Lying on the tip of our tongue, speaking the truth, telling the truth, and accomplishing the truth, otherwise it will be awful. - Gwen Rice Clark They know that you walked through the door and saw their eyes. All of these, all of which are lying; all these are just to confirm that you do not need to know. Now that you are going to enter the room, it is inevitable to quit, and one fact still exists. You lie. Whatever the reason, no matter how logical the excuses you want in your heart, it does not seem like it really is wrong, that is not a problem.
I, 'ai' is the same as 'buy' diphthong. I thought about that, a tooth through the tooth, TH, thought. "'" Is something like "legal", here it is made with a tongue, think this is D. Using 'ew' is like a double sound of 'less'. These are the tongue piercing through the teeth. Lily's lower lip to support the lips, second L, Lily, V lips, as well as the V sound trough, as the tongue falls in the L position, 'h', 'sit' as the Lily Valley. The tongue is L, not L, L. Instead, the lips are in the form of R consonants and the tongue goes back into the TH through the teeth. Those "like" like "no", like tricky, tricky roses, consonant form of R, "o" like "no", "no" like 2. Together with the teeth for the Z sound, then for a little part for the Schwar, together for the final Z sound. Now, from the perspective. I think that the tip of the tongue penetrates the tooth, the tongue ups D, the lower lip becomes V. 'Ew' is used as 'less' double finger. Ning
Consonants of the tooth are made from the tip of the tongue or blade and upper teeth. They are divided into two groups according to the tongue part to produce them: when the tip of the tongue protrudes in front of the tooth, consonants of the upper tooth are generated and if the tip of the tongue sticks out in front of the tooth Consonants between the teeth are generated by the tongue. They may be in different places, but you can not use the language for comparison. In linguistics, consonants of the teeth and consonants of the alveolus are often contrasted, leading to generalization of the language crossing pattern. Different tooth positions tend to be contrasted with the part of the tongue used to create them. In most languages using pawls, teeth overlap. Taa (! Xóõ) is a counter example to this model, but in the same language there are few consonants in the same place.