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> I wish someone had taken into account that "th" sounds are very
> beautiful.
Matter of opinion. For me it sounds like spitting and I don't like to be spat on ;)
--
Ecce Jezuch
"How can I respect your crime
When all you criminals whine?" - P. Keenan
-----------------------------------------
Oblicz, ile kredytu dostanie Twoja firma!
http://linkint.pl/f2989
Castilian Spanish has a phoneme /θ/ which is written "z" or, before "e"
or "i", "c". Andalusian and American Spanishes have merged this phoneme
with /s/, though it is still distinct in morphology, in particular the "zc"
alterations of some 2nd and 3rd conjugation verbs. [ð] occurs in Spanish as
an allophone of /d/, and maybe in Castilian of /θ/ (both "z" nor "s" have
voiced allophones, but I've never been in Castile to hear how they pronounce,
e.g., "liderazgo" versus "liderad go...").
Some Hebrew dialects have [θ] and [ð] as morpho-allophones of /t/ and /d/,
distinguished in writing by the lack of a dagesh. Ashkenazis pronounce this
allophone as [s], saying e.g. "Shabbos".
Pierre
--
.i toljundi do .ibabo mi'afra tu'a do
.ibabo damba do .ibabo do jinga
.icu'u la ma'atman.