Talk:Learn Cyrillic: Difference between revisions

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I don't mean to be that guy but I can't think of any Indian languages that have the sound (unless you count Bengali). For ć I would say like how Brits say the T in "Tuesday" and for đ I would say like how (at least some) Americans say the d-y in "did you". Maybe you confused [dʑ] for [ɖʐ]? Also, how Brits say the lli in million works for lj. --[[User:Ziwi|Ziwi]]
I don't mean to be that guy but I can't think of any Indian languages that have the sound (unless you count Bengali). For ć I would say like how Brits say the T in "Tuesday" and for đ I would say like how (at least some) Americans say the d-y in "did you". Maybe you confused [dʑ] for [ɖʐ]? Also, how Brits say the lli in million works for lj. --[[User:Ziwi|Ziwi]]
I mean, the best way to do this would be to get rid of the "Approximate english pronounciation" part entirely and replace them with IPA codes, but not everyone here (partly including me) knows what exactly they mean, so that would render the table basically useless. I switched out the original example of "J in Jay" because that sounds more like 'dž' when I pronounce it.
P.S. Random, no offense, but could you sign your posts please? The format to do so is -- and four tilde. This might help for later comments: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a4/Wikipedia_basics_-_Talk_pages.ogv --[[User:SrbinKrajisnik|SrbinKrajisnik]] ([[User talk:SrbinKrajisnik|talk]]) 09:01, 10 April 2025 (UTC)

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