English, asked by thakurvikash2322, 10 months ago

The problem of phonetics and pronunciation is dealt with by george bernard shaw in

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Answered by yallboymoney206
0

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We use bank-grade encryption to keep your personal information safe, and you always have control over what information gets shared.

ID.me helps you prove your identity and group affiliation across multiple websites. It serves the same purpose as the physical ID cards you carry in your wallet – but for the internet.

We use bank-grade encryption to keep your personal information safe, and you always have control over what information gets shared.

Take control of your digital identity

ID.me helps you prove your identity and group affiliation across multiple websites. It serves the same purpose as the physical ID cards you carry in your wallet – but for the internet.

We use bank-grade encryption to keep your personal information safe, and you always have control over what information gets shared.

Explanation:

Answered by pankajroy2
2

Answer:

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LYNN RAMSSON | CERTIFIED EDUCATOR

Pygmalion is all about speech and phonetics, which are the cornerstones of the British experience of social class.

At the start of the play, Henry Higgins gambles with Pickering over his experiment with Eliza's speech; by making the bet in the first place, Higgins is treating the acquisition of so-called "proper" speech and pronunciation as a sport, which reflects Higgins's position of privilege within British society. Only someone so confident in his or her position could make light of it in this way.

Later in the play, Eliza is very convincing after she has been schooled by Higgins, which suggests that social class is utterly meaningless; if the trappings of high class can be learned so quickly and so thoroughly by someone of such low position as a flower seller, what value does it carry, really?

Ironically, though Shaw might be able to make the meaninglessness of speech and phonetics apparent, through Higgin's treating speech like a sport and through Eliza's rapid progress, the harsh reality still persists: speech and phonetics in Britain remain significant markers of class that divide the people of Britain still to this day.

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