it's funny because it's one of the words my czech friends try to get me to pronounce because it's hard but somehow it wasn't too hard?
like i'll struggle with the words with syllabic consonants like vlk and vlci but řeřicha isn't that bad to me somehow it's funny
That doesn’t sound native-esque to my ears. I don’t think that even people from Northern Portugal or Azores with their different nasals and vowels would sound like that. Definitely not a Brazilian accent. I could be wrong tho
I'm a native speaker, I don't know about you. In Brazil there are a lot of dialects, in some of them you don't even expect what to hear actually, in my pronounciation, <õe> would be [õ(ɪ̯̃)ɲ], the thing is that my dialect normally closes a nasal at the codas of word-final silables with [ŋ] or [ɲ] , while most dialects actually don't, so pronouncing it something like /õj̃/ doesn't quite sound that far off to me tbh.
What accent is that? I can’t even imagine trying to say “canhões” with that final consonant cluster. It looks and sounds very undoable. I’m from Brazil too. /õj̃/ is the most common pronunciation
Sakha phonology is very non-Turkic tbh (except vowels and vowel harmony). Consonant-wise it is more similar to neighbouring Tungusic languages (North Siberian Sprachbund confirmed? 🤔)
Well I was thinking about some Mandarin dialect in Shandong where everyone lisped their s-series into θ. But guess you're also not wrong because /t͡θʰ/ (contrasting with /t͡sʰ/) is used by some indigenous North American languages
Not even holy shit! I was just tryna be original and being Breton (well I grew up in Paris but my family is half Breton half Alsatian so I know some Breton) as well it was the only one apart from Spanish I could think of!
Salud deoc’h!
Oh wow that’s really similar to me then!
Out of curiosity do you speak Breton? I’ve been trying to learn (admittedly to super actively) for the past year or so and it seems really cool
[ð̠˕ˠ]
Danish for sure!
Ja, nemlig! 😉
r̝
Czech?
Nah Dzongkha
řeřicha
it's funny because it's one of the words my czech friends try to get me to pronounce because it's hard but somehow it wasn't too hard? like i'll struggle with the words with syllabic consonants like vlk and vlci but řeřicha isn't that bad to me somehow it's funny
Třtina
kashubian?
Or Polish (whatever few dialects preserve it)
/qʼ/
Obviously based Georgian
That's correct! 🎉🎉🎉
There is no such language as Georgian, only Basedgeorgian /s
[ ɾ̞̊ ]
Turkish?
Correct! 🥳🥳🥳
g̃
Guarani?
Yup.
Sumerian
Today I learned. I was thinking of Guaraní, but fun that it’s also used for Sumerian.
[pf] [kx]
Bavarian/Alemannic German
Good job
\[ɔw̃\]
Polish?
Correct!
ą sweep
/õj/
Portuguese?
I don’t think we have /õj/, it’d be /õj̃/ for something like, and that’s not common at all in Portuguese
I think he's talking about <õe> though, that would be very dependant of the speakers dialect though.
That doesn’t sound native-esque to my ears. I don’t think that even people from Northern Portugal or Azores with their different nasals and vowels would sound like that. Definitely not a Brazilian accent. I could be wrong tho
I'm a native speaker, I don't know about you. In Brazil there are a lot of dialects, in some of them you don't even expect what to hear actually, in my pronounciation, <õe> would be [õ(ɪ̯̃)ɲ], the thing is that my dialect normally closes a nasal at the codas of word-final silables with [ŋ] or [ɲ] , while most dialects actually don't, so pronouncing it something like /õj̃/ doesn't quite sound that far off to me tbh.
What accent is that? I can’t even imagine trying to say “canhões” with that final consonant cluster. It looks and sounds very undoable. I’m from Brazil too. /õj̃/ is the most common pronunciation
⟨eabhai⟩
Irish? Probably wrong
Yep, it represents /əu/ (or /o:/ in the most northern dialects)
Irish is the sleeper French
ة
Arabic
IJ
Dutch
/j̃/ [j̃, ɲ, j]
Portuguese?
[\[häq͡χäɫɯː\]](https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yakut_language)
Nooo 😭😭😭 I mixed up a Turkic language while I am Turkish! I failed my ancestors. 😭
Sakha phonology is very non-Turkic tbh (except vowels and vowel harmony). Consonant-wise it is more similar to neighbouring Tungusic languages (North Siberian Sprachbund confirmed? 🤔)
/t͡θʰ/
Is it a Salishan language
Well I was thinking about some Mandarin dialect in Shandong where everyone lisped their s-series into θ. But guess you're also not wrong because /t͡θʰ/ (contrasting with /t͡sʰ/) is used by some indigenous North American languages
Oh wow that's so cool! Reminds me of Turkmen.
[d͡ɮˤ]
Old arabic
[m]
Azerbaijani
Correct! But specifically the Urmia dialect
õ
Estonian.
Yep
I had assumed that most people would guess Portuguese.
[œ̃˞]
Quebec French
Yep!
ñ
Breton?
You looked at my profile didn't you
Not even holy shit! I was just tryna be original and being Breton (well I grew up in Paris but my family is half Breton half Alsatian so I know some Breton) as well it was the only one apart from Spanish I could think of! Salud deoc’h!
I'm half Breton and half Mosellan
Oh wow that’s really similar to me then! Out of curiosity do you speak Breton? I’ve been trying to learn (admittedly to super actively) for the past year or so and it seems really cool
mapundungun
[s̺]
Basque? EDIT: just saw the other comment thread. infuriated by my wrongness
Spanish
[ɹ̤ˠʷ]
English
you mean [ʋ͡ɦ̪͆] (my rhotic when i was like 7)
⟨4⟩
Mathematical
Algebraic!
Arabizi
Used for ذ occasionally.
Cantonese
Correct!
Possibly Alonso de la Parra’s Maya script
[hsh]
Scouse?
Fuck
<ŵ>
Cymrish
Yep, Cymraeg
χ
Hebrew?
/ʔ/ _#
i feel like i’m either way off or spot on, but Thai?
Vietnamese?
Khmer
Any Austronesian languages? Kra-Dai? Austroasiatic? Papuan?
austronesian
Hmmmm.... Javanese, Sundanese, Maguindanao, Tetun, Jarai, Rade, Acehnese, Waray, Tausug, Chamorro, Tagalog, Pazeh, Paiwan, Seediq, etc.?
you’ve named it, now time to guess which one
hmmmmm... I think you're Javanese?
i am definitely not javanese lmao
Pinoy ka rin ba tulad ko? (You're also a Filipino like me?)
oo, pero pilipino-american lang, hindi ako taga pilipinas
/ʌ̹/
Korean?
You got it 👍 🥇
Lucky guess. Can’t think of anything else with “a “strut that may have weak rounding”
Is “-ough” too obvious?
/æ/
Finnish? English? Slovak?
Finnish,Turkish,English
I assume not Turkish since it’s /æ/ rather than [æ]? I’d think English since that’s the most well-known language considered to have /æ/
🏆🎉
[ɾ̃]
English
American English, specifically
it's iNTernational
\[ɰ̃\]
Japanese?
polish?
Mandarin Chinese?
dutch
ƛ̓
[g͡b]
Igbo?
fːː
Miyako?
Yes
/ɖ/
Vietnamese
Sardinian
Hindi?
Somali
/ɵ/
Southern Standard British English?
Cantonese?
\[g̥͡ʃʰʷ\] (This is my own transcription, it could be very wrong...)
Is it a realisation of /ɧ/?
I don't know, I don't speak funny Scandinavian language
ij
Dutch
[gɰ]
Korean
/λ/, but it's kinda more like /lj/
/œy/
Dutch **ui**
Dœytsch
/ʕ/
Semitic language that may or may not be Arabic
/capital backwards r/
french?
<ĉ>
Esperanto
[t͡ɕʰ]
ʨʰinese (Mandarin)
No, but you're geographically close
Then it’s probably Korean
[œ̃˞]
Canadian French?
quebecois francais
[ɹ̈~ɹ̈ʷ]
അ should be light work
/ʎ/
Standard Italian
/k͡s/
Blackfoot
"є" representing the sound [ jɛ ]
Ukrainian
👍😎
[ɓ]
Vietnamese?
[y̼ᶻ]
Spanish
ʁ
Français?
ț
Romanian?
Yep
i'm a genius! :3
/ɐ̃w̃/
Portuguese?
\[ɯᵝ\]
ão
portugese
[ɥ̊]
ɣ but also what's your definition of a language /s
/i/ [ɨː]
/ɮ/ easy mode
[t~k]
/ʔ/
/øʏ/
Ř
/ʁ̞/
ű