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Anna B
مُعلم محترف
🎧 You've heard "Wouldja?" and "Didja?" in movies and probably assumed it was casual slang. It isn't. It's a pronunciation feature called palatalization — a type of assimilation that happens when a word ends in /d/, /t/, /s/, or /z/ and the next word begins with you or your. When those sounds collide with /y/, they blend into a new sound. Your mouth takes a shortcut. Listen: Would you... → "Wouldja" (the j sound in judge) Don't you... → "Doncha" (the ch sound in chair) What's your... → "Whatcher" (same ch sound) Miss you → "Mish-you" (the sh sound in shoe) This is why phrases with you and your often sound nothing like their spelling. Once you hear it, you can't unhear it. And once you can hear it, natural English gets much easier to follow.
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٣ يونيو ٢٠٢٦ ٠٨:٣٧

لا تفوّت فرصة تعلّم لغة جديدة وأنت مرتاح في منزلك. تصفّح مجموعتنا المختارة من مدرّسي اللغات ذوي الخبرة وسجّل في درسك الأول الآن!