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This Is Hard To Prounounce


actiondell4

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I am learning thai and learnt the Thai words for "to work" ,which is "tam ngaan ".

I cannot get the "ngaan " word,its very difficult,i keep on saying naan which my thai tutor says means "long time",instead of "NGAAN,prounounced with a "G" sound.

I just cannot prounounce the "ngaan" word correctly,does anyone else have this problem.

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Yes many of us have the same problem with this and other words where one letter is silent.

All native English speakers struggle with the syllable initial /ng/ consonant. There is no silent letter here, this is a recognized consonant which shows up in English as a final consonant but is written with two letters in the Roman alphabet as are other consonants such as /th/ or/sh/. (English uses some 28 consonants using a alphabet with only 20 some consonant characters) But with practice, slowly removing the first half of a short English syllable with the /ng/ ending (sing, bang, bong, etc) you will get the hang of it. It took me almost a year to get it to come out without feeling that I was choking.

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I don't know if this works for everybody, but I've always said the word 'lasagne' as "leh-sawn-nguh", and it's the only word I can think of in English where I use the "ng" sound to begin a syllable--try saying the final syllable, "nguh" by itself. That's the sound you're looking for in "งาน/ngaan".

Another method that might work is to say a word like "sing" or "song" as recommended above, but "freeze" your mouth on the last part of the word--stop at the "ng", and don't let your tongue go anywhere. Now try and say a vowel sound, like "aa", starting with your tongue where it was at the end of "sing" or "song". The sound that comes out should sound like "ngaa"--now just add an "n" and you've got "ngaan". Practice until you can get your tongue in the right position without saying a word ending in "ng" first.

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Yes many of us have the same problem with this and other words where one letter is silent.

All native English speakers struggle with the syllable initial /ng/ consonant. There is no silent letter here, this is a recognized consonant which shows up in English as a final consonant but is written with two letters in the Roman alphabet as are other consonants such as /th/ or/sh/. (English uses some 28 consonants using a alphabet with only 20 some consonant characters) But with practice, slowly removing the first half of a short English syllable with the /ng/ ending (sing, bang, bong, etc) you will get the hang of it. It took me almost a year to get it to come out without feeling that I was choking.

I wouldn't say all native English speakers struggle with it. It's actually quite easy for some.

But you are correct that there is no silent letter.

As for pronunciation tips: don't think of it as "n" + "g". It is just one sound "ng". You close the back of your throat, the same as when you make a "k" or "g" sound, but it's a nasalized vibration.

Edited by LazyYogi
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