well what about guttural abcdefghijklmnopqrstvxyzæøå`?
Very cool. Odd how it skipped Spain
Pavma is missing.
Half of Belgium uses a trill and the Netherlands is mostly trill and alveolar
What do the different shades mean?
Is this the sound you make when you have corn shell stuck in the back of you throat when you eat popcorn?
That rolled Bavarian “R” always gets me.
There are plenty of parts of rural southern France where people still use alveolar trill or tap for R.
Brazilian Portuguese uses guttural r’s syllable finally (e.g. puRtugaw for Portugal) but are you sure that major coastal Portuguese cities use ALL guttural r’s (dark red)?
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[UPDATED MAP] – Feel free to comment if any areas you know use the guttural R are missing on the map above.
Source: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guttural_R](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guttural_R) & [https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivo:Guttural_R_used_in_Western_Europe.png](https://es.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivo:Guttural_R_used_in_Western_Europe.png)
well what about guttural abcdefghijklmnopqrstvxyzæøå`?
Very cool. Odd how it skipped Spain
Pavma is missing.
Half of Belgium uses a trill and the Netherlands is mostly trill and alveolar
What do the different shades mean?
Is this the sound you make when you have corn shell stuck in the back of you throat when you eat popcorn?
That rolled Bavarian “R” always gets me.
There are plenty of parts of rural southern France where people still use alveolar trill or tap for R.
Brazilian Portuguese uses guttural r’s syllable finally (e.g. puRtugaw for Portugal) but are you sure that major coastal Portuguese cities use ALL guttural r’s (dark red)?