For example, many speakers pronounce fire, tiger, and spider with the raised vowel.
The speaker must pronounce a roommate's name clearly in order for it to count.
However, nowadays most Spanish speakers pronounce ll the same as y (yeísmo).
There is noticeable pronunciation differences by which each speaker pronounces the name of his or her respective city.
The same speaker may pronounce "Toronto" differently depending on the subject of the conversation in which it is used.
Some speakers might even pronounce it as kepjoeater.
Most systems available today can do this only when the speaker pronounces every word with great clarity and pauses after each one.
Lieberman (1963), for example, found that speakers pronounce words less clearly when they are more predictable from their linguistic or pragmatic contexts.
The standard language is being affected by different dialects, where speakers pronounce the two accents differently.
Some speakers pronounce them on one side of the mouth, some on both.