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		 Transcription 
		
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 kalaa
 
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							| What
is the difference between these two short vowel sounds/ I / and / i
/  Example:
City /ˈsɪti/ Thank you in advance 
 |  25 Oct 2016      
					
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 x_spacegirl_x
 
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							| / I / is spoken short, almost no sound and more like a very short  �a �, and no emphasis    / i / is long and usually used as emphasis |  25 Oct 2016     
					
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 Gi2gi
 
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							| Some dictionaries suggest   [ �sɪtɪ] ...     I am more used to transcribing the long sound as i:   So,  i is somewhere in between  ɪ and  i:   Giorgi  |  25 Oct 2016     
					
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 yanogator
 
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							| "City" is pronounced as if the two words "sit" and "tee" were merged into one. That should help you with those two vowel sounds.   Bruce  |  25 Oct 2016     
					
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 miss_alejandra
 
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							| I learnt that /i/ is called neutralized i sound, and in phonetics is commonly used when words end with a /y/ letter. |  25 Oct 2016     
					
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 67Englishteacher
 
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							|  [i:] is long   [i] and the other one (I don �t know how to type it) are both short but they sound differently. Neutralised [i] sounds roughly like [i:] but is shorter.   Neutralised [i] is used instead of the other short "i" at the end of words AND before a vowel sound. Ex: at the end of "pretty" (but not in the first syllable), in "he" (end of word), in "react" (before a vowel sound). |  26 Oct 2016     
					
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