Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Church Letters Templates What 2 Letters Of The English Alphabet Should Replace The Letters "ch" As In Church Or Cherry And "w" In Word?

What 2 letters of the English alphabet should replace the letters "ch" as in church or cherry and "w" in word? - church letters templates

The English iz (is) one of the youngest in Europe, as the language. It iz the language confusing and mixed, as iz mixed with other words, many other languages. The alphabet iz not only misleading, but not completely. The letter "W" is pronounced iz az U wrong when he perceptionally double double "V". What should the letter or letters to the pronunciation of words, with W? The other letter that the defect should be phonetically iz the place, "CH" in the words of the child, chilled, etc. Since the letter "c" wrong the letter "k replaced", which iz pronounced "cow" and the letter "h "iz phonetically pronounced" eh "kuhhuh should" be pronounced ch. What new and creative or more points together gives you the correct phonemes for the beginning of the church on the floor, and cherry?

5 comments:

Abby Paige~BABY BRO DUE IN JAN!! said...

I think TJ would be the "ch" and work uh work for W, would becauze pronounzed oo-huh. Zay Zoundz quickly and "Wuh. Arise must SH JH. Yes-huh. Once again, quickly and Zay Zoundz Zortea as" sh. "Furthermore," PH "juzt must" F "and" d "," t ". Now I want to write the number thiz uzing thoze Letterz:

I think TJ uhoot uhork for "ch ant" uh uhoot uhork of W, which are pronounzet oo becauze-huh uhood. Zay zountz quickly and "Wuh be. Matured quickly Jhoot SH JH. Yes-huh. Agan, Zay and zountz Zortea as" sh ". I raise," PH "will be juzt Jhoot" f ". I Nouhen rerite paragraf uhill uzing the thiz Letterz.

He sees doeznt rite, but in this zountz Kinta.

Abby Paige~BABY BRO DUE IN JAN!! said...

I think TJ would be the "ch" and work uh work for W, would becauze pronounzed oo-huh. Zay Zoundz quickly and "Wuh. Arise must SH JH. Yes-huh. Once again, quickly and Zay Zoundz Zortea as" sh. "Furthermore," PH "juzt must" F "and" d "," t ". Now I want to write the number thiz uzing thoze Letterz:

I think TJ uhoot uhork for "ch ant" uh uhoot uhork of W, which are pronounzet oo becauze-huh uhood. Zay zountz quickly and "Wuh be. Matured quickly Jhoot SH JH. Yes-huh. Agan, Zay and zountz Zortea as" sh ". I raise," PH "will be juzt Jhoot" f ". I Nouhen rerite paragraf uhill uzing the thiz Letterz.

He sees doeznt rite, but in this zountz Kinta.

deedsall... said...

The spelling of the English language has become dangerous. In Shakespeare's time, we could write the words to more or less what I wanted, and this situation lasted until the mid-18th Century, when Samuel Johnson published his 1755 (Dictionary). This more or less fixed the spelling of English words. Unfortunately, little effort has been made to simplify the spelling, so that sound can in a number of different options and a letter that more than one sound could be represented. And the pronunciation of English has changed since the first day of Johnson, but no, the book, what the situation even worse.

However, there is nothing wrong with the letter W. It is very good, the consonants in words like 'wool', 'West', 'keyword', etc., or semi-vowel in words like "now", "some" pull " and can therefore be a good idea to get rid of him, with words that still, as "evil" that "," Chiswick, etc. "As regards the name, but alsoHistory. Until the 16th Century English used a single letter V to represent both the U "healthy" and "v", but his name was U. Thus, if the writers felt the need of a new letter to the consonants of the W, who wrote and of course, represented as VV , the "double U".

You're right about the C, however. Most of the C's could in fact be replaced by either K or S YC itself would be reserved for the sound in "church". There are quite a few that do these African languages: C, to represent it is expressed in Hausa and Fulani, for example, in Hausa, "shit" (= "Game"), "Chacha".

But then you should think about other inconsistencies, such as TH learn - not to decide "Tuh · uh" and sh is pronounced "Suh · eh" In fact, the English spelling is so irregular and inconsistent that radical reform for some time.

ganesh said...

What \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ u0026lt; w>? This is not the only letter that does not match your pronunce - for example, \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ u0026lt h> \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ u0026lt, x \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ u0026lt g>. As a consonant, which represents the bilabial approximant, and no other letter stands for the sound. I say keep it.

Grg said...

English is not confusing, I think, is one of the easiest languages to learn ...

Why do the words, if everyone simply talking to them? "
Learning another language if you want a good sound

Post a Comment