To most of my research so far, it is the visual of speech sounds. When you look through a dictionary, you'll usually see these things under the main word you're looking for.
For example, you take a word like "Seahorse". You have the word type, and below the word type, you see some fancy looking text.
I will bold this mini dictionary bit for you to show you what we're focusing on.
Seahorse
Noun
/ˈsēhôrs/
The text in bold here is what you're looking for when you want to find the "Phonetic Transcription." Hope this helps!
You should give credit to them, yes. You can state the source from which it came from, or the author himself. I’m going to say this is true
(He burnt un’wares his wings, and cannot fly away.)
Answer:
Brainliest?
Explanation:
Besides basic fundamental knowledge within college and the understanding of the information given by a regular aspect of college systems, non-traditional students need support.
Hi there!
The answer you are looking for is: She said: "Better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall."
When she married a man that was three and a half feet tall, Klorine said better to have loved a short man than never to have loved a tall. To make her statement even more clear, she also added that the one who asked that question doesn't know the correct notation for height.
Hope this helps!