According to someone who is actually fluent in the language it is not "you-an", but rather more like "yren" (admittedly difficult for the American tongue).
> yew- an. This first answer is correct. The 'an' as in "man". And the official Mandarin dialect which sounds exactly the same is "yuan" where there is an automatic implication of two dots over...
The usual pronunciation of I (the pronoun or English letter) is the same as the word (eye). However, the pronoun I is sometimes "extended" as (aye), a long I with a very soft long E on the end,...
It depends on the person. Some say Ay-Tee-Ay-Tee because of other walkers, like the AT-ST, AT-PT and AT-AA. Others say At-At (@-@) because it's more efficient to use just two syllables rather than...
h-OW doo yoo doo make sure that you don't put too much time into stressing each word though. when spoken normally the "do you do" sounds almost like one word