Difference between revisions of "L"

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He who calls himself [[John A. Bristol|Bristol]] didn't know how to pronounce this sound until he was a Junior in High School; and bets you don't know, what he learned recently, that there are two l sounds in English -- one the so-bekannt "dark l" that follows a vowel, and the other the initial l which [https://www.oldradioshows.org/2016/10/10/arch-obolers-sounds/ Arch Oboler] uses after a vowel when he wants to get a spine-chilling spinechilling "Kihl! Kihl! Kihl!"  
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He who calls himself [[John A. Bristol|Bristol]] didn't know how to pronounce this sound until he was a Junior in High School; and bets you don't know, what he learned recently, that there are two l sounds in English -- one the so-bekannt "dark l" that follows a vowel, and the other the initial l which [https://www.oldradioshows.org/2016/10/10/arch-obolers-sounds/ Arch Oboler] uses after a vowel when he wants to get a spine-chilling "Kihl! Kihl! Kihl!"  
 
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Latest revision as of 08:09, 8 August 2022

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
He who calls himself Bristol didn't know how to pronounce this sound until he was a Junior in High School; and bets you don't know, what he learned recently, that there are two L sounds in English -- one the sobekannt "dark l" that follows a vowel, and the other the initial l which actors use after the vowel to get a spinechilling "Kihl! Kihl! Kihl!"
From Fancyclopedia 1, ca. 1944
He who calls himself Bristol didn't know how to pronounce this sound until he was a Junior in High School; and bets you don't know, what he learned recently, that there are two l sounds in English -- one the so-bekannt "dark l" that follows a vowel, and the other the initial l which Arch Oboler uses after a vowel when he wants to get a spine-chilling "Kihl! Kihl! Kihl!"



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