How to Pronounce S s vs. SH American English
In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to compare the consonants S
and SH.
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More information at the end of the video.
I got a request recently to compare these
two consonants. I’m happy to do it.
The S sound can actually be made two different
ways: one with the tongue tip pointing up,
and one with it pointing down. I make the
S with the tongue tip pointing down. Sss.
Notice how the corners of my lips are either
relaxed, ss, or pull out, ss. This is different
from SH, shhh, where the corners come in and
the lips flare. Let’s compare some photos
to look at the tongue position.
You can see that not only is the lip position
different, but the tongue position too. For
the S sound, the tongue tip touches the back
of the bottom front teeth. The front/middle
part lifts a little bit.
For the SH sound, the tongue tip lifts to
the middle of the mouth. Though it stays forward,
it’s not touching anything. The front/middle
part of the tongue arches up so it’s very
close to the roof of the mouth.
I’m going to turn off the sound now. Just
look at my mouth. Which sound am I making?
The S sound. My lips did not flare.
Let’s look at some minimal pairs. Repeat
with me.
See, she.
suit, shoot.
sock, shock.
sign, shine.
Now I’m going to say just one word in a
minimal pair. Which is it? Is it the word
with S or SH?
Has this video helped? Sh, ss.
I hope it has.
If there’s a concept you need help with,
please put it in the comments below.
Also, I’m very excited to tell you that
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using
Rachel’s English.
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