• @[email protected]OP
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    161 year ago

    To explain: /eː/ and /oː/ exist in Australian English, but they’re the vowels in SQUARE and NORTH respectively, so Australians don’t naturally associate them with foreign /e/ and /o/. If you can force an Australian to say “care-sore”, it sounds remarkably like Spanish “queso”!

    • @TugOfWarCrimes
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      151 year ago

      As an Australian, I am ashamed at how long I sat here saying “care-sore… queso” to myself over and over listening to how strangely similar they do sound when I think about it

  • baker
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    61 year ago

    Oh naur.

  • @PoppinKREAM
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    41 year ago

    Ngl this made me laugh pretty hard lol

  • @Daefsdeda
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    31 year ago

    Linguist are… lets say unique

    • @[email protected]OP
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      111 months ago

      Find a text-to-speech program that supports Australian English and get it say “queso” and “care-sore”. Then compare each of those to a Spanish speaker saying “queso”. Decide for yourself which one sounds more like the original.