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-- Posted by Ifodi at 2:27 am on Dec. 18, 2008
Can anyone help me - I'm looking for the pronunciation for the greek word 'Ψυχή' (Soul in English) Helps appreciated cheers :)
-- Posted by roflfuckyou at 2:27 am on Dec. 18, 2008
Yuk-sn
-- Posted by Ifodi at 2:37 am on Dec. 18, 2008
Ok. Anyone who can speak Greek know how to pronounce the word? I know that Ψ is Psi, u Upsilon, χ is Chi and ή Eta but I don't know whether you string them together or its a total different pronunciation..
-- Posted by sunshineshower at 2:57 am on Dec. 18, 2008
Going from what google tells me it seems to be pronounced "syy-kee" written psyche which makes sense if it means soul.
-- Posted by Colleen35 at 6:18 pm on Dec. 19, 2008
/psyxi/ /ps/ like in English /y/ is like an 'ee' sound with your lips rounded, like when you say 'oo' /i/ is and 'ee 'sound /x/ is the in ; think how you change between the sounds /t/ and /s/, and it's the same change between /k/ and /x/ Modern Greek pronunciation it's /psiçi/ /ç/ is kind of like a lighter /x/. Pronounce it with your tongue farther forward in your mouth, where you pronounce the in . [/linguist]
-- Posted by Ifodi at 2:32 pm on Dec. 27, 2008
That's so hard to say!! Dammit.
-- Posted by Shaknbake at 6:25 pm on Dec. 27, 2008
Quote: from Ifodi at 2:27 am on Dec. 18, 2008
Can anyone help me - I'm looking for the pronunciation for the greek word 'Ψυχή' (Soul in English) Helps appreciated cheers :)
Psuki (laps, [ü]ber, kitten, philadelphia) I have read however that modern Greek replaces the ü sound with 'i.' In that case it would by 'psiki.'
-- Posted by cpjcjhsh at 12:57 am on Dec. 29, 2008
Colleen35 is bang on. Like psee-HEE but the H is more gutteral; at the back of the throat. Due to the nature of the word, however, it will likely sound more like a harder or raspier H.
-- Posted by Colleen35 at 4:41 pm on Dec. 29, 2008
Quote: from cpjcjhsh at 12:57 am on Dec. 29, 2008
Colleen35 is bang on. Like psee-HEE but the H is more gutteral; at the back of the throat. Due to the nature of the word, however, it will likely sound more like a harder or raspier H.
The 'h' is actually farther forward, since it's a palatal articulation in modern Greek and a velar articulation in ancient Greek; English 'h' is either bare phonation or a glottal articulation.
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