On the other hand,homographs are words that are spelled the same but have different pronunciations. Think about the verbread. The infinitive is pronounced /rEEd/ (with a long e), but the past tense and the past participle are pronounced /red/, like the color red. They are written in th...
百度试题 结果1 题目13. The dictionaries show that some English words have more than one pronunciation (pronounce). 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 答案见上字典表明一些英语单词有多于一种的发音。根据句意,故填名词pronunciation 反馈 收藏
百度试题 题目 Many function words in English have two pronunciations: a strong form and a weak form.英语中许多功能词有两种不同发音:强读式和弱读式。 A.正确B.错误 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 A 反馈 收藏
1【题目】Many English words have more than one __, suchas "either", "tomato", and "read".A. pronunciationB. cosatomC.instrumentD.community 2【题目】Many English words have more than one, such as either", “tomato", “read.A.pronunciation B.conversation C.instrumentD.community 3.Man...
百度试题 结果1 题目1. As we know, some English words have two different pronunciations(pronounce) . 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 答案见上 反馈 收藏
Many function words in English have two pronunciations: a strong form and a weak form. 英语中许多功能词有两种不同发音:强读式和弱读式。 A、正确 B、错误 点击查看答案&解析
Words with unusual spellings or pronunciations Silent letters and unusual letter combinations Irregular verb forms Words with multiple meanings Ambiguous words Homonyms and homophones Examples of homonyms: Examples of homophones: Commonly misused hard words Hard-to-spell words Hard English words to pronou...
百度试题 结果1 题目4. Many English words have more than one pronunciation_( ). 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 答案见上 反馈 收藏
Multi-meaning words have the same pronunciation with different meanings. For example, let’s look at the word “ball”. You could have a “ball” which means you would have a good time. You could toss a “ball” which means you throw an object. You could be on the “ball” which me...
Just as in English, the spellings have been fixed for a long time, and have not changed with the language’s pronunciation. As for why French speakers stopped pronouncing those final consonants in so many words, that’s a question for the historical linguists. In case you’re curious, thou...