/ˈæskə/
+ Find examples of products related to the word 'aska' on Amazon.comPracticing the sound by sound pronunciation table of the word 'Aska' will help you improve your spoken American English.
#2: /æ/ | |
Tongue | The tongue is wide. The front stays forward, touching the back of the bottom front teeth. The back part of the tongue stretches up. |
Jaw | The jaw drops. |
Vocal Chords | The vocal cords vibrate. |
#3: /s/ | |
Tongue | The tongue is behind the teeth. |
Lips | |
Teeth | The teeth remain clenched. |
Air | The air flows through the tip of the tongue towards the edge of the teeth. |
Vocal Chords | The vocal cords do not vibrate. |
#4: /k/ | |
Tongue | The back part of the tongue reaches up and touches the soft palate, cutting off the air. The tongue pulls away and the air flows. |
Lips | The lips position to adjust the sound that comes next. |
Air | Air passes through the mouth. First, the air stops. Then, it flows. |
Vocal Chords | The vocal cords do not vibrate. |
#5: /ə/ | |
Tongue | The tongue remains forward and relaxed. |
Lips | The lips relax. |
Jaw | The jaw drops. |
Vocal Chords | The vocal cords vibrate. |
Round the rickety ruckus of Aska's roller rink, ask a squirrel to swiftly skate and sink. Aska's agile antics delight and amaze, as assorted animals applaud in a blaze. But alas, poor Aska's skates slip away, adorable chaos takes center stage today. Aska tries to twirl, tumble, and turn, tickling the town with transient concern. Astonished onlookers laugh and cheer, as Aska causes a hullabaloo so dear. In the end, Aska emerges unscathed, acknowledged as the Apex of Awesome Aska, so brave!
Romantic love allows you to focus mating energy. Attachment sustains that relationship as long as necessary to raise your baby.
Helen Fisher
roʊˈmæntɪk lʌv əˈlaʊz ju tu ˈfoʊkəs ˈmeɪtɪŋ ˈɛnərʤi əˈtæʧmənt səˈsteɪnz ðæt riˈleɪʃənˌʃɪp æz lɔŋ æz ˈnɛsəˌsɛri tu reɪz jʊər ˈbeɪbi