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[Facts] Pronunciation of Teja
Can anyone please help me with the pronunciation of the name Teja.I see it as either tey-a or tee-jah (the "Jah" pron. like the begining of the French name Jaques).Thanks, Jo
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Tay zha, tay juh (soft j )
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Depends on the language. BtN lists it as a Slovene abbreviation of Doroteja (Dorothea), in which case it is pronounced Tei-ya (ei as in weigh). Bear in mind that the normal pronunciation of j is as English y. The palatal approximant j was replaced in English by the voiced palatal fricative which developed from palatal g, which in many words was then replaced by i, which was then, purely by scribal convention for clarity, replaced by y when initial or final (thus "day", but "daily" when the i is not final). In almost all the other European languages, and non-European languages which later adopted the modified Roman alphabet, the approximant is represented by J, developed from I. Y in other languages is frequently the equivalent of OE Y, or Greek Υ (upsilon, a u sound similar to the u in Tuesday).
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I would say it tay-hah, because it looks spanish to me. If not, then I would say tay-yah.
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I say it's said like this because I requested my spiritual name at 3ho.com and I received it as Teja Pavan ...And the website pronounced it this way as well as my yoga teacher.
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That combination probably comes from Sanskrit. The root tij means to prick or sharpen (related to English stick), and teja means sharpness, and by extension, power. The t- is a voiced dental plosive, the -e- is a voiced long close-mid front vowel (started as an a+i dipthong in ancient language, but lost that quality pretty fast), the -j- is a voiced palatal affricate, and the -a is a schwa, which can be made into a long open -a to make it feminine. Incidentally pavana, purifier, is from pU, related to english fire, meaning to purify. It is the usual name for the wind spirits. The -a dropped out in modern north Indian languages.
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Do you mean a voiced alveolo-palatal or postalveolar affricate? The voiced palatal affricate is rare, and not usually represented by j (g, gg or gj is typical as the stop component is an allophone of g before front vowels, e.g. geese).
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Voiced post-alveolar affricate
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Sorry, "t- is an unvoiced dental plosive"
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