"How Does This Sound Only Exists In One Language Work?" is like a toy that only speaks one language, no matter how hard you try, it won’t say “hello” in Spanish or “goodbye” in French.
Imagine you have a robot friend who can talk. But this robot has only one voice, and it always says things the same way, like a repeating song. If you ask it to say “hello,” it just says “hello” every time, no matter what language you use. That’s like how this sound only exists in one language, it doesn’t change or translate; it stays the same.
Why It Happens
This happens because the robot is programmed with only that one voice, and it can't switch to another one. Just like how a music player plays only one song on repeat, this robot only speaks one way.
So when you hear something that doesn’t change no matter what language you use, think of it as a special kind of robot, always saying the same thing, in the same voice.
Examples
- A sound like the 'click' in some African languages is only found there and not in English.
- The 'schwa' vowel is common in many languages but might be missing from others entirely.
- Some languages have sounds that don't exist elsewhere, like the rolled 'r' in Spanish.
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See also
- What is morphophonemics?
- What is Consonance?
- How Does The Language Sounds That Could Exist, But Don't Work?
- What makes some languages sound BEAUTIFUL?
- What is phonology?