Sentence examples for difference in pronunciation from inspiring English sources

"difference in pronunciation" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
For example, "My dialect has a noticeable difference in pronunciation compared to other dialects of English."

Exact(6)

There's no difference in pronunciation, but using the wrong one when writing is a mistake in the everyday English you use every day.

And there's a slight difference in pronunciation there too, isn't there?

"For example, consider the difference in pronunciation of the word "live" in the phrases 'I live in Seattle' and 'Live from New York.' Polly knows that this pair of homographs are spelled the same but are pronounced quite differently".

The minuscule phonetic difference in pronunciation brought shouts across the table.

For example, the only difference in pronunciation between the words "cow" and "alive" is that is pronounced with a broad b sound, while is pronounced with a slender b sound.

Roque Strew of Pitchfork Media found Sia's Adelaide accent to be a "liability", specifically noting difference in pronunciation between the studio versions of "Destiny" and "Distractions" and the live performances.

Similar(54)

The difference in the language between the Sunday and Monday messages hung on as little as a single syllable in the Korean language -- a nuance attributable by some to regional differences in pronunciation -- which led to drastically different interpretations of the initial commentary.

While still preserving the meaning behind the Japanese script, Smith made the decision to use different dialects of English to reproduce the regional differences in pronunciation found in the Japanese version.

But there are are also differences in pronunciation and spelling.

The English of e-mail, Twitter and text messaging is becoming far more mutually comprehensible than spoken English, which is fractured by differences in pronunciation, politeness and emphasis.

But many other regional word maps — like those showing where people stop drinking "soda" and start chugging "pop" or "Coke" — have no clear relationship to differences in pronunciation, he said.

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