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By happenstance, i stumbled upon the words cha, char and chai in the dictionary today, all defined as meaning tea in informal british english Here never can there come fog too thick, never can there come mud. I lived and worked in london for some time, but never.

Gotcha actually has several meanings The whole context is here All of them can be derived from the phrase of which this is a phonetic spelling, namely [i have] got you

Literally, from the sense of got = caught, obtained, it means i've caught you

As in, you were falling, and i caught you, or you were running, and i grabbed you I, having lived most of my life in the american south, have heard this expression a lot (though i would tend to spell and pronounce it 'preciate 'cha i.e Having also lived in other regions, though, i'm well aware that it's as peculiar to southerners as y'all. idk the etymological details of the idiom, i think it's very typical of southern warmth and friendliness For example, i know that chameleon or chamomile are pronounced with a hard c like in camel, not with a soft c like in change

Charity, on the other hand, is pronounced as in change Is there some rule to infer the correct pronunciation? Are these words examples of elision What effect do they create

If a child says them what does this suggest about their language development

What is the phrase for a romantic relationship between two incompatible personality types Often seen in movies, lots of examples e.g The pronunciation of ch as /k/ is generally found in words borrowed from greek (where the ch stands for the greek letter chi) English words of greek origin

Ch is pronounced like k rather than as in church Loanwords from a few other languages have ch. I realize some native speakers will create a new sound when linking s/z and y [j] Miss you = [mɪʃuː] mishu as you = [/æʒuː] azhu is it okay if i just say [mɪsjuː] for miss you.

For a more comprehensive discussion of english spelling and pronunciation quirks, see hou tu pranownse inglish

It misses a few subtleties (like the ch in machine), but overall it's a nice summary of english pronunciation rules. I find the following sentence very puzzling

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