Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Tati
Enseignant professionnelสัญญา pronunciation
Are ญญ pronounced as N + Y when put together? Like รร are pronounced as AN?
Any other examples of double letter that are pronounced diffrently?
21 mars 2015 16:46
Réponses · 6
1
The way to pronounce สัญญา correctly is Sanya (สัน-ยา) and the words that have รร at the end, are pronounced as -un or -an such as บรรณารักษ์ (librarian) the pronounce will be bun-na-rak.
Apart from ญญ and รร, the words that have ณ, ล, ฬ at the end are pronounced as N as well. However, the pronounciation is still depends on the vowels of that word too. Such as ทหาร (ta-harn), ปลาวาฬ (pla-warn), ใบตาล (bai-tarn), สัญญาณ (sun-yarn). These words have -า as a vowel so the pronounciation will be -arn not -un/-an
ถ้ามีข้อสงสัยอะไรเพิ่มเติม สามารถถามได้นะค่ะ :)
22 mars 2015
Thank you!
19 juin 2015
For รร (such as in บรรพชา or กรรณ), I think you may call it double letter. In this case, รร works as a vowel.
But for ญญ in สัญญา, I think you should look at them separately. The first ญ works as an ending consonant and sounds like "n" in English; while the second ญ is an initial consonant, so its sounds is equal to "y" in English. It actually has nothing to do with 2 ญs being together. In a normal case, when being alone, ญ as an ending consonant always pronounces as "n" (e.g. จรัญ, อาสัญ); and ญ as an initial consonant always pronounces as "y" (e.g. ญาติ, ญัตติ)
However, there are times that only one ญ has 2 roles: both ending (for the previous syllable) and initial (for the next syllable). In those cases, it pronounces as "n" then "y", such as อัญมณี
17 juin 2015
สัญญา Sun-Ya
สังสรรค์ Sung-Sun
บรรทุก Bun-Tuk
กรรไกร Gun-Grai
***** _ัญ &_รร same sound
2 avril 2015
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !
Tati
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais, Français, Russe, Espagnol, Turc
Langue étudiée
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais, Français, Espagnol, Turc
Articles qui pourraient te plaire

Santa, St. Nicholas, or Father Christmas? How Christmas Varies Across English-Speaking Countries
3 j'aime · 0 Commentaires

Reflecting on Your Progress: Year-End Language Journal Prompts
2 j'aime · 1 Commentaires

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
25 j'aime · 17 Commentaires
Plus d'articles
