English TH Accent Training

You may have learned that this is what
you need to do for the TH sound.

Here I’m saying the phrase ‘bad weather’ and I’ve frozen my mouth on TH.

This is the position of the TH sometimes,

but there are a lot of very common words where native speakers do a little bit of a shortcut for the TH.

It all relates to stress.

In this video you’re going to learn that shortcut, the right way to make a TH.

I love this: we’re studying a sound,

but at the same time we’re studying stress, the foundation of American English.

First, let’s talk about the full TH position.

This is the one you’ve been taught as a student, but my students still really struggle with this sound.

That can happen for a couple of reasons.

One, they stick too much of their tongue out.

Look, it’s not that much, it’s just the very tip.

Two, they block the air with their tongue.

Th. Th. Th.

That turns this into a stop consonant, it’s not a stop consonant.

The air flows freely.

You should be able to hold it continuously with no stopped air, no pressure.

Just try that with me now.

See how the teeth are just very lightly
touching the tongue.

You don’t want to press the teeth into the tongue.

So these are the mistakes my students make when trying to make a TH sound.

The other biggest problem is they simply don’t make it.

They make an S sound, or a T.

What do you sink?

Or what do you tink?

then with the voiced TH they make a D sound:

dis is mine, or a Z sound, zis is mine.

That’s not a huge problem.

In most cases, it won’t mess up people
understanding you.

But if a lot of your sounds are inaccurate

and your rhythm isn’t American,

it can start to be hard to understand someone.

So it is worth taking the time to learn these new sounds that you don’t have in your native language.

Let’s look at three words with a TH at the beginning, middle, and end.

First, the word thin.

This TH is unvoiced, that means it’s made with just the air, no vibration of the vocal cords.

TH.

Thin, thin.

Watch this. You’ll see it in slow motion. You’ll see it twice, then a third time with no sound.

You say it, slowly, just like you’ve seen.

Thin.

Now a word with a TH in the middle, ‘although’.

Here the TH is voiced.

That means it’s not just air,

but vocal vibration as well,

Although, the tongue position is the same.

Although

Let’s take a look at this word.
You’ll see it twice, hear it twice, study it.

Then you’ll see it one more time with no sound, you say it out loud that time.

Say it slowly, although.

And now a word with the TH at the end.

This is both.

What TH is that, voiced or unvoiced?

Both, thh.

That’s unvoiced.

You’ll see and hear it two times, the third time you say it, slowly, both.

Both

Great

Now let’s talk about that shortcut.

Sometimes the tongue tip doesn’t come
all the way through the teeth.

Let me show you what I mean.

We’re going to study a phrase, It’s better than I thought.

So we have two TH’s there.

One in the word ‘than’, and the one in
the word ‘thought’.

It’s better than I thought.

When I do that phrase, which words are
the most stressed?

Which are the most clear to you?

It’s better than I thought.

It’s better than I thought.

‘Better’ and ‘thought’ are stressed.

That means the word ‘than’ is unstressed.

Than is unstressed and it begins with a voiced TH.

In this case we can do the tongue shortcut.
Let’s see.

I’ve just started the word ‘than’.

Look at the tongue position.

It’s different than what we’ve been seeing.

The tip isn’t out.

Where is it?

It’s actually behind the teeth.

The very tip is touching the backs of the teeth.

It doesn’t sound like a D because we’re not putting pressure against the roof of the mouth.

Let’s keep going.

Here is the TH in THOUGHT.

This TH is unvoiced, and the tongue tip always has to come through for an unvoiced TH.

Plus, this word is stressed.

Let’s watch the whole phrase again.

TH in than, tongue tip not coming through.

TH in thought, tongue tip coming through.

There are a lot of really common words
that will usually be unstressed,

that begin with a voiced TH.

You can do this shortcut on those words.

‘Than’ is one of them. It’s pronounced: than, than.

Notice in the phrase the vowel is
reduced: it’s not THAN.

A common English reduction.

Let’s practice just the three words

‘better than I’.

Better than I.

Better than I.

Than, unstressed, than.

Better than– Better than I. Better than I.

Simplifying the TH in the word THAN
doing our shortcut

helps us get through these unstressed
and an important syllables more quickly

which is what we want.

That is the rhythm of American English, and it’s foundation, it’s so important.

Simplifying the unstressed words helps us say them more quickly,

provides better contrast to a longer, stressed syllables.

Actually, this reminds me of an email I just got last night from someone in my Academy.

Here’s what she said let me go get it:

It was nothing like I expected and to be honest I was so upset to start with such basic stuff.

Ugh!

A million negative thoughts went through
my head as I did imitation.

Long story short, I was shocked at how
much I needed the basics.

YOUR ACADEMY IS FREAKING AWESOME! LOL

The thing I told her is that I’m addressing
stress with my students

with both the biggest accent struggles and also my most advanced students.

It matters for everyone.

Knowing this simplification of the TH and tying it to stress is going to help you sound more natural.

She goes on to say:

As important as communication is

I think my biggest achievement so far is
how much more confident I feel.

That confidence spills into every aspect of my life.

Not to be sappy and corny but words fail
to convey my heartfelt gratitude.

Carol Ann, thank you so much.

I got this late last night when I was working.

An idiom we can use for this is
‘burning the midnight oil,’ working late.

And it gave me a pick-me-up when I needed it.

So ‘better than I’ is BE-tter-than-I.

Than, than, than, than, than

with that simplified TH.

You try it.

Just try the unstressed syllables.

Better than I.

ter-than-I

Let your face completely relax.

ter-than-I

Now we’ll see the phrase again three times.

You’ll hear the audio all three times,

but do repeat out loud the third time
with me, in slow motion.

Now let’s do it’s worse than I thought.

Here again you can see the tongue position for the TH is not through the teeth.

The tip is just behind the teeth.

This simplified TH helps me make the sound faster.

It’s not a D, it’s not pushing against
the roof of my mouth.

It’s pressing the backs of the teeth.

Worse than, worse than.

and now here is the full position for the TH in ‘thought’.

Worse than I.

Worse than I

– than I, than I, than I

– than I thought.

Try just ‘than I’ with me.

Than I , than I.

Simple.

It’s worse than I thought.

It’s worse than I thought.

Hear that stress.

Feel it. Worse and thought are stressed, longer, up-down shape: than I– than I– than I–

These two words are flatter in pitch, said more quickly.

More simply.

Than I, than I.

Now we’ll see the phrase again three times.

You’ll hear the audio all three times, but do repeat out loud the third time with me, in slow motion.

What do you think?

Is this simplified TH starting to make more sense?

Let’s study one more sentence with the word ‘than’

The phrase is “I thought it would be easier than this.”

Three TH’s.

I thought it would be easier than this.

Thought and this, both of these TH words are stressed.

And the tongue tip will come through for that.

THAN unstressed, the tongue
position will be simplified.

Clear TH position for the word ‘thought’.

Simplified position for the word ‘than’.

Clear TH position for the word ‘ this’.

IT’s a voiced TH, but since the word is stressed, the whole tongue tip does come through.

The word THIS can be unstressed, and in that case you’ll see the simplified position.

We’ll see that later in this video.

Now we’ll see the phrase again three times.

You’ll hear the audio all three times, but do repeat out loud the third time with me, in slow motion.

It’s tricky.

We have three TH’s here.

I’m going to give you another tricky sentence.

It’s “my brother’s taller than Theo.”

Brother and Theo will have the tongue tip
coming through.

THAN is simplified. Let’s watch.

Now you’ll see it three times, repeat out
loud the third time.

Other words that begin with a voiced TH that may be unstressed are: the, this, that, these, them.

Actually the TH in THEM can even be dropped.

That’s a pretty common reduction.

Also though, they’re, there, their.

Note at the beginning of a sentence, it can go either way.

The mouth position can be simplified or it might not be.

You’ll notice this as you watch more examples.

I think you get how we do the simplified TH and what is the right tongue position for a full TH.

The rest of this video is going to be words
and phrases with TH.

Some will have a simplified position and some will be the full position.

You’ll be able to identify that because everything is in slow motion.

The text is on the screen so you can use the slider on the video player to go quickly,

fast forward, find the words and phrases you most want to practice .

We’ll have some good ones in there like
‘thirteenth birthday’.

Sore throat, and I think so.

For each one, you’ll see and hear it three times, I suggest you say it out loud the third time.

Notice where a TH is simplified.

Practice it that way.

Stop the video if you need to and repeat many times to get that movement into your mouth, to build that habit.

If you work on this video every day, and you use a mirror to watch your own mouth,

for a couple of weeks, can you imagine how comfortable you’ll be with this sound?

Are you still here?

Amazing.

I have no doubt that your TH is clearer than it was at the beginning of this video.

To study more up-close shots of the mouth, check out this difficult words video.

Please be sure to subscribe with notifications.

I make new videos every Tuesday that focus on spoken English

and I’d love to see you back here.

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

您可能已经了解到,这是
您需要为 TH 声音做的事情。

在这里,我说的是“坏天气”这句话,我已经把嘴冻住了。

有时这是 TH 的位置,

但有很多非常常见的词,母语人士为 TH 做了一点捷径。

这一切都与压力有关。

在本视频中,您将学习该捷径,即制作 TH 的正确方法。

我喜欢这一点:我们正在研究声音,

但同时我们也在研究压力,这是美国英语的基础。

首先,让我们谈谈完整的TH位置。

这是您作为学生时被教过的那个,但我的学生仍然对这种声音感到很挣扎。

这可能有几个原因。

一,他们伸出太多舌头。

看,不是那么多,这只是小费。

第二,他们用舌头挡住空气。

钍。 钍。 钍。

这把它变成了一个停止辅音,它不是一个停止辅音。

空气自由流动。

您应该能够在没有停止空气、没有压力的情况下连续握住它。

现在就和我一起试试吧。

看看牙齿是如何轻轻
接触舌头的。

你不想把牙齿压进舌头。

所以这些是我的学生在尝试发出 TH 声音时所犯的错误。

另一个最大的问题是他们根本做不到。

它们发出 S 音或 T 音。

你听什么?

或者你觉得什么?

然后用浊音 TH 发出 D 音:

dis 是我的,或 Z 音,zis 是我的。

这不是一个大问题。

在大多数情况下,它不会弄乱
理解你的人。

但是如果你的很多声音都不准确,

而且你的节奏不是美式的,

那么你就会开始很难理解某人。

因此,值得花时间学习这些您的母语中没有的新声音。

让我们看一下开头、中间和结尾都有 TH 的三个单词。

一是薄二字。

这个 TH 是清音的,这意味着它是由空气制成的,没有声带的振动。

TH。

薄,薄。

看这个。 你会在慢动作中看到它。 你会看到它两次,然后第三次没有声音。

你说,慢慢地,就像你见过的一样。

薄薄地。

现在是一个中间带 TH 的词,“虽然”。

这里 TH 是浊音。

这意味着它不仅仅是空气,

还有声音的振动,

虽然,舌头的位置是一样的。

虽然

让我们来看看这个词。
你会看到两次,听到两次,研究它。

然后你会再看一次,没有声音,那一次你大声说出来。

不过慢慢说吧。

现在在结尾加上一个 TH 字。

这两者兼而有之。

那是什么 TH,有声还是无声?

两者,th。

那是无声的。

你会看到和听到两次,第三次说出来,慢慢地,两者兼而有之。

两者都

很棒

现在让我们谈谈那个捷径。

有时舌尖不会
完全穿过牙齿。

让我告诉你我的意思。

我们要学习一个短语,它比我想象的要好。

所以我们有两个 TH。

一个在“比”一词中,一个
在“思想”一词中。

这比我想象的要好。

当我做那个短语时,哪些
词最重?

你最清楚哪些?

这比我想象的要好。

这比我想象的要好。

强调“更好”和“思想”。

这意味着“than”这个词没有重读。

Than 不重读,以浊音 TH 开头。

在这种情况下,我们可以做舌头快捷方式。
让我们来看看。

我刚刚开始使用“比”这个词。

看舌头的位置。

这与我们所看到的不同。

小费没有出来。

它在哪里?

它实际上在牙齿后面。

尖端接触到牙齿的后部。

这听起来不像是 D,因为我们没有对上颚施加压力。

我们继续吧。

这是思想中的 TH。

这个 TH 是清音的,对于清音 TH,总是必须通过舌尖。

另外,这个词被强调了。

让我们再看一遍整个短语。

TH in than,舌尖不通过。

思索着,舌尖探出头来。

有很多非常常见的单词
通常不会重读,

它们以浊音 TH 开头。

您可以对这些单词执行此快捷方式。

“比”就是其中之一。 发音为:比,比。

注意短语中的元音
减少了:它不是 THAN。

一种常见的英语减法。

让我们只练习

“比我更好”这三个词。

比我

好。比我好。

比,无压力,比。

Better than– Better than I. Better than I.

简化 THAN 单词中的 TH
做我们的捷径

可以帮助我们更快地通过这些非
重读和重要的音节

,这正是我们想要的。

这就是美式英语的节奏,它是基础,非常重要。

简化未重读的单词有助于我们更快地说出它们

,与更长的重读音节形成更好的对比。

实际上,这让我想起了昨晚刚从我学院的某个人那里收到的一封电子邮件。

她是这么说的,让我去拿吧:

这和我预期的完全不同,老实说,从这些基本的东西开始我很沮丧。

啊! 当我模仿时,

一百万个消极的想法在
我脑海中闪过。

长话短说,我对
自己对基础知识的需要感到震惊。

你的学院太棒了! 大声笑

我告诉她的事情是,我正在
与我的学生

一起解决最大的口音问题以及我最先进的学生的压力。

这对每个人都很重要。

了解 TH 的这种简化并将其与压力联系起来会帮助你听起来更自然。

她接着说:

与沟通同样重要的是,

我认为迄今为止我最大的成就是
我感到更加自信。

这种自信渗透到我生活的方方面面。

不要过于笨拙和陈词滥调,但言语
无法表达我由衷的感激之情。

卡罗尔安,非常感谢你。

我昨晚工作的时候很晚才得到这个。

我们可以使用的一个成语是
“熬夜”,工作到很晚。

当我需要它时,它给了我一个提神剂。

所以“比我好”就是比我更好。

比,比,比,比,

比那个简化的 TH。

你试一下。

试试不重读的音节。

Better than I.

ter-than-I

让你的脸完全放松。

ter-than-I

现在我们将再次看到这个短语三遍。

你会听到所有声音三次,

但第三次大声重复
我,慢动作。

现在让我们做的比我想象的更糟。

在这里您可以再次看到 TH 的舌头位置不是通过牙齿。

尖端就在牙齿后面。

这个简化的 TH 帮助我使声音更快。

它不是 D,它没有推
到我的上颚。

它压在牙齿的后部。

比不上,比不上。

现在这里是 TH 在“思想”中的完整位置。

比我

更糟糕。比我更糟糕

——比我,比我,比我

——比我想象的还要糟糕。

和我一起尝试“比我”。

比我,比我。

简单。

这比我想象的还要糟糕。

这比我想象的还要糟糕。

听到压力。

感受一下。 Worse 和thought 是重音,更长,上下形状: than I– than I– than I-

这两个词音调平缓,说得更快。

更简单。

比我,比我。

现在我们将再次看到这个短语三遍。

你会听到所有声音三次,但第三次大声重复我,慢动作。

你怎么认为?

这个简化的 TH 开始变得更有意义了吗?

让我们再研究一个带有“比”这个词的句子,

这句话是“我认为这会比这更容易”。

三个 TH。

我认为这会比这更容易。

Thought 和 this,这两个 TH 词都被强调了。

舌尖会为此而来。

THAN unstressed,舌头
位置将被简化。

清除“思想”一词的 TH 位置。

单词“than”的简化位置。

清除单词“this”的 TH 位置。

它是一个浊音 TH,但由于这个词是重读的,整个舌尖都通过了。

THIS这个词可以不重读,在这种情况下你会看到简化的位置。

我们稍后会在本视频中看到这一点。

现在我们将再次看到这个短语三遍。

你会听到所有声音三次,但第三次大声重复我,慢动作。

这很棘手。

我们这里有三个 TH。

我要给你另一个棘手的句子。

这是“我哥哥比西奥高”。

兄弟和 Theo 将有
舌尖通过。

THAN 被简化。 让我们来看吧。

现在你会看到它三次,
第三次大声重复。

其他以浊音 TH 开头但可能不重读的词有:the, this, that, these, them。

实际上 THEM 中的 TH 甚至可以被删除。

这是一个很常见的减少。

不过,他们在那里,他们的。

注意在句子的开头,它可以去任何一种方式。

嘴的位置可以简化,也可以不简化。

当您观看更多示例时,您会注意到这一点。

我想你知道我们是如何做简化的 TH 的,以及完整的 TH 的正确舌头位置是什么。

该视频的其余部分将是
带有 TH 的单词和短语。

有些将有一个简化的位置,有些将是完整的位置。

您将能够识别出这一点,因为一切都在慢动作中。

文字显示在屏幕上,因此您可以使用视频播放器上的滑块快速、

快进,找到您最想练习的单词和短语。

我们会有一些好的,比如
“十三岁生日”。

喉咙痛,我想是的。

对于每一个,你会看到和听到三遍,我建议你第三遍大声说出来。

注意简化了 TH 的地方。

就这样练习。

如果需要,请停止视频并重复多次以使该动作进入您的嘴中,从而养成这种习惯。

如果你每天都在制作这个视频,并且用镜子观察自己的嘴巴,

持续几个星期,你能想象听到这个声音会有多舒服吗?

你还在吗?

惊人。

我毫不怀疑你的 TH 比视频开头更清晰。

要研究更多近距离拍摄的嘴巴,请查看这个难词视频。

请务必订阅通知。

我每周二都会制作专注于英语口语的新视频

,我很想在这里见到你。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。