My [a:], let me show you it
n_true pointed me to Forvo, where you can listen to recordings of words in many languages or record your own, and I've been recording a bunch of German words.
(I wonder who requested those words... many of them look as if they came from a political text or something.)
After each recording, it's played back to you so you can choose whether to stick with it or try again, and I've found that my long /a:/ phoneme sounds different than the sound I thought I make :) Somehow more... back and rounded or something.
My short /a/ sounds as I expect, though, even though I read that in German, the two phonemes differ only in quantity, not in quality. (Unlike the other short-long vowel pairs, which differ in both.)
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I think I've recorded be'Hom.
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(I've considered doing Klingon, too, but I don't think I'd try Japanese.)
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You're right, though, the list of people who are "qualified" is extremely small (or possibly empty).
Similarly with Ancient Greek, and *maybe* with Sanskrit (I've heard rumours of a village in India where people have revived Sanskrit, though I don't know whether it's the children's native language or whether they merely learn it at school and only speak it later in life).
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I've read the same but find it hard to believe it, at least in my pronunciation.