Voiceless Dental Fricative

Only language with a θ sound can post ITT
Can't find the map, but that means only those who can speak:
>Albanians
>Spanish (man they use the hell outta it lol)
>Greek
>English
can post ITT.

Attached: english-th-sound-tongue-between-teeth-german.jpg (758x566, 207.92K)

Other urls found in this thread:

upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/Voiceless_dental_fricative.ogg
youtube.com/watch?v=fHxO0UdpoxM
twitter.com/NSFWRedditImage

Attached: A.B.Frost_1879-12_Harper's_355_p160_English_th.png (943x858, 140.93K)

Should’ve added
>Arabic
too (though to be honest, Egyptians cant pronounce ðˤ, ð, or θ)

Wtf is a zero sound?

theta sound

First you need to speak a human language to understand this

Based THread.

What?
>tf
>tp

Fucking hate that sound.
Spanish speakers should be communally proud of the voiceless velar fricative, j, which produces so much seethe in the Anglo and which to my ears sounds so much kino. I simply love it.

Should add that in the International Phonetic Alphabet, I'm referring to the sound ⟨x⟩,

Scots and sheepshaggers produce it too. It's the sound of the ch in "loch", and in "Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch".

Those are Celtic brothers, not filthy Angl*s

Wdym
Someone say it in a vocaroo

You forgot Icelandic and a fuck ton of others.

The sound you make when you say "three" as opposed to "tree".

upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/80/Voiceless_dental_fricative.ogg

It's the "th" sound in "think"

we have it in some dialects so i feel entitled to post here, fuck you all

youtube.com/watch?v=fHxO0UdpoxM

I've seen numerous people pronounce that fluently and I still don't get how.

All the Indian languages have the theta sound

>languages without hard R
Lmaoing at your gay ass lingo

>implying Russian has very hard R
get on our level, n00b xd

Attached: nauru.gif (220x210, 26.97K)

>his language doesn't have ç sound
(IPA alphabet)

Why yes, we do have a very hard R, and a soft R, and a middle R

>her language doesn't have the ழ் (zh) sound

So does our language.
Most complicated sound language in Europe.

You only have soft R.

*Faggot R

>Ooga booga

interesting, does it exist in sanskrit?

we arguably don't have a middle R, but all people exposed to Spanish or Scottish English here know how to roll their R's.

oh you mean with like the characters you can add to other characters to make them harder or softer or whatnot? Its been a while since i studied Russian at all but i remember something like that :D