"C" is read as c, not k. You read as it is written. Jakub Štancl is Jakub Štancl. You read all letters, we are not shortening or making more letters into one. Yours Sh is mostly our š. Hope i wrote it clear :)
You vastly overestimate an anglophone's capability to read as written, my friend. There's basically none. 😅 One note of interest - the original pronounciation for C is in fact K. Cicero was "Kikero" for ancient Romans. The change to the "ts" sound is a thing in later ecclesiastical latin.
The Czech Republic has recently introduced a short version of the name - Czechia - but the name of the nation remains the Czechs, not Czechians
Ok daddy
@@lum1x229 kid's reply
@@lum1x229 Oil up and pre-stretch.
Jakub Stancl is pronounced "Yakoob Shtuntzl".
"C" is read as c, not k. You read as it is written. Jakub Štancl is Jakub Štancl. You read all letters, we are not shortening or making more letters into one. Yours Sh is mostly our š. Hope i wrote it clear :)
You vastly overestimate an anglophone's capability to read as written, my friend. There's basically none. 😅 One note of interest - the original pronounciation for C is in fact K. Cicero was "Kikero" for ancient Romans. The change to the "ts" sound is a thing in later ecclesiastical latin.
these discussions in a century with google translator, AI... content creators are at their very first level 🤷♀
The name of the first goal scorer is pronounced as 'Shtantsl' and
Your pronounciation is kinda good tbh, just that C is C. We don't have any "special rules" to speaking, we speak what we type.
How long was it then
Czechians:))
The video says nothing.