I always thought it was more about whether the L sound was before a vowel or before a consonant. In regular speech, when you link words together, the L sound can be at the end of a word, but still would be the same as if it was at the beginning. E.g., in the sentence 'throw the ball at me', the L sound in 'ball' is the same as in the word 'life' because 'at' is right after it. Similarly, in words like 'boulder', the L sound before the consonant D is the same as when the L is at the end of a word, e.g., 'throw the ball' or 'call me'.
Yes! I think she does talk about that later in the video, but I love that you put that point here because it is very important. 🤗🩵💙 Hugs and Vibes! ~ Amy
I always thought it was more about whether the L sound was before a vowel or before a consonant. In regular speech, when you link words together, the L sound can be at the end of a word, but still would be the same as if it was at the beginning. E.g., in the sentence 'throw the ball at me', the L sound in 'ball' is the same as in the word 'life' because 'at' is right after it. Similarly, in words like 'boulder', the L sound before the consonant D is the same as when the L is at the end of a word, e.g., 'throw the ball' or 'call me'.
Yes! I think she does talk about that later in the video, but I love that you put that point here because it is very important. 🤗🩵💙 Hugs and Vibes! ~ Amy