Thanks Stuart Jay, this is incredibly helpful, I’ve been working on Thai vowels a lot recently - far from perfect but making progress - this video helps a lot.
@Henry-rb4zp2 ай бұрын
Man! These tools are amazing! Really, thank you for sharing them.
@lroc62722 ай бұрын
Thanks
@chuckmaceanruig2 ай бұрын
I wish that I had learned this before I tried to learn Tamil. 🤦🏻♂️ An excellent lesson! Thank you, kru. 🙏🏻
@wowwatchth77822 ай бұрын
ยอดผู้ติดตามขึ้นนะคะ 😊 ยินดีด้วย 🎉
@napoleonfeanor2 ай бұрын
I like it when scripts are made in a manner corresponding to similarities in sounds. Korean Hangul is very good in this. However, in case of vowels, I think they look a bit too similar (a line with one or two short lines sticking out). I should really also look deeper into the Indian derived scripts,too.
@limonade26842 ай бұрын
I wish I had a button with a random next letter or word. Then I could try to pronounce/translate it and/or to write it. To make it more difficult, change between handwriting, font and textbooks.
@napoleonfeanor2 ай бұрын
I don't learn Thai but am interested in languages/scripts in general. I assume this issue must be especially hard for speakers of languages whose spelling of the written word has a rather low degree of being phonetic such as English and French. This means that a language has many vowel sounds that are not represented by a letter and letters representing different vowel sounds in different words. I know, this can be historicalky explained in English but I just say learning to write that way makes things somewhat harder (but maybe improves memorisation skills... I wonder if there is a study about this). Among major European languages, German is probably the one with a bigger degree of being phonetic (but still far away). I use it as example because it has a way to show long vowels in writing. If a vowel is long, you usually either have two of the vowels or vowel+h. Regular o is in Bote (messenger) but in the word Boot (boat), it is long. Other languages use accents on the vowel.
@limonade26842 ай бұрын
I am German and I find no phonetic phenomenons in my language. When I hear American girls, they sound like singing and almost screaming from high to low and back. I could pronounce 20 different no's, just depending on how I want to express my mood.
@napoleonfeanor2 ай бұрын
@limonade2684 no phonetic ones? Really?
@limonade26842 ай бұрын
@@napoleonfeanor No. Like English, you express your emotions by pitch and sound, but nothing more.
@Brook.0072 ай бұрын
❤❤
@kennethbeard55532 ай бұрын
I tried to subscribe, but the process kept failing with an error message that the magic email link could not be sent.