What language was the person who voiced this first language? tal O n for tal on as the word for bird claw (lions, tigers, and bears have claws. Thrixer I V instead of Thrixer 4 (in Roman Numerals, and what idiot decided to use ancient Earth numbers for this?
The accent is a nonstandard but clearly understandable American one, at least to Americans like me. The pronunciation of talon sounds like a Francophone issue, possibly Cajun. British speakers sometimes sometimes pronounce a French derived word more like French, while most Americans don't. I have trouble with some southern rural accents, though, and some British accents, like Geordie, are almost completely unintelligible to me. Some of the AI errors are universal, like ship's hole instead of ship's hull, that is so distracting, and occasionally obscene, that I usually stop watching immediately. Many of my upper level ESL/EFL students have managed to overcome the oddities of English spelling and pronunciation, but those who have had to switch between American and British standards do experience problems. Sometimes I continue to watch if the errors are in my area of study, but too much repetition is a distinct turnoff. I was able to watch more than a third of this video before having to discontinue.
What language was the person who voiced this first language? tal O n for tal on as the word for bird claw (lions, tigers, and bears have claws. Thrixer I V instead of Thrixer 4 (in Roman Numerals, and what idiot decided to use ancient Earth numbers for this?
The accent is a nonstandard but clearly understandable American one, at least to Americans like me. The pronunciation of talon sounds like a Francophone issue, possibly Cajun. British speakers sometimes sometimes pronounce a French derived word more like French, while most Americans don't. I have trouble with some southern rural accents, though, and some British accents, like Geordie, are almost completely unintelligible to me. Some of the AI errors are universal, like ship's hole instead of ship's hull, that is so distracting, and occasionally obscene, that I usually stop watching immediately.
Many of my upper level ESL/EFL students have managed to overcome the oddities of English spelling and pronunciation, but those who have had to switch between American and British standards do experience problems. Sometimes I continue to watch if the errors are in my area of study, but too much repetition is a distinct turnoff. I was able to watch more than a third of this video before having to discontinue.
AI pronunciation is seriously lacking. NO understanding of what is said and how or why. Humans at least have that ability.