Made this song on the fly. Enjoy.
Moderator: Community Team
DaGip wrote:Made this song on the fly. Enjoy.
DaGip wrote:Made this song on the fly. Enjoy.
kuthoer wrote:DaGip wrote:Made this song on the fly. Enjoy.
Don't give up your day job.
Did you have to agree to buy premium to get unbanned?DaGip wrote:Jesus, I was drunk! The admin decided to unban me last night when I was really lit!
notyou2 wrote:Did you have to agree to buy premium to get unbanned?DaGip wrote:Jesus, I was drunk! The admin decided to unban me last night when I was really lit!
Army of GOD wrote:Do you guys say it "mul-tie" or "mul-tee"?
I've always said it multee.
Army of GOD wrote:Do you guys say it "mul-tie" or "mul-tee"?
I've always said it multee.
Army of GOD wrote:Do you guys say it "mul-tie" or "mul-tee"?
I've always said it multee.
Dukasaur wrote:Army of GOD wrote:Do you guys say it "mul-tie" or "mul-tee"?
I've always said it multee.
Mul-tie if the next vowel to follow is a short vowel, as in multi-billion dollar lawsuit.
Mul-tee if the next vowel to follow is a long vowel as in multi-lane highway.
The Latin /ī/ was pronounced in Middle English as long /i:/ (as in Modern English seen), but the Great Vowel Shift (GVS), which turned Middle into Modern English, moved all the ME long vowels up a step on the vowel chart.
That meant that words like mice and house (/mi:s/ and /hu:s/ in ME), which were already at the top of the chart, couldn't go any further. So, to make room for ME /e:/ and /o:/ (as in seen and soon) at the top, they fell off and became diphthongs. In particular, ME high front /i:/ became ModE /ai/ , while ME high back /u:/ became ModE /au/.
Which is why mice and house are now pronounced /mais/ and /haus/. This means that multi- can be pronounced as in Latin or Middle English as /ˈməlti-/, or in post-GVS fashion as /ˈməltai-/.
http://english.stackexchange.com/questi ... nunciation
notyou2 wrote:In Canada we call it the top of the house.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users