We also recommend that you have a stand-alone audio player application that supports WAV sound files (e.g. Windows Media Player) installed on your computer in the event that the pronunciation does not play automatically when you click on the audio icon. Most newer operating systems come bundled with an audio player. Your browser should be configured to automatically associate WAV sound files with your audio player.

No, only those entries that have pronunciations listed in the definition have audio pronunciations. Among those that do not are thesaurus entries, abbreviations, and open compounds, such as "bird dog" and "red herring," the elements of which are pronounced at the "bird," "dog," "red," and "herring" entries. Also excluded are many entry words that appear within other entries, such as "stillness" at the end of the "still" entry. Words that are spelled and pronounced the same but entered separately, such as "crane" the noun and "crane" the verb, are a special case: only the entry listed first in the results list has an audio pronunciation.


Download Audio Pronunciation Of Words


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This happens when part of the compound is already pronounced elsewhere in the dictionary. For example, at the "Grand Teton" entry "Grand" is not pronounced because it is already pronounced at the "grand" entry; "Teton" is pronounced, however, because there is no entry or pronunciation for "Teton" by itself. Similarly, at "Hohokam Pima National Monument," only the audio pronunciation "Hohokam Pima" is given, because "national" and "monument" are pronounced at their own entries.

Click on the "hear it again" link to replay the pronunciation until it no longer sounds clipped. You may have to replay the pronunciation more than once. If this doesn't help, try clicking on the "Click here to listen with your default audio player" link.

Click on the "hear it again" link to replay the pronunciation until it no longer skips. You may have to replay the pronunciation more than once. If the pronunciations skip consistently try clicking on the "Click here to listen with your default audio player" link. If they are skipping with your default audio player, you may have to change your default audio player.

I'm an online ESL teacher and I'm trying to use Notion to make (really amazing) notes for my adult students of all our lessons. I'd like to be able to include new vocabulary that came up during the lesson, with a way for students to click on/near the word and hear it pronounced. Does anyone have any suggestions for this besides individually downloading each audio file and inserting it into the page along with the vocab? I'm looking at sites like hearling.com at the moment, or finding ways to download the audio from Google translate, but would love to know if anyone has found a more elegant way to do this.

The very first verse I randomly pulled up to test it, Ezekiel 3:1 appears to have odd pronunciation. I want to work out if this is odd due to the rules of pronunciation being different to what I have taught, or if it is a mistake. In Ezekiel 3:1

Regarding the audio pronunciations: I own the Greek ones - currently available through various base packages, see the Recommendations at the righthandside of e.g. -pronunciations-dataset - and I assume Hebrew (which is available at -audio-pronunciations ) will work just the same. Thus the screenshots will sometimes show Greek where Leslie and others see additional Hebrew.

(English pronunciations of audio from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus and from the Cambridge Academic Content Dictionary, both sourcesĀ  Cambridge University Press)

The Pronunciation Database contains sound files which the user can click to listen to words in the three major dialects, namely Connacht, Ulster and Munster. The words are articulated by native speakers from the relevant dialects.

As for kanji, the Japanese sound system is very consistant, so you should be able to sound each kanji out with the hiragana provided (I usually say the readings out loud during lessons and reviews) . If you still need some help with the sounds, this syllabary chart has audio.

Your best bet, IMO, would be Oxford Dictionary of English (ODE), whose accessibility isn't as good as, say, Merriam-Webster, but its audio pronunciation feature is superb: -dictionary-of-english/id978674211

To the person who suggested this, using VO or Google Translate for pronunciation needs isn't a good idea.

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I appreciate your comment, but if I was going to do that, I wouldn't have posted the question. There are times when I want to know the british pronunciation of words or spellings. Particularly as (no offense to my American friends), but so much of the media today is produced in America, and British/Australian/NewZealand spell some words and pronounce words differently. Take Mom verses Mum for instance. Not bad, it is just how language has evolved in different areas of the world. Screen readers, majority of which are produced in America, so their pronounciations of some words may not be the way british pronounce them. Simply because American's and british have different ways of pronouncing some words, so a screen reader can only pronounce words in the way it has been programmed, so if a british programmer is coding the screen reader, words will be spelled or pronounced the way a british person would. Likewise, if An American was coding a screen reader, the words would be pronounced how Americans do. I have already tried out a couple of words with voiceover tonight after reading your comment, and I can tell you It didn't matter which voiceover language I used, all the words were pronounced the same no matter if I was using British, American, Australian, Irish, South African or indian english. Your comment wouldn't be helpful to say, a person studying linguistics or an author or a person wanting to audio record reading text for example.

You're welcome. I just noticed that Oxford English Dictionary (OED) received an update few days ago, which resulted in the app and its Definition text area becoming quite accessible and VO-friendly. Audio pronunciations have also been improved. It's the most up-to-date British English dictionary and the latest release contains the most recent Oxford 2021 updates, but is subscription-based -- around $19 per year I think.

Oh, one last thing! I've noticed a difference between using Amazon Polly and how Storyline uses it. For whatever reason, words sometimes are pronounced differently - it might be how Storyline sends text to Amazon Polly. In HeroVoice TTS there is a preview button so you can check it before writing your phoneme SSML. :)

None of these answers worked for me; after a bit of searching, I found a website called that allows you to put in text, choose the language, and then be able to listen to and download the pronunciation. The voice is the exact same as Google Translate's -- hopefully this is helpful to anyone passing by this thread.

But while English may not seem like the most difficult language to pronounce, it has its fair share of words that can be hard to get your tongue around. This is mainly because the English language is a mishmash of words borrowed from other languages. Or inspired by other languages.

As an English learner, you may have noticed a disconnect between the pronunciation and spelling of certain words in English. Sometimes, how you spell a word has nothing to do with how you pronounce it or vice versa.

But whether you're learning English for personal or professional reasons, learning how to pronounce these challenging words will help you impress native speakers and take your English to the next level. So keep at it!

I have little patience for people who are overly scrupulous about these pronunciation issues. And I say this as someone who is overly scrupulous in very, very,very many other areas regarding punctuation, grammar, spelling (for God's sake, get your LOSE and LOOSE correct, people).

If you want to know how to pronounce Bible names correctly, be sure to check out our Bible Pronunciation Guide. This is available on every Bible name page and shows the phonetic pronunciation of every word.

Along with our online pronunciation guide, BibleSpeak also provides links to some of the best resources for Bible study available today. From Bible commentaries, to study tools, be sure to check out our complete reference list of books that will help you as you study and teach God's word.

Do you know how to properly pronounce a Japanese word? To help you learn how to speak Japanese, we have implemented a new feature in JapanDict: audio pronunciation for all the words and sentences in the dictionary.

I'm looking for a website where I can search an individual chinese word and I can download an MP3 of the pronunciation I've often used google ( -audio-pronunciation-words/21064/) for English pronounciation, and I can listen online to pronounciation on , but I want to download the audio so that I can put it on my Anki cards so that I hear it said by a native speaker every time I review a word. I use Forvo sometimes, but Forvo has a limited number of words and the quality is sometimes not very good. Any other recommendations, or is Forvo the best option for me?

If more than one written pronunciation is given for a word, they are all acceptable, but the first form given is the most common. Not all possible American pronunciations are shown in this dictionary. For example, some speakers only use the sound // when it is followed by /r/ (as in horse /hrs/) and use // in all other words that are shown with // in this dictionary, so that they pronounce both caught Ā and cot as /kt/.

/Ā  / shows the strong stress in a word or group of words. It is in front of the part (or syllable) that you say most strongly. For example, any /ni/ has a stress on the first syllable; depend /dpnd/ has a stress on the second syllable.

/Ā  / shows a weaker (or secondary) stress. Many longer words have a syllable that is pronounced with a secondary stress as well as a syllable with strong (or main) stress. So in the word pronunciation /prnnsien/, the main stress is on the syllable /e/, and the secondary stress is on the syllable /nn/. ff782bc1db

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