произношение - Pronunciation of е - Russian Language Stack Exchange In Russian there are two letters you can use for indicating this sound, e and э As many other letters, letter 'е' is used for indicating different set of phonemes In the beginning of the word 'e', for example, actually stands for 'je', after consonants it stands, almost always, for [e] as well, it's just that the preceding vowel is palatalised
Is ё a distinct letter, or is it just е with a diaeresis? 17 Some sources say that there are 32 letters in the alphabet, while others say there are 33 The discrepancy seems to be a result of including excluding ё They also mention (whether or not they include ё) that ё is frequently rendered as е Is ё a distinct letter, or is it just е with a diaeresis?
What is the difference between the letters Е and Э? What is the difference between the letters Е and Э? Based on my book, they are both like E in English My friend (he's not a Russian native speaker) explained to me that Э is a consonant and Е is a
Rule of е after a vowel - russian. stackexchange. com The rule is "е" sounds like "ye" after a vowel, does the е[ye] have to be right in front of the vowel to sound like [ye] or can it be anywhere behind "e" throughout the word?
Difference in pronunciation of е and ѣ in old Russian In Russian, е and ѣ completely lost their difference about the end of XVIII, long before sound recording was invented PIE contrasted long and short vowels ѣ originated from the PIE's long vowel ē which in some other languages turned into diphtongs It is commonly accepted that it was a long vowel in Russian as well, though it is disputed whether it was just a long vowel or a diphtong
Vowel reduction and unstressed е at the beginning According to vowel reduction rules, the "е" at the beginning in some words like Европа Елена Екатеринбу́рг should be reduced just like "j+ɪ" (where "ɪ" stands for something very near to "и")
чё? or чо? - which is the correct spelling? This word is an attempt to write down a relaxed pronunciation of the neutral form что, and, as such, no strict rules can be applied, there is no "correct" spelling The corpus seems to mention чё more often than чо and шо (531 135 153 entries in lowercase) If you want to use this spelling as a part of eye dialect, just make sure you reflect the character's assumed pronunciation