The easiest trick for pronouncing the w
combinations ew, iw
and w
is to think of Elmer Fudd or a two-year-old who can't say "L." |
| English "hell"
comes out as Samala hew "pelican."
This bit of mimicry comes easily to most of us and it works much better
for mastering ew than trying to figure out the
phonetics involved. |
 |
elew |
 elew |
| ew |
elew |
"go down/come
down" |
 |
| |
 elew |
"tongue" |
 |
| |
hew |
"pelican" |
hew |
| |
 e w |
"barn owl" |
|
 |
Be careful not to pronounce this combination
of letters like the English spelling of words such as "few"
or "chew." |
| |
|
|
|
|
Here are words with iw and w
combinations. |
Again, remember Elmer Fudd or the two-year-old who can't say
"L." Except for the glottalization,
English "chill" comes out like Samala
 iw
"paw (of an animal)." |
| iw |
  iw |
"paw (of an animal)" |
 |
 |
| |
pi w |
"to cost" |
| |
|
|
|
w |
aq w |
"to gut, ream out" |
|
|
| |
aql w |
"word, speech, language" |
 |
|
| |
cy w |
"kind, sort; edge, rim" |
 |
| |
x l w |
"crystal, quartz; glass" |
You've already learned a word with the combination
y
—   h y
"man, male." Here are a few others. |
y |
  y |
"wasp" |
 |
 |
| |
kn y |
"fox" |
| |
w y |
"notch,
groove" |
 |
| |
|
|
|