How is æ pronounced Old English?

Æ and æ (ash): This letter, called "ash," may be familiar to you from old-fashioned spellings of words like "Encyclopædia." The digraph æ in Old English is pronounced the same way as the "a" in the words "bat" or "cat."
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What sound does æ make in English?

It is similar to the /ɑ:/ sound, but it is shorter; /æ/ not /ɑ:/. To produce the sound put your tongue low and at the front of your mouth and stretch out your lips, then make a short voiced sound with you mouth open.
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How is æ pronounced in ancient Greek?

"Ae" and "oe" can be pronounced like "e." General rules of accent: If a name has two syllables, accent the first.
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How did Romans pronounce AE?

AE = pronounced to rhyme with "see" in borrowed words in English; the Romans pronounced it to rhyme with English "sky." In Church Latin it rhymes with English "say."
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What language uses æ?

Æ (lowercase: æ) is a character formed from the letters a and e, originally a ligature representing the Latin diphthong ae. It has been promoted to the status of a letter in some languages, including Danish, Norwegian, Icelandic, and Faroese. It was also used in Old Swedish before being changed to ä.
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How to Pronounce Æ in Old English



What does ə sound like?

Simply put, the schwa is a reduced, neutral vowel sound written as an upside-down and backwards e, ə, in the International Phonetic Alphabet (the universal chart of symbols, representing all the sounds languages make).
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How is thorn pronounced Old English?

Thorn (Þ, þ)

The y is really used to substitute for the letter thorn, derived from the runic alphabet of Futhark, and it's pronounced like "th", as in the word "the". Due to most printing presses not having the letter thorn available, it became common practice to use a y instead, leading to "ye".
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What is this ø called?

Ø (or minuscule: ø) is a letter used in the Danish, Norwegian, Faroese, and Southern Sámi languages. It is mostly used as a representation of mid front rounded vowels, such as [ø] and [œ], except for Southern Sámi where it is used as an [oe] diphthong.
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How is the letter eth pronounced?

The letter is called "eth," pronounced so that it rhymes with the first syllable in the word "feather." Thorn and eth are used interchangeably to represent both voiced and unvoiced "th" sounds (the sound at the beginning of "the" is voiced; the sound at the end of "with" is unvoiced).
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What is the Y in Ye Olde called?

This is because early printing fonts had to be imported from Germany and Italy, where there was no sign for thorn. It was the thinking then that the letter y most closely resembled the thorn, so printers substituted it with a y. And that's why we have those cheesy “Ye Old” shop signs now.
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Why does Old English have eth?

Suffix. (archaic) Used to form the third-person singular present indicative of verbs. I giveth, and I taketh away; he emaileth; thou saideth; he killedeth; respondeth to my messageth; shooketh.
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What sound is Ʊ?

The sound /ʊ/ is a back, high, lax, rounded vowel. Spelling: “oo” – took, good. “u” – put, bush.
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Is Apple a schwa?

We say a before consonant sounds and an before vowel sounds. So it's an apple, an egg, an ice cream, an orange, an umbrella. Well that sounds easy. Yes, the tricky thing is the schwa sound.
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Does British English have a schwa?

We can see that, there are some letters that are often pronounced as schwas. They are usually weak syllables or words that are not stressed such as conjunctions. In British English, we often use a schwa for words ending in 'er', however in the US, people prefer to actually pronounce the 'r' sound at the end.
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Is æ still used in English?

In modern English, æ is occasionally used stylistically, like in archæology or medæval, but denotes the same sound as the letter e.
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Is æ a diphthong?

The Old English “æ” was not a diphthong. It represented the sound of “a simple vowel, intermediate between a and e,” the OED says. This symbol died out by about 1300, when it was replaced in new spellings by “a,” “e,” or “ee.”
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What is the 27th letter in the alphabet?

Total number of letters in the alphabet

Until 1835, the English Alphabet consisted of 27 letters: right after "Z" the 27th letter of the alphabet was ampersand (&). The English Alphabet (or Modern English Alphabet) today consists of 26 letters: 23 from Old English and 3 added later.
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What does suffix ae mean?

The ‑ae suffix is used for the plural of many non-naturalized, specialist, or unfamiliar nouns ending in ‑a (see ‑a1) derived from Latin or Greek: antennae is the plural of antenna; larvae of larva; scapulae of scapula, a shoulder-blade; pupae of pupa, a chrysalis.
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How is Đ pronounced?

Đ represents a voiced alveolar implosive (/ɗ/) or, according to Thompson (1959), a preglottalized voiced alveolar stop (/ʔd/). Whereas D is pronounced as some sort of dental or alveolar stop in most Latin alphabets, an unadorned D in Vietnamese represents either /z/ (Hanoian) or /j/ (Saigonese).
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