← Back to context Comment by incognito124 5 days ago Yes, thank you. It's 'c' in English but 'g' in my mother tongue 7 comments incognito124 Reply b112 5 days ago Interesting, I can see how it would sound the same, with a different accent. fwipsy 5 days ago Native English speaker. I tried saying both out loud and it sounds the same. It's just a glottal stop (?) either way in my accent. bigstrat2003 5 days ago They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds. 2 replies → SAI_Peregrinus 5 days ago "Hard c" is voiced, "g" is unvoiced. 1 reply →
b112 5 days ago Interesting, I can see how it would sound the same, with a different accent. fwipsy 5 days ago Native English speaker. I tried saying both out loud and it sounds the same. It's just a glottal stop (?) either way in my accent. bigstrat2003 5 days ago They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds. 2 replies → SAI_Peregrinus 5 days ago "Hard c" is voiced, "g" is unvoiced. 1 reply →
fwipsy 5 days ago Native English speaker. I tried saying both out loud and it sounds the same. It's just a glottal stop (?) either way in my accent. bigstrat2003 5 days ago They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds. 2 replies → SAI_Peregrinus 5 days ago "Hard c" is voiced, "g" is unvoiced. 1 reply →
bigstrat2003 5 days ago They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds. 2 replies →
Interesting, I can see how it would sound the same, with a different accent.
Native English speaker. I tried saying both out loud and it sounds the same. It's just a glottal stop (?) either way in my accent.
They should sound different. Not a lot different, but there is normally a noticeable difference between g and c sounds.
2 replies →
"Hard c" is voiced, "g" is unvoiced.
1 reply →