Among our National Day songs, Singai Naadu is one of the most soulful and heartfelt. I enjoyed Shabir Tabare Alam’s original rendition, and shared it on my page six years ago (http://bit.ly/2Oh8QaQ)!
The a cappella group 1023 has given this song a fresh interpretation, combining it with another NDP staple, Munnaeru Vaalibaa. The group members are all ethnic Chinese, but they took pains to pronounce the Tamil lyrics accurately. Their medley also incorporated konnakkol, a form of vocal percussive music. To deliver a faithful rendition, their music director enrolled in online classes at a konnakkol school in Bangalore!
This music video is a good example of how music transcends language, race, or religion. I hope you enjoy this medley too, as National Day draws closer! – LHL
One of our favourite things about Singapore - it is a beautiful brew of cultures, influences, and harmony. 1023 may not be native Tamil speakers, but we absolutely loved doing this medley of Munnaeru Vaalibaa and Singai Naadu, incorporating the traditional Carnatic art form, Konnakkol.
Thank you S Jesudassan and Shabir Tabare Alam for inspiring local music 🇸🇬❤
📹 XD Studios
💄 Loveblush Hair & Makeup Co.
📸 Raymond Phang Photography
🏙 SuperTree Rooftop Bar by IndoChine
🎙 Suite Sound
🎨 Interpage Pte Ltd
📝 Agung Santoso Ongko, Amanda Poh, Rachel Lian
🎤: First premiered at Arts in Your Neighbourhood by National Arts Council Singapore
Special thanks to Nandini Kanagaraj, Rasanya Isabella Jacob, Sures Ravindran and Siti Nur'Ain for being our pronunciation coaches 😘
同時也有1部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過27萬的網紅Lindie Botes,也在其Youtube影片中提到,A question I get asked often - what steps to take when just starting with a language? ——— 1. Start with the alphabet if the language has a new writi...
how to pronounce example 在 陳 小曼 Slow Food Design Facebook 的精選貼文
每次過年總會發現一些全家都只會台語,沒人知道怎麼寫的食材⋯例如這個口感有點像栗子與黃豆的綜合體、台語發音「品彭」的食物,本名為「鳳眼果」,又稱蘋婆、羅晃子,外殼像大型的深紅色豆莢,黃色果實外還有一層黑色的殼,在植物界裡也算是長得蠻時尚的⋯根據醫藥百科,果實性甘,有溫胃、治腹痛的功效。
雖然不明白它跟鮑魚、白菜、獅子頭、勾芡之間的關係,不過也是順便長了知識。(除了獵奇長輩圖與麻將以外的小樂趣)
Always found new things in the new year dish that everyone knows how to pronounce in Taiwanese but don't know how do they written - for example this thing we found today: phoenix eye fruit, a fruit taste like chestnut mix beans (it also called Thai chestnut) sounds like "ping pong" in Taiwanese, which is grow in a dark red/brown pod with a black shelf outside the yellow bean. Sounds like a fashion icon in vegetable world.. lol
According to Chinese herbal medical encyclopedia, this fruit tastes sweet and able to cure stomach problems. Although I don't get the reason to cook it with abalone, cabbage and meatball, but it was fun to discover new interesting ingredients on the table.
how to pronounce example 在 Step Up English Facebook 的最讚貼文
Chắc hẳn các bạn đều nắm được cách phát âm đuôi -ed. Vậy hôm nay hãy vừa ôn lại - vừa luyện đọc tiếng Anh bằng một bài viết hướng dẫn cách phát âm này hoàn toàn bằng tiếng Anh nhé
Share cho bạn bè cùng học bài này nhé!
You may have noticed that in English, past tense verbs with an -ed ending are pronounced in three different ways:
[t]
[d] or
[Id].
For example:
If I say the past tense verb “walked“, as in, “I walked away,” what is the last sound that you hear in the verb? “Walked” [wakt]
The -ed verb ending sounds like a [t], “Walked” [wakt], even though it ends in the letter “d”.
What do you hear when I say: “smelled“, as in, “it smelled bad.”
The -ed verb ending sounds like a [d]: “smelled” [smeld]
And when I say, “visited”, as in “I visited New York City”, how did I pronounce that “-ed” ending? [Id] [vizitid].
The -ed verb ending sounds like [ɪd], [vizitid].
Why the Sound Changes?
Place your fingertips on the front of your neck, and pronounce the following words. What do you feel on your fingers when you say the underlined sound?
vow | fake (vvv | fff)
zebra | snake (zzz | sss)
–> When we pronounce voiced sounds, our vocal chords vibrate when we say those sounds. [v] [z]. Did you feel the vibration?
–> When we pronounce voiceless sounds, our vocal chords do not vibrate. [f] [s]. No vibration.
This vibration or lack of vibration then carries forward to the following sound in the word. Therefore, this vibration or lack of vibration explains why we pronounce the past tense of verbs in three voiced or voiceless ways: [t], [d] or [Id].
1) [t] final sound
Verbs ending in voiceless sounds [p, k, θ, f, s, ʃ, tʃ] cause the “-ed” ending to be pronounced as the voiceless [t] (with no vocal chord vibration).
[p] “He popped a balloon.” [papt]
[k] “They talked a lot” [takt]
[θ] “th”: “She frothed a cup of milk” [frawθt]
[f] “I laughed at the movie.” [læft]
[s] “She kissed a frog.” [kIst]
[ʃ] “sh”: “We brushed it off.” [bruʃt]
[tʃ] “ch”: “I reached around for it.” [riytʃt]
2) [d] final sound
Verbs ending in the voiced sounds [b, g, ð, v, z, ʒ, dʒ, m, n, ŋ, r, l] cause the “-ed” ending to be pronounced as a voiced [d].
[b] “It bobbed up and down.” [babd]
[g] “He begged her to stay.” [bɛgd]
[ð] “She breathed loudly.” [briyðd]
[v] “They loved it.” [luvd]
[z] “We raised her expectations.” [reyzd]
[dʒ] “They bridged the gap.” [brIdʒd]
[m] “I claimed it was mine.” [kleymd]
[n] “They banned new members.” [bænd]
[ŋ] “She banged into the chair.” [bæŋd]
[r] “He cleared it up.” [kliyrd]
[l] “I rolled up the paper.” [rowld]
3) [əd] or [ɪd] final sound
Verbs ending in the sounds [t] or [d] will cause the “-ed” ending of a verb to be pronounced as the syllable [əd] or [ɪd].
[t] “I visited the Empire State Building.” [vɪzɪtəd]
[t] “She edited the research paper.” [ɛdɪtɪd]
[d] “We ended the game early.” [ɛndɪd]
[d] “He breaded the chicken.” [brɛdɪd]
Nếu muốn phát âm đúng, bạn cần luyện nghe thật nhiều.
-st-
how to pronounce example 在 Lindie Botes Youtube 的最佳貼文
A question I get asked often - what steps to take when just starting with a language?
———
1. Start with the alphabet if the language has a new writing system. It’s extremely important to get the pronunciation right from the beginning so you don’t have to rely on often inaccurate English renditions of how to pronounce words. Once you have the writing system down, write as much as you can in the language without relying on English or another language to help too much.
2. After the alphabet, learn basic greetings and vocabulary. This is an important step and helps motivate you to keep going. I listen to the radio or to music from that language a lot, and if I learn the 100 most used words in the language, I’ll most likely hear that word in a song and get super excited about it.
3. Grammar. Learn a grammar structure, look at example sentences (either on apps like Duolingo, or textbooks, or sites that give example sentences like conjugator) and then replace words in the sentences with other words you know.
4. Practice. Getting a language partner is important. You should find someone who is open to correcting your mistakes, and someone who is patient to talk to you despite you being a beginner. I also practice by doing everything I normally do, in another language. My diary/schedule/shopping list/music playlist all transforms into my target language for a period of time.
5. Keep track of your progress. A diary, studygram or Youtube channel is a good way to see how you’ve progressed.
———
?SOCIALS
Insta → https://www.instagram.com/lindiebotes/
Website & resources → http://lindiebotes.com/
Twitter → https://twitter.com/lindiebee
FB → https://www.facebook.com/lindiebotesvideos/
Ko-fi → https://ko-fi.com/lindiebotes#
✨GOODIES
$10 free italki credits (after first lesson) → https://go.italki.com/LindieBotes
10% off Du Chinese (my favorite app!) enter LINDIE10 at checkout → https://www.duchinese.net/
All discounts → http://lindiebotes.com/discounts
All language resources → https://lindiebotes.com/language-resources/
Merch → https://society6.com/lindiebotes
?ABOUT
Welcome to my channel! My name is Lindie and I share my love for languages through my polyglot progress and language learning tips here. South African by birth, I spent most of my life in France, Pakistan, the UAE and Japan. Now I work as a UI/UX designer in Singapore. I'm a Christian and strive to shine God’s light in all I do. May this channel inspire you to reach your language goals!
New here? Best videos → https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLRCVN94KILKXGx45JKaVBSpPkrpXhrhRe
FAQ → https://lindiebotes.com/faq/
?BOOKS I USE
Practical Chinese Grammar → https://geni.us/PracticalChineseGram
Japanese for Busy People on Amazon → https://geni.us/JapaneseForBusy1
Advanced Japanese for Busy People → https://geni.us/JapaneseForBusy3
Korean Grammar in Use Intermediate → https://geni.us/KoreanGrammarUse
Korean TOPIK exam prep → https://geni.us/TOPIK2prep
Short Stories in Spanish → https://geni.us/spanishshortstories
?EQUIPMENT
Camera → https://geni.us/CanonPowerShotG7
Mic → https://geni.us/RodeSmartLavMicr
Tripod → https://geni.us/ManfrottoTravel
———
Some links are affiliate links, and a percentage goes towards supporting my channel.
Collabs & partnerships: hello@lindiebotes.com