3 RULES for PERFECT English

You were taught that this word is pronounced want, 
right? But listen to how my toddler pronounces it  

I want it. Want it. No T. Did you learn t.hat 
pronunciation when you learned this word?  

Probably not. You probably learned the wrong 
pronunciation of so many words in English and it’s  

not your fault. It’s how English is taught. It’s 
so frustrating you were not given the full picture  

of English pronunciation when you learned English 
as a non-native speaker. Because when you learned  

a new word, there was a focus on reading, writing, 
and the letters, what you see not, what you hear.  

You have to learn totally different 
rules when it comes to speaking English. 

Because it’s not just two-year-olds who 
say want without a T, in this phrase.

By the way, there are four different 
pronunciations of the T. Dropping it is  

just one of them, and we’ll talk about 
them all. Today, we’re going to study  

how my toddler speaks English. And we’re going 
to cover the main things you need to change,  

the main rules you need to know as a non-native 
speaker, to correct your pronunciation, to improve  

your fluency in spoken English. And as always, if 
you like this video, or you learned something new,  

please give it a thumbs up and subscribe with 
notifications. I’d love to see you back.
 

First, let me say, what’s wrong with 
having an accent when speaking a foreign  

language? Absolutely nothing. Accents, 
human diversity, they’re wonderful.  

But if the way you speak English is getting in the 
way of your communication, if you’re not reaching  

your own goals for yourself, then it’s a problem. 
Let’s not let this be what holds you back. My son,  

of course, is learning English only by hearing. He 
doesn’t get messed up by seeing or understanding  

letters, and how they might relate to sounds. I 
recently posted a video online of a conversation  

I had with him, and one of my students commented 
how she noticed he was naturally doing all these  

things it’s taken her years to work on. So 
she, like you, learned that this letter is  

pronounced ttt– T pronunciations, reductions, 
and linking, are the three main things we’ll  

talk about in this video. Sawyer, my son, 
does it all naturally. Most of my students  

don’t. I’ll make sure you know where to go to 
work on all of these things. You learned tt–  

a true T but I would say that’s the pronunciation, 
10 maybe 20% of the time, so most of the time,  

it’s the wrong, less natural pronunciation. The 
rest of the time, it’s dropped, flapped, stopped,  

or turned into a CH. We’ve seen an example 
of dropping the T in: I want it. I want it.

I want it.

He also drops it in the word just.  

I just want it now. I just want it. It’s really 
common to drop the T between two consonants,  

and that’s why he drops it in just. The next sound 
is the W consonant. Just want it. Last summer,  

for example, there, also very common 
to drop the T because it comes between  

two consonants. Last summer. I just 
want it. Let’s hear his phrase again. 

I just want it now. Actually, just the other 
day, i told my four-year-old son, Stoney,  

to brush his teeth. You know what he said? I 
don’t want to. I don’t want to. I don’t want to. 

He dropped the T in want, the T in don’t, the T 
in to. He said that phrase with no T’s. I don’t  

want to. All smoothly linked together, but all Ts 
dropped .i actually have a video that goes over  

N apostrophe T words, like don’t. That’s really 
helpful. I go over all the different ways the T  

might be pronounced in this particular word or 
set of words, so check that video out here, or  

by clicking the link in the video description.
Stoney, time to brush your teeth. I don’t want to. 

Sawyer also changes the T pronunciation 
in the phrase ‘can you get it for me?’.  

Can you get it for me? Get it—becomes: get it, 
get it, get it, linking those two words with  

a flap T. Get it, get it, that’s very different 
from ttt–, get it, get it, get it, get it.

Let’s see it again.
 

Can you get it for me?
Get it. Get it. It sounds like a D between  

vowels in American English, doesn’t it? Get 
it, get it. That’s one of our T pronunciations,  

and it helps us speak English really smoothly, 
and that smoothness, and linking between words  

is a really important characteristic of American 
English, and that might be different than your  

native language. If you’ve watched a lot of my 
videos, then you’re probably pretty familiar with  

the different T pronunciations. But if you want a 
refresher, or if this idea is totally new to you,  

i’ve put together a playlist that goes 
over the different T pronunciations,  

and when you would want to use each one.
Now, in this phrase: Can you get it for me?  

He also did an important reduction, and reductions 
are another key issue you’ll want to study to make  

sure that you’re having more natural English 
pronunciation, to focus on English sounds,  

and how things are actually pronounced, 
not words or letters. It was this word,  

you probably learned it’s pronounced for.
I doubt you learned that it’s pronounced fer.  

but that’s how it’s pronounced most of the 
time. There’s a big difference between for and  fer.

Now with Sawyer here, I’ve slowed it down  

so you’re not going to hear it as short, but 
you’ll definitely hear it’s fur, and not for.

For– for– Can you get it for me?
You know, I had a student in my academy once,  

she lived in the US and she was married to an 
American. She told him about the academy and  

that she was training to change her habit 
to say fur instead of for. And he said,  

what? That’s not how we say it. Of course, he 
was wrong. We’re so unaware of our own habits.  

As an adult, he was also tied to the letters 
F-O-R even though he himself pronounced it as:  

for, for, as if it had no vowel at all. By the 
way she did catch him in conversation saying fer–  

and so she stopped him and pointed it out. She 
knew more about his pronunciation than he did.  

Okay, so for becomes fr, that’s a reduction, 
that means a sound changes or is dropped. This  

word and so many others, we almost always reduce 
them. Keep in mind, this is not bad English,  

sloppy English, lazy English, unclear English, 
this is actually the most clear English, the  

way all native speakers do it. Because American 
English is a stress-timed language, that means a  

contrast between long and short is very important, 
and reductions help us say these kinds of words  

very quickly. There are lots of common reductions 
in English. You can learn them. You can learn the  

reduction. And you can train that. You can be 
like Sawyer and say: for me, instead of: for me.

I have a playlist that goes over a lot of these 
and I also have a complete set of videos dedicated  

to reductions along with audio for training in 
my online school Rachel’s English Academy. If you  

want to learn more about the academy and how you 
can, join click here or see the pinned comment.  

Now, let’s talk about linking, our third topic 
today. Many students like to make each individual  

word clear and separate. But we don’t have a 
feeling of separation between words in English.  

Remember, our example from Sawyer, just want–just 
want– instead of: just want, just want,  

he dropped the T. That’s because it makes it a 
smoother link. Just want, just want. So we link  

words together and we want that smoothness 
for that American English flowing sound.  

If this is hard for you, there are some 
tricks, like dropping the T in just,  

and I’ve put together a playlist that can help 
you with this. And actually, reductions, like fr,  

the for reduction you just learned, these really 
tie in with linking. Reductions have to be linked  

to sound right. You can’t say ‘for me’ with a 
separation like that. You want: for me, for me,  

for me, for me. Constant flow of sound, as if 
it’s one word. So reductions and linking really  

work together in American English. In next week’s 
video, we’re going to do an in-depth analysis of a  

scene from a movie, so we can really study these 
reductions in real English and how everything  

links together. T pronunciations too. So be 
sure to come back next week for that video.  

Now, let’s see that whole conversation I had 
with Sawyer. What do you notice about his speech?

By the way, here are the places 
where you can follow me, where I  

sometimes post things like that video, you’ll 
get to see short videos and photos from my life  

occasionally. And you can keep your learning 
going right now with this video. If you’re  

serious about changing some of your habits 
in spoken English, head over to my academy  

and check it out, we can help you and 
support you. Rachelsenglishacademy.com

And don’t forget to subscribe here on YouTube.  

I make new videos every Tuesday. That’s it 
and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English