Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Battered fish goujons with battered onion rings, peas, chips and tartare sauce. A goujon (from French: goujon ' dowel ', ' pin ') is a strip of meat taken from underside of the muscular fish tail or chicken breast, sometimes breaded or coated in batter and deep fried. [1] [2] [3]
Chicken tenders (also known as chicken goujons, tendies, chicken strips, chicken fingers, or chicken fillets) [citation needed] are chicken meat prepared from the pectoralis minor muscles of the animal. [1] [2] These strips of white meat are located on either side of the breastbone, under the breast meat (pectoralis major). [3]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us
Pronunciation is the way in which a word or a language is spoken. This may refer to generally agreed-upon sequences of sounds used in speaking a given word or language in a specific dialect ("correct" or "standard" pronunciation) or simply the way a particular individual speaks a word or language.
The English Pronouncing Dictionary (EPD) was created by the British phonetician Daniel Jones and was first published in 1917. [1] It originally comprised over 50,000 headwords listed in their spelling form, each of which was given one or more pronunciations transcribed using a set of phonemic symbols based on a standard accent.
CMUdict provides a mapping orthographic/phonetic for English words in their North American pronunciations. It is commonly used to generate representations for speech recognition (ASR), e.g. the CMU Sphinx system, and speech synthesis (TTS), e.g. the Festival system.
Thomas Jefferson University is apologizing after the names of some graduates from the nursing program were unrecognizably pronounced at their commencement, as seen in videos from the ceremony that ...
Many of these are degenerations in the pronunciation of names that originated in other languages. Sometimes a well-known namesake with the same spelling has a markedly different pronunciation. These are known as heterophonic names or heterophones (unlike heterographs , which are written differently but pronounced the same).