How to Pronounce COMFORTABLE AMERICAN ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION

In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to go over the pronunciation of

the word ‘comfortable’.

This week’s Word of the Week is ‘comfortable’.
If you look this up in a dictionary, you’re

probably going to see something other than
what I’m going to say now. I’m going to tell

you how people say it when they speak American
English. COMF-der-ble. Three syllables. Stress

on the first syllable. Comf-, comf-. We begin
with the K consonant sound, where the back

part of the tongue will reach up here and
touch the soft palate, kk, kk. Then we have

the UH as in BUTTER vowel, where the tongue
and lips are totally relaxed, co-. Then the

M consonant, where the lips come together:
com-, com-, comf-. Then we have the F consonant,

so the lips will part so the bottom lip can
be touching the top teeth, comf-, comf-. Then

we have an unstressed syllable: the D sound,
schwa/R sound, -der-, -der-. It’s going to

be short, flat, low in pitch, and quiet, -der-,
-der-. Comf-der-. And finally, -ble, -ble.

The B consonant with the Dark L sound, -ble,
-ble. Again, it’s unstressed, so it’s going

to be low in pitch and flatter, -der-ble,
-der-ble. COMF-der-ble. Comfortable.

To make the Dark L, pull the back part of
the tongue back towards the roof of the mouth.

You don’t need to worry about bringing the
front part of the tongue up if you make the

dark sound: ul, ul. Comfortable. Comfortable.

I hope you’re comfortable.

That’s it, your Word of the Week. Try it out
yourself. Make up a sentence with the word,

record it, and post it as a video response
to this video on YouTube. I can’t wait to

watch it.

That’s it, and thanks so much
for using Rachel’s English.