hand
/hănd/
noun
- The terminal part of the human arm located below the forearm, used for grasping and holding and consisting of the wrist, palm, four fingers, and an opposable thumb.
- A homologous or similar part in other animals, as the terminal part of the forelimb in certain vertebrates.
- A unit of length equal to 4 inches (10.2 centimeters), used especially to specify the height of a horse.
Videos
Hand [pronunciation] | WordReference Forums
I can't find a good pronunciation of hand.
Llaw rhymes with bough or cow.
The Ll can't be adequately transcribed using English phonetics. Best I can do is to describe how to make the sound.
Place your tongue in the "L" position, smile a bit, and exhale. The air should escape around the sides of your tongue producing a hissing sound that's similar to a "sh".
More on reddit.comwhat’s the vowel in “hand”
Pronunciation: hand, ranch [AE CA] | WordReference Forums
I am doing a proof-of-concept project and wanted to code-name it in Welsh (rabbit hole of Snowdonia -> Eryri -> etc). The theme of the project is assistance. So I figured 'llaw' would look cool. I can't find a consistent pronunciation. I'm having a hard time nailing down the fricative 'll'. I figured /ow/ for 'aw'.
Llaw rhymes with bough or cow.
The Ll can't be adequately transcribed using English phonetics. Best I can do is to describe how to make the sound.
Place your tongue in the "L" position, smile a bit, and exhale. The air should escape around the sides of your tongue producing a hissing sound that's similar to a "sh".
https://translate.google.com/?sl=en&tl=cy&text=Hand&op=translate
And then click on the speaker icon. It's a perfectly acceptable computer generated pronunciation.
is it really realized as /æ/, even in the U.S.? even growing up way before i learned linguistics, i thought stuff like the vowel in “hand” and the middle vowel in “banana” were way different from the other /a/ sounds we learned. when i hear british speakers say “hand”, that does definitely sound like /æ/, but one of my profs told us it would be transcribed like that most of the time, not just with british speakers. to me it sounds more like “hey-und” (i don’t have IPA on my phone lol) if i slow down my pronunciation of it, like some really subtle diphthong.