Idiom Taken to the Cleaners American English Pronunciation

In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to go over the idiom ‘taken to

the cleaners’.

To be taken to the cleaners can mean the same
thing as the idiom ‘ripped off’, which we’ve

already studied: They charged me double, I
was taken to the cleaners. But it can also

mean to be bested by someone, to be defeated.
For example, my team was taken to the cleaners

in the last game of the season. That doesn’t
mean that we lost by one or two points. That

means we lost by a lot.

Taken to the cleaners begins with the True
T, your teeth have to come together, your

tongue has to go to the roof of the mouth,
tt. Then we have the AY as in SAY diphthong.

Common problem is not dropping the jaw enough
for the first sound. Ta-. This is a stressed

syllable. The second syllable is unstressed.
Ta-ken, -ken, -ken. Super fast – so it’s

the K, schwa/N sound. For the K sound, the
back part of the tongue comes up and touches

the soft palate here, the tongue tip stays
down. Then you quickly release the K and the

front part of the tongue goes to the roof
of the mouth for the N, -ken. You don’t need

to worry about making a separate schwa vowel
sound, enough of one will happen as you transition.

Now we have TO and THE, both unstressed in
this sentence fragment. I’m going to reduce

the vowel to the schwa in TO, and I’m even
going to reduce the T to a Flap T instead

of a True T. So, it’s going to sound like
‘de’ instead of ‘te’. I’m going to link it

to the word THE. The two words link together
and they’re going to be very flat and quick,

‘to the’, ‘to the’. Actually, I’ve made a
video on these two words specifically, how

the mouth moves to make these two words together,
so check that out. To the, to the, to the.

Not clear on its own, right? Taken to the,
taken to the. Taken to the cleaners. Cleaners,

a noun, a content word, is stressed. It has
two syllables, and just like ‘taken’, stress

is on the first syllable.
Cleaners. ‘Cleaners’ begins with the KL consonant

cluster. So the back part of the tongue lifts
and touches the soft palate here. But this

time, rather than the tongue tip being down,
the tongue tip can be in position for the

L, here. That way when you release the K,
you’re ready to go for the L, kl, kl, kl.

Next, the EE as in SHE vowel – tongue tip
down, cl-, cl-, but front part of the tongue

very close to the roof of the mouth, clea-.
Corners of the lips may pull back a little

bit, clea-. And the last syllable, unstressed,
quite fast, -ners, -ners, -ners. Tongue tip

will be up here at the roof of the mouth for
the N, clean, and then pull back for

the R, cleaner-. Again, you don’t need to
think about making a schwa sound between the

two. The schwa is sort of absorbed by the
R anyway. And the S is pronounced as a Z,

-ners, -ners, -ners. Cleaners, taken to the
cleaners.

Practice your English: Make up a sentence
that uses this idiom, record a video, and

post it as a video response to this video
on YouTube. I can’t wait to watch!

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