Talk:Esperanto/Appendix/Alphabet and pronunciation

Untitled
The 'o' in dot and the 'o' in or seem to be different o's
 * The 'o' in dot is the correct sound. --Gabriel Beecham 00:30, 19 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Why does the U first have an accent in the beginning of the article and further down an umlaut?15:37, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Audio
I'm making recordings of all the sample Esperanto words. I'm almost done, but I want to clear something up before I finish: I'm not sure ĝojo is such a great example for the oj diphthongs. When the noun ending is added, a syllable break will usually be inserted, and the word typically sounds like ĝo-jo, unless I force it. Hovever, any plural noun should do the job, so I'll change it to lingvoj (languages) unless there are any objections. I hope this will be clearer, and I'll be back soon with my finished recordings. --WurdBendur 05:59, 31 July 2006 (UTC)

Ought to change
Ref (Post-edit notice) The 'o' sound in the main table states o as in French mot or o as in Spanish no, but I don't speak French or Spanish. From what I gather, this would be the sound of o as in "cord" or "sorry", and I think this being an English Wikibook it would be best to include English examples for all instructive content. ~Jafet 11:22, 19 November 2007 (UTC)

Near the end in the diphthongs section you mention the pronunciation of 'boy' for one digraph and then 'buoy' for another. To people who are from the UK (like me) this is confusing because we pronounce both words exactly the same (with that 'oy' sound) but I know that Americans pronounce each differently. It might help to mention that on the page to stop us Brits getting confused!