle change in length and emphasis and probably not consistent across a range of speakers.
( , Sun 18 Jul 2010, 18:58, closed)
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where you're from perhaps. Definitely not the same in a proper Queen's English accent. Do you pronounce "putt" and "put" the same?
( , Sun 18 Jul 2010, 19:19, closed)
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"that thing over there" is pronounced "Tingio"
I think its Italian.
( , Mon 19 Jul 2010, 13:19, closed)
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I also use a similar, but not quite identical, sound in words like "foot".
However, since I'm trying to learn another language at present I see "put" as "puut" and "putt" as a slightly shortened version of "put" as I would pronounce it ordinarily.
(I'm a Yorkshireman who was brought up a bit posh, FWIW)
( , Mon 19 Jul 2010, 17:49, closed)
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So for me, "put" has the same vowel sound as "foot" or "would", and "gun" has the same vowel sound as "son" or "fun".
Does that help?
( , Sun 18 Jul 2010, 19:55, closed)
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in there they say about the difference between the u in put being different to the one in gun only in the south.
That's what the government say, so it must be right.
( , Sun 18 Jul 2010, 22:06, closed)
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Up here in Scotland, they are most definitely different sounds.
Unlike the 'a' sounds in bath and cat, which are identical here, but differentiated in Southern British English.
( , Mon 19 Jul 2010, 9:06, closed)
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For lots of dialects of English, including most American dialects, the 'u' in 'put' is a high rounded lax vowel but the 'u' in gun is a mid central vowel (the sound at the beginning of 'erm' for British folks). For other dialects there isn't a contrast.
I've seen descriptions of Thai that say it contrasts these two sounds and others that say it does not. Maybe, like English, it depends on the region.
( , Mon 19 Jul 2010, 1:12, closed)
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