Advanced Ending Voiced vs. Unvoiced Consonants American Accent

In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to talk about ending voiced

vs. unvoiced consonants.

In American English, we have voiced and unvoiced
sounds. All vowels are voiced. All diphthongs

are voiced. Consonants can be either voiced
or unvoiced. Unvoiced consonants are made

just with air, no, uhh, sound from the vocal
cords. For example, hh, sh, tt, pp. Voiced

consonants do have voice in them, uhh, like:
mm, bb, zh.

Hh, sh, tt, pp.

Mm, bb, zh.

There are lots of consonant pairs where the
mouth position is the same, and one is voiced,

the other is unvoiced, for example, CH / JJ.

Every once in a while, I’ll get a comment
on a video asking about the pronunciation

of these paired consonants at the end of a
word. These come from people with a good ear

that pay attention to what they hear. Mostly
they say, I don’t hear a voiced consonant,

I hear an unvoiced consonant. They’re right.
We’re going to get into a topic here that

is quite advanced. It deals with subtle differences
of sound.

Let’s take, for example, the word ‘flowers’.
In IPA, we spell that like this: the ending

consonant is the Z sound, which is voiced.
But actually, that kind of sounds like an

S at the end, doesn’t it? Flowers, ss, ss.
A really weak, light S. It doesn’t have

a strong S, flowersss. That’s not correct.
But it also doesn’t have a strong Z, flowerzzz.

Flowers, ss, ss. It actually has a very weak
S.

Several years ago, I was reading an old pronunciation
book and it said how in these voiced/unvoiced

pairs, the unvoiced is strong and the voiced
is weak. I didn’t really know what that

meant until I started thinking about ending
consonants. These ending consonants are so

weak that we take the voice out of them, and
they end up sounding like weak unvoiced sounds.

So the word is not flowerssss or flowerzzz
but flowers, ss, ss, a weak unvoiced consonant.

Let’s look at a few more words.

Dive, ff, ff. It’s really a very weak F
[f]. It’s not divvve or difffe, but dive,

ff, ff.

Garage, sh, sh, sh. It’s a very weak unvoiced
SH sound. It’s not garasshh or garazzhh,

but, garage, sh, sh, sh.

Badge, ch, ch, ch. Very weak, unvoiced sound.
Not batch, or baDGE, but badge, ch.

Weakening these ending voiced consonants can
help you say the words more easily and more

naturally.

Let’s study the word ‘badge’ a little
further, and compare it with ‘batch’.

Badge, batch. The ending of ‘badge’ is
weak. Badge. The ending of ‘batch’ is

stronger. ‘Batch’. That’s not the only
difference. The unvoiced ending also makes

the vowel a little bit shorter.

Badge, batch. They don’t sound quite the
same. First of all, the ending of ‘batch’

is stronger. Badge, batch. CH, CH, instead
of ch, ch. Also, the vowel is longer on the

word ‘badge’. Vowels are a little longer
before voiced endings in these kinds of minimal

pairs. So, you have two clues to help figure
out which word it is: the strength of the

ending and the length of the vowel.

But, there is a time when the weak ending
gets stronger. Do you know when that is? It’s

when we link it to a word that begins with
a vowel or diphthong. In a consonant to vowel

link, it helps to think of the ending consonant
as beginning the next word. So if you think

of it as a beginning consonant, then it gets
much stronger. Let’s go back to the word

‘flowers’, and put it in a phrase, ‘flowers
on the table’. Flowers on, flowers on.

Now I’m hearing a little bit more of a clear
Z sound, zon [3x]. Flowers on.

It’s stronger than when the word was at the
end of a sentence. I love flowers. ss, ss, ss.

Flowers on, zz, zz, zz. So if the ending,
weak voiced consonant links into a vowel,

it’s not really that weak anymore.

This topic was pretty advanced. So if you
don’t understand, don’t worry. If you

do, think of lightening ending voiced consonants
and see if that helps make the pronunciation

of those words easier.

If there’s a word or phrase you’d like
help pronouncing, please put it in the comments

below. Also, I’m very excited to tell you
that my book is now on sale. If you liked

this video, there’s a lot more to learn
about American English pronunciation, and

my book will help you step by step. You can
get it by clicking here, or in the description

below.

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

在这个美式英语发音视频中,
我们将讨论结束浊音

和清音辅音。

在美式英语中,我们有浊音和清音
。 所有元音都是浊音。 所有的双元音

都是浊音。 辅音可以是浊音
或清音。 清辅音是

由空气发出的,不,呃,是声带发出的声音
。 例如,hh, sh, tt, pp。浊

辅音中确实有语音,uhh,例如:
mm, bb, zh。

Hh,sh,tt,

pp.mm,bb,zh。

有很多
嘴位相同的辅音对,一个是浊音

,另一个是清音,例如CH / JJ。

每隔一段时间,我会
在一段视频中收到评论,询问单词

末尾这些成对辅音的发音
。 这些来自耳朵好的人,

他们会注意他们所听到的。
他们大多说,我听不到浊辅音,

我听到清辅音。 他们是对的。
我们将在这里进入

一个相当高级的话题。 它处理
声音的细微差别。

让我们以“花”这个词为例。
在国际音标中,我们这样拼写:结尾

辅音是 Z 音,它是浊音。
但实际上,那种结尾听起来像一个

S,不是吗? 鲜花,ss,ss。
一个非常弱的轻S。它没有

一个强大的S,flowersss。 这是不正确的。
但它也没有很强的 Z,flowerzzz。

鲜花,ss,ss。 它实际上有一个非常弱的
S。

几年前,我在读一本旧的发音
书,它说在这些浊音/清音

对中,清音强而
浊音弱。

直到我开始考虑结束
辅音时,我才真正知道这意味着什么。 这些结尾的辅音

太弱了,以至于我们从它们中取出声音,
它们最终听起来像微弱的清音。

所以这个词不是flowersss 或flowerzzz,
而是flowers, ss, ss,一个弱清辅音。

让我们再看几句话。

潜水,ff,ff。 这真的是一个非常弱的 F
[f]。 这不是 divvve 或 difffe,而是 Dive,

ff, ff。

车库,嘘,嘘,嘘。 这是一种非常微弱的清音
SH 音。 不是 garasshh 或 garazzhh,

而是,garage, sh, sh, sh。

徽章,ch,ch,ch。 声音非常微弱,清音。
不是批次或徽章,而是徽章,ch。

弱化这些结尾的浊辅音可以
帮助您更轻松自然地说出单词

让我们进一步研究一下“badge”这个词
,并将其与“batch”进行比较。

徽章,批次。 “徽章”的结尾
很弱。 徽章。 “批次”的结局

更强。 ‘批’。 这不是唯一的
区别。 清音结尾也

使元音短一点。

徽章,批次。 它们听起来不太
一样。 首先,‘batch’的结局

更强。 徽章,批次。 CH,CH,而
不是 ch,ch。 此外,

“badge”这个词的元音更长。
在这些最小对中,元音在浊音结尾之前稍长一些

。 因此,您有两条线索可以帮助您
确定它是哪个单词:结尾的强度

和元音的长度。

但是,有时弱结局
会变得更强。 你知道那是什么时候吗?

当我们将它链接到
以元音或双元音开头的单词时。 在辅音到元音的

链接中,将结尾辅音
视为下一个单词的开头会有所帮助。 因此,如果您

将其视为开头的辅音,那么它会变
得更强大。 让我们回到

“花”这个词,把它放在一个短语“
桌子上的花”中。 花开,花开。

现在我听到了更清晰的
Z 音,zon [3x]。 上花。

它比单词在
句尾时要强。 我爱花。 ss,ss,ss。

花开,zz,zz,zz。 因此,如果结尾,
弱浊辅音连接到元音,

它就不再那么弱了。

这个话题很高级。 所以如果你
不明白,别担心。 如果你

这样做了,想想减轻结尾的浊辅音
,看看这是否有助于使

这些词的发音更容易。

如果有您想帮助发音的单词或短语
,请将其放在下面的评论

中。 另外,我很高兴地告诉你
,我的书现在正在销售中。 如果你

喜欢这个视频,还有很多
关于美式英语发音的知识,

我的书会一步一步地帮助你。 您可以
通过单击此处或在下面的说明中获取它

就是这样,非常感谢您使用
Rachel 的英语。