Read This Stanza From â€å“old Ironsides.ã¢â‚¬â What Does the Word â€å“itã¢â‚¬â in the Fifth Line Refer to?
- #one
Could I get a few people to explain the deviation in pronunciation betwixt a, á, ã, â and à in Portuguese using English language comparisons (if possible)? I tin can't seem to find a thread or other Spider web site that addresses them each clearly. Thank you!
- #2
1. "á and à" are the same, but just "á" does not exist. When using only the character "a", the right is "à". The pronunciation is practically the same as "o" in "ouch".
2. "ã and a" are the same and are practically the aforementioned equally "un" in "under". When used as a letter, "a" has the same pronunciation as "à". Again, just "ã" does not exist.
iii. "â" is the same as "ã". Once again, just â" does non be.
This is the general pronunciation. It all depends on the give-and-take in question. Especially the character "a".
- #3
Examples:
Anda! - Come! or Walk! (both "a" accept the same pronunciation every bit "ã".)
Calma - Calm (start "a" = "à" and second "a" = "ã". I think that in Brazil, both are pronounced "à")
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- #iv
Examples:
Anda! - Come up! or Walk! (both "a" have the same pronunciation as "ã".)
Calma - Calm (get-go "a" = "à" and second "a" = "ã". I remember that in Brazil, both are pronounced "à")
Depende do lugar practice Brasil, na Bahia é assim mesmo como você disse eastward boa parte do Nordeste.
Mas no resto do país é [ɐ].
- #5
Á and À are an open A (like in start), while  is a closed A (like in bird). The à is simply a nasal closed A.
The IPA symbols are:
Á/À: a
Â: ɐ
Ã: ɐ̃
Ê: eastward
É: ɛ
Ô: o
Ó: ɔ
Source: https://forum.wordreference.com/threads/difference-in-pronunciation-between-a-%C3%A1-%C3%A3-%C3%A2-and-%C3%A0.2892496/
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