Do you say the L in folk?

People frown on this in non-standard dialects such as cockney ("the ol' bill"). But the "l" in folk, talk and walk used to be pronounced. Now almost everyone uses a "w" instead- we effectively say fowk, tawk and wawk.
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Do you say the L in yolk?

1 answer. This is referred to as "L-vocalization". Check out the Wikipedia article on the topic. In my own speech, I pronounce both words without any /l/, i.e. I say folk as if it were "foke" and yolk for me has the same pronunciation as yoke.
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Do we pronounce the L in world?

Not even a tiny bit, it is completely silent as it is followed by a consonant. The 'l' in world is dark because it comes after a vowel sound. Your tongue should raise at the back and the front, it is a very soft sound, not like the clear /l/ you find at the beginning of a word.
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Do you say the L in walk?

L is also silent in could, should, would, as well as in calf and half, and in chalk, talk, walk, and for many people in calm, palm, and psalm.
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Why can I not pronounce the letter L?

Correctly pronouncing /l/ is very difficult for many non-native speakers. /l/ is commonly confused with/r/ or /w/. If you don't have /l/ in your language, you will have to retrain your muscle memory. You must focus on proper placement for your tongue, lips, jaw and air flow.
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Why is the L silent in folk?

People frown on this in non-standard dialects such as cockney ("the ol' bill"). But the "l" in folk, talk and walk used to be pronounced. Now almost everyone uses a "w" instead- we effectively say fowk, tawk and wawk. This process is called velarisation.
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Why do my R's sound like L's?

Rhotacism is a speech impediment that is defined by the lack of ability, or difficulty in, pronouncing the sound R. Some speech pathologists, those who work with speech impediments may call this impediment de-rhotacization because the sounds don't become rhotic, rather they lose their rhotic quality.
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Is the L silent in Almond?

More recent standard dictionaries say we can now properly pronounce “almond” either with or without the “l” sound.
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Is the L silent in chalk?

Many students try to pronounce these Ls, but in all these words, the L is completely silent. In walk, chalk, and talk, the L comes after an A, and the vowel is pronounced like a short O. Half and calf have an AL, too, but the vowel is pronounced like the short A in staff.
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Why L is not silent in milk?

That's why we still have an /l/ in milk, whelk: it's because /ɪ/ and /ɛ/ are front vowels. But with a back vowel before your velarized ‹l› and velar consonant following it, your mouth has no chance to produce any kind of distinct /l/ sound. Hence its disappearance in talk, walk, balk, caulk, chalk, folk, Polk.
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Is the L in salmon silent?

In Latin, the word for fish is salmo, and the L is pronounced. Even though the English word spelling changed from samoun to salmon, the pronunciation stayed the same, making the L silent.
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Is the L silent in Palm?

Both the OED and M-W list the silent “l” as the first pronunciation and the “l” pronunciation as a variant for the following words: alms, palm, psalm, and qualm.
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Is it pronounced zeebra or zebra?

In the US, zebra is pronounced as zee-bruh, so with a long "e". It is interesting to note that the original pronunciation of zebra was with a long "e", the American way so to speak, and was pronounced this way in the UK as well.
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Do you pronounce the L in Salve?

A salve is something that soothes. You can use an ointment as a salve for an itchy rash, or maybe your kind words can act as a salve to comfort a heartsick friend. In some parts of the world, people pronounce salve the way it's spelled, but in the U.S. the correct pronunciation has a silent L.
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Which letter is silent in scissors?

Silent C: The letter C is silent when it is in the letter combination of SC. Examples: scissors, ascent, fascinate, muscle.
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Why is the S in island silent?

Island was long written with different spellings which didn't include 's', so it has presumably always been pronounced without /s/. (The derivation is not from Latin insula but from various Germanic forms, which also had no 's'.)
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Which letter is silent in lamb?

Silent b is introduced in the word 'lamb'. To help remember this silent letter, there is a story of how the word was originally spelt – lambaz – in old Germanic. Over time the 'baz' at the end of the word was dropped from the pronunciation but the 'b' remained in the spelling of the word.
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Are the L's silent in tortilla?

While you would look at the word and think it's pronounced tor-till-ah, we're sorry to say amigos – you've been saying it wrong! Because of its Spanish origins, the double 'l' in tortilla is pronounced 'ya'. Repeat after us: Tor-tee-ya. Now you've got it!
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Is it pronounced apricot or apricot?

Apricot is pronounced differently between American English and British English. In the US, the correct pronunciation of apricot is ah-prih-cot. The only difference is that the "a" is pronounced with an open "ah" sound, differently from the British pronunciation of apricot.
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Why do Asians switch L and r?

The /l/ can only appear syllable-initially while the /r/ appears syllable-finally. This means that a Chinese speaker would have more trouble with an /l/ sound at the end of a word and also with an /r/ sound at the beginning of a word.
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Can Japanese say l?

There is no L sound in Japanese, so they opt for the nearest sound they can manage, which is the Japanese R, a sound that English natives find it hard to master, and nothing like L at all in how it is articulated. The Japanese R approximates the English one but with a click, a tongue tap against the hard palate.
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Why do Japanese mix up L and r?

The Japanese sound is more of a cross between the English R and L, so it's very difficult to distinguish the two, hence Engrish. A proper hard R is actually just as difficult to pronounce as an L for Japanese speakers, and the hardest words to pronounce are those with both sounds (for example, parallel).
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