Homophone Phrases American English Pronunciation
In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to talk about homophone phrases.
Today I’m going to talk about how reductions
can make homophone phrases. A homophone
is a pair or set of words that have different
meanings and often different spellings, but
sound the same, like flour / flower.
For example, three sentence fragments: got
a / got to / I’ve got to. They’ll all sound
the same when we reduce them in a sentence.
I got a new car, I got a new car, got a, got a,
I got a new car. Or, I got to test drive
it, I got to test drive it, got to, got to,
I got to test drive it. Or, I have got to
go. I’ve got to go, got to, got to. I’ve got
to go. When students realize this, there
is sometimes a bit of panic: how will people
know which one I’m saying. I want to put
you at ease: you never need to worry about
that. The context will always make it clear.
Another example: ‘had her’ and ‘hatter’
– I’m sure you know the Mad Hatter is a character
in Alice in Wonderland. One thing I try
to stress with my students: when we’re doing
a reduction, like dropping the H in the word
‘her’, we don’t want it to sound like a separate
word. We want it to sound like an extra
syllable, part of a bigger word. So ‘had
her’, had’er, had’er, two words, should sound
just like ‘hatter’, ‘hatter’, one word.
Had her, hatter.
I had her bring it to me at work.
The Mad Hatter is a fun character.
Think about this any time you’re working with
the reduction of her, or dropping the H on
any other H reduction. It should sound like
an extra syllable tacked on to the end of
the word before.
Let’s look at some more examples of these
homophone phrases:
let her / led her / letter – I let her
leave work early, let her, let her. I led
her the wrong way, led her, led her. I
didn’t get the letter, letter, letter.
but her / butter – I invited her, but her
mother said no, but her, but her. When I
bake, I usually use butter instead of margarine,
butter, butter.
gave him / gave them – Now here we’re dealing
with two words that sound the same
when they reduce. Both HIM and THEM reduce
to the schwa-M sound. So ‘gave him’ sounds
just like ‘gave them’. I gave him a new shirt,
gave him, gave him. I gave them my old TV,
gave them, gave them. Again, you don’t need
to worry that they sound the same. Based
on context, people will know what you’re talking
about.
So there it is, just another interesting part
of American English pronunciation.
That’s it, and thanks so much for using
Rachel’s English.