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AIQ
AIQ
03:21
Holy fuck being me is tough ...
 
11 hours later…
14:01
Hello everyone. I am alive and back. I am extremely sorry for my inactivity though I had said I would be actively participating here during vacations.
I was taking a much needed break after my assignments and stuff were all completed and submitted after my finals. Looking at the computer screen for five whole months are extremely tiring and truly unhealthy. But there was no other way.
So I threw away my laptop (not literally) in my picnic basket for three whole weeks and read some books. Peace. But at last I am back here. Looks like I missed too much fun.
@Void I saw a question you edited half an hour ago. In your explanation you have written that assume is pronounced either as 'a-shoom' or 'a-soom'. But when I hear the pronunciation on Google, it sounds like 'a-syum' to me. Is it correct? Or am I hearing wrong?
14:32
@DhanishthaGhosh: TL;DR: You're absolutely right! But the pronunciation in Google's dictionary is a 'careful' pronunciation.
Long version: In most American accents, 'assume' is pronounced a-soom, without the medial glide (the Y after the S), it's because the cluster 'SY' has been reduced in those accents. .....
You'll also hear STOOPID in those accents. I had never heard 'assume' pronounced ASOOM until recently, and it caught me off guard.
In British accents, however, the cluster -SY- still exists and Assume is pronounced with a medial Y; AS-YOOM (that's what you're hearing on Google). In rapid/casual speech (some prescriptivists call it 'sloppy speech), there's a tendency to 'merge/assimilate' nearby sounds. (assimilate: ... see one of my recent answers, the on about the pronunciation of 'posthumous')
The S sound is articulated (produced) at the ridge behind your top teeth (say ssss and feel the blade of your tongue), the Y is articulated further back in the mouth i.e. at the hard palate (the region behind the ridge). So when a Y comes after an S, the S anticipates it and changes its place of articulation to the palate
i.e. it's articulated further back in the mouth in anticipation of the following Y
@Void A careful pronunciation means something did in a very calculative and sophisticated manner?
You could say that
Dictionaries are mainly for learners, so they try to pronounce words very carefully
@Void Aha, I see. I don't know why, but being an Indian I took up words mostly belonging to British English, I mostly (if not always) write British English spellings, when I believe there is more of American English influence nowadays.
@Void That sounds complicated to me. I will stick to my pronunciation of the one I picked up and learned, which to say, is the Google one actually. XD
lol
That's perfectly fine
victory symbol; I really am lazy to copy paste the emoji from Google
14:43
(But don't pronounce it ASOOM 😅)
joking
tears of joy
😂
ah
I'll brb
So what have you been up to? I saw you modifying the pronunciation tagged questions.
I am sure you have marked that tag as highly important XD
It is really good to have someone or know someone this good at pronunciation related stuff.
15:04
Lol... that's true.
Also, I'm the first member to have received the silver pronunciation tag badge
Check it on my profile
Next goal is gold tag badge
also, there are loads of duplicates of the same question, so I'm close voting them
@Void I already saw that. It is extremely nice and you are a worthy and deserving person to receive it.
@Void Oh, I see.
thanks :))
By the way, I was willing to ask you where did you actually share the links of your answers, I mean the whole post naturally? Twitter?
You got two Publicist badges.
Reddit
I'd also posted a link to this answer but it didn't attract visitors
Nice. I am not a Reddit user otherwise I would have contributed to visiting it, again. Because I have already visited those questions at least thrice.
15:16
🤣
@Void Not being rude, but I could not decipher anything from this answer, partially because I was sleepy that day when I first saw it (at four up-votes state) and partially because it contains too much old English, incomprehensible for a poor fellow like me.
Again, I don't mean to disrespect you. It is just my views why it didn't attract too much attention.
lol
I understand that... I love feedback/criticism!
so I know what my answers are lacking
you're (anyone is) welcome to give me feedback about my answers
There is not much to give, as it is to take knowledge from your answers.
15:31
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, bad keyword with email in answer, email in answer, messaging number in answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (341): Is there any difference between "take the initiative" and "show initiative"? by annonymuos on ell.SE
 
5 hours later…
20:02
@AIQ What's wrong?
@DhanishthaGhosh Welcome back!
20:19
@EddieKal Thank you Eddie. I hope you aren't disappointed by my behaviour. I really missed ELL when I was at break.
[ SmokeDetector | MS ] Bad keyword in answer, link at beginning of answer, potentially bad keyword in answer (121): kind of sport vs sport by jojo jojo on ell.SE
20:37
@DhanishthaGhosh Lol, nah, of course not. Everybody here is volunteering their time. And everybody needs some time away from ELL or SE once in a while. I myself am taking some time off some other sites that I used to frequent.
Big thanks to everybody here for contributing!
20:55
@EddieKal Count my vote for this!
AIQ
AIQ
@EddieKal Too many pretty girls around me that's what's wrong ...
God damn
The temptation is real ...

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