American English T Pronunciations

Today I’m doing a big video, a lot of content.
I hope it doesn’t get too confusing. But this

whole big video is going to be on one little
letter: T. How do you pronounce this letter?

Luckily, there are some rules that I’m going
to lay out that will help you figure out how

to pronounce this letter. At the beginning,
let’s go ahead and throw out TH and TION.

Th can be either the voiced or unvoiced TH
sound: thanks, unvoiced, or this, voiced.

And the TION can either be sh as in motion,
or ch as in mention. Ok, we’re done with that.

Now let’s move on to the T sound. The T can
be silent, but we’ll talk about that later.

In all other cases, there is one symbol used
in IPA, and that is tt. However in practice,

in real life conversation, you will hear native
speakers use three different sounds. First,

tt, the official T sound, as in the word ‘tap’.
Second, what is called a tap T or flap T sound,

it is identical to the D sound, as in the
word auto. Now in my videos, and on my website

in IPA, I actually do use the D symbol here,
because that’s how it’s pronounced in conversation.

Auto. Both of these sounds are described in
detail, how to make them, in my Understanding

the T and D Sounds video. If you haven’t watched
that already, I do recommend it. And the third

sound is the T as a stop. This is also explained
in detail in another video, Stop Consonants,

if you’re wondering how to make this sound.
An example for this is the word wait. Wait,

where the tongue moves up into position for
the T, but then does not release. This is

a stop. Wait. In my videos and on my website,
when I want to symbolize this sound in IPA,

I put a line after the T to signify a stop.
So when do you make which of these three sounds?

There are rules, and of course exceptions
to rules, to help you figure that out. First,

rule one. When to make the tt real, actual,
official T sound. Two parts, part one. You

will make this sound when it begins the word
or a stressed syllable within a word. For

example, telephone or attend. TEND is the
stressed syllable in the word. Attend. Therefore,

tt, you do make that real T sound. Second
part, if it is part of a consonant cluster.

Consonant clusters that happen at the beginning
of words or syllables are st-, str-, or tr-.

For example stop, strain, tram. Tt, tt, tt,
in all of those cases you do make the actual

T sound. Consonant clusters can also occur
at the end of a word or syllable. There are

five that will cause the tt T to be pronounced
as a real T. They are CT, connect. FT, soft.

LT, lilt. ST, first. And PT, slept. There
is one ending consonant cluster I left off

that list, that’s because it’s an exception.
And it is NT. When this consonant cluster

comes at the end of a word or syllable, the
T is pronounced not, tt, as a real T, but

actually as a stop. For example, environment,
environment. Tt. You don’t generally release

that in general conversation. There is one
other possible exception I thought of. And

that is when someone is speaking really fast
and reduces something. For example, the word

to. It can be reduced to the word tt, with
the schwa sound, as many reduced words and

syllables take on the schwa sound. But, I
think it can in fact be reduced to the flap

T or D sound with the schwa, even though it
begins the word. For example, if I’m speaking

really fast I might say Quarter to three,
quarter to three. The word ‘to’ is actually

getting a voiced sound under it. So it would
then be the D sound. That is in very quick

speech and it’s the only exception to the
T at the beginning of the word being the tt

real T sound that I can think of. But I wanted
to mention it. Rule 2: when to use the flap

or tap T, in other words, D sound. This happens
when the T, either written with 1 or 2 Ts,

comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds.
For example, mutter. Mutter: the flap/tap

T, or D, sound. This doesn’t have to just
be the T sound within a word. It can be a

T at the end of a word when the next word
is linked and begins with a vowel. For example,

What about me? What about me? The T in that
sentence comes between two vowel sounds, so

it is also pronounced this way. One exception:
the schwa is a vowel sound. But when the T

is followed by the schwa and the N sound,
the T is not pronounced as a flap even if

there was a vowel before. Rather, it is pronounced
as a stop. For example, the word tighten.

Here the T is between the ‘ai’ as in ‘buy’
diphthong and the schwa-N combination. It’s

between two vowel sounds, but it is not pronounced
as a flap. It is the stop. Tighten. If you

can see, the tongue does not change position
between the T and the N sound. Tighten. Tight

  • stop - N. That’s why you don’t bother with
    flapping the T there. Tighten, tighten. Before

we keep going, let’s compare the words ‘auto’
and ‘atone’. In both cases, the T is surrounded

by vowel sounds. But do you hear a difference?
Auto, atone. In the first word it is pronounced

as a D, and in the second word as a T. Why
is that? Auto, atone. The reason is: think

back to rule 1. Because the T in ‘atone’ is
beginning the stressed syllable. So rule 1

is more powerful than rule 2. Even though
in atone it comes between two vowel sounds,

the first rule overrides it. Because it is
beginning the stressed syllable, it is pronounced

tt, as a real T. Auto, atone. Rule 3: when
to pronounce it as a stop. We’ve already gone

over two cases in our exceptions to previous
rules. The exception to rule 1 was the ending

consonant cluster NT, where it is pronounced
as a stop as in environment, sent. The exception

to rule 2, when it is followed by the schwa
and the N sound, as in tighten. There is it

also pronounced as a stop. It also happens
any time a word or a syllable ends in a T

except for those rule 1 ending consonant clusters,
and except for the rule 2, when the next word

it is being linked to begins with a vowel.
Examples: about, fitness. There are some words

that are just written with a silent T. For
example, Christmas, whistle, mortgage. These,

unfortunately, just need to be learned. There
is one case, I’ve noticed, where sometimes

native speakers will altogether leave out
a T sound that does actually exist in IPA.

This would be when a T begins an unstressed
syllable and the syllable before ended with

an N, I’ve noticed this. For example, interview.
Interview. There’s no stop, there’s no T,

there’s no D. Also, wanted. I wanted to know.
Wanted. Again, no stop, no T, and no D. These

could possibly be considered lazy pronunciations,
but I guarantee you will hear them. Ok, that

was a lot of information that I just gave
you. The best way to figure out if you’ve

gotten it all is to simply go over words and
figure out how the T would be pronounced and

why. So we’re going to go through another
video that does just that, look for it. That’s

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

今天我在做一个大视频,内容很多。
我希望它不会变得太混乱。 但这

整个大视频将出现在一个小
字母上:T。你如何发音这个字母?

幸运的是,我将列出一些规则
来帮助你弄清楚

这封信如何发音。 一开始,
让我们继续扔掉 TH 和 TION。

Th 可以是浊音或清音 TH
音:thanks,清音,或 this,浊音。

并且 TION 可以是 sh 如在运动中,也可以是
ch 如在提及。 好的,我们完成了。

现在让我们继续讨论 T 音。 T
可以保持沉默,但我们稍后会讨论。

在所有其他情况下,
国际音标中使用一个符号,那就是 tt。 然而在实践中,

在现实生活中的对话中,您会听到母语
人士使用三种不同的声音。 首先,

tt,官方的 T 音,如单词“tap”。
第二,所谓的轻拍 T 音或拍音 T 音,

它与 D 音相同,如
auto 一词。 现在在我的视频中,在我

的国际音标网站上,我确实在这里使用了 D 符号,
因为这就是它在对话中的发音方式。

汽车。 在我的理解 T 和 D 声音视频中详细描述了这两种声音
,以及如何制作它们

。 如果你还没有看过
,我强烈推荐。 第三个

声音是作为停止的T。 如果您想知道如何发出这种声音
,则在另一个视频“停止辅音”中也对此进行了详细说明


一个例子就是等待这个词。 等待

,舌头向上移动到
T 的位置,但随后没有释放。 这是

一个停止。 等待。 在我的视频和我的网站上,
当我想用 IPA 来表示这个声音时,

我在 T 后面放了一条线来表示停止。
那么你什么时候发出这三种声音中的哪一种呢?

有一些规则,当然还有规则的
例外,可以帮助你弄清楚这一点。 首先,

规则一。 什么时候让 tt 发出真实的、实际的、
官方的 T 音。 两部分,第一部分。

当它开始单词或单词中的重读音节时,您将发出此声音

例如,电话或出席。 TEND 是
单词中的重读音节。 出席。 因此,

tt,你确实发出了真正的 T 音。 第二
部分,如果它是辅音簇的一部分。

出现在
单词或音节开头的辅音簇是 st-、str- 或 tr-。

例如停止、应变、电车。 Tt,tt,tt,
在所有这些情况下,您确实会发出实际的

T 音。 辅音簇也可以出现
在单词或音节的末尾。 有

五个会使 tt T 发音
为真正的 T。它们是 CT,连接。 英尺,软。

LT,轻快的。 ST,第一。 和PT,睡着了。
我在那个列表中留下了一个结尾辅音簇

,那是因为它是一个例外。
它是新台币。 当这个辅音簇

出现在单词或音节的末尾时,
T 的发音不是 tt,而是真正的 T,而是

实际上作为停止发音。 例如,环境,
环境。 Tt。 您通常不会

在一般对话中发布它。
我想到了另一个可能的例外。

那就是当某人说得非常快
并减少了一些东西的时候。 比如

to这个词。 它可以用 schwa 音简化为单词 tt
,因为许多简化的单词和

音节都带有 schwa 音。 但是,我
认为它实际上可以用 schwa 简化为

拍音 T 或 D 音,即使它
开始了这个词。 例如,如果我说得

很快,我可能会说 Quarter to Three、
Quarter to Three。 ‘to’ 这个词实际上

在它下面有一个浊音。 所以它
会是D音。 那是在非常快速的

语音中,它是单词开头的 T 的唯一例外

是我能想到的 tt 真正的 T 音。 但我
想提一下。 规则 2:何时使用拍打

或敲击 T,即 D 音。
当 T(用 1 个或 2 个 T 写成)

出现在两个元音或双元音之间时,就会发生这种情况。
例如,喃喃自语。 Mutter:拍打/轻拍

T 或 D 的声音。 这不一定
是单词中的 T 音。

当下一个
单词连接并以元音开头时,它可以是单词末尾的 T。 例如,

我呢? 关于我的什么? 该句子中的 T 位于
两个元音之间,

因此也以这种方式发音。 一个例外
:schwa 是元音。 但是当 T

后面跟着 schwa 和 N 音时,
即使之前有元音,T 也不会发音为拍

音。 相反,它被发音
为停止。 例如,收紧这个词。

这里的 T 位于“购买”
双元音和 schwa-N 组合中的“ai”之间。 它

位于两个元音之间,但不发音
为襟翼。 这是停止。 紧缩。 如果你

能看到,舌头不会
在 T 音和 N 音之间改变位置。 紧缩。 紧

-停-N。这就是为什么你不费心
在那儿拍打T的原因。 收紧,收紧。 在

我们继续之前,让我们比较一下“auto”
和“atone”这两个词。 在这两种情况下,T 都

被元音包围。 但是你听出来有什么不同吗?
汽车,赎罪。 在第一个单词中发音

为 D,在第二个单词中发音为 T。这
是为什么呢? 汽车,赎罪。 原因是:

回想规则 1。因为“atone”中的 T 是
重读音节的开头。 所以规则 1

比规则 2 更强大。即使
在 atone 中它出现在两个元音之间

,第一个规则会覆盖它。 因为它是
重读音节的开头,所以发音为

tt,作为真正的 T. Auto,atone。 规则 3:何时
将其发音为停止。 我们已经

在之前规则的例外中讨论了两个案例
。 规则 1 的例外是结尾

辅音簇 NT,它
在环境中发音为停止,发送。

规则 2 的例外,当它后面跟着 schwa
和 N 声音时,如收紧。 它

也被发音为停止。 它也发生在
任何时候一个单词或一个音节以 T 结尾,

除了规则 1 结尾的辅音簇,
并且除了规则 2,当

它被链接到的下一个单词以元音开头时。
例子:关于,健身。 有些

单词只是用无声T写的。
例如,Christmas,whistle,mortgage。

不幸的是,这些只是需要学习。
我注意到有一种情况,有时

母语人士会完全忽略
IPA 中确实存在的 T 音。

这将是当 T 开始一个非
重读音节并且之前的音节以 N 结尾时

,我注意到了这一点。 比如面试。
面试。 没有停止,没有T,

没有D。还有,通缉。 我想知道。
通缉。 再一次,没有停止,没有 T,没有 D。这些

可能被认为是懒惰的发音,
但我保证你会听到它们。 好的,这

是我刚刚给你的很多信息
。 弄清楚你是否

已经掌握了一切的最好方法是简单地检查单词并
弄清楚 T 的发音方式和

原因。 所以我们将通过另一个
视频来做这件事,寻找它。 就是

这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的
英语!