top | item 27067272 (no title) intergalplan | 4 years ago t͡ʃ, t͡ɕ, ʈ͡ʂ all sound so close to my poor ear that I'd struggle to articulate the difference. They sound like exactly the same thing at slightly different speeds. discuss order hn newest timothyg|4 years ago The latter two are distinguished in Mandarin Chinese, the difference between ‘q’ and ‘ch’ in Pinyin. thaumasiotes|4 years ago Note that that isn't the only difference between the Mandarin sounds. Pinyin "q" is also a laminal consonant, not an apical one. lainga|4 years ago well 't' specifically... it doesn't sound like I'd say it. almost like the tongue's not being puffed forward hard enough.
timothyg|4 years ago The latter two are distinguished in Mandarin Chinese, the difference between ‘q’ and ‘ch’ in Pinyin. thaumasiotes|4 years ago Note that that isn't the only difference between the Mandarin sounds. Pinyin "q" is also a laminal consonant, not an apical one.
thaumasiotes|4 years ago Note that that isn't the only difference between the Mandarin sounds. Pinyin "q" is also a laminal consonant, not an apical one.
lainga|4 years ago well 't' specifically... it doesn't sound like I'd say it. almost like the tongue's not being puffed forward hard enough.
timothyg|4 years ago
thaumasiotes|4 years ago
lainga|4 years ago