English Sounds R Consonant How to make the R Consonant

In this American English pronunciation video,

we’re going to learn how to make the R consonant sound.

This is truly one of the hardest sounds in American English.

Before I go into how to make it, I want to talk about how not to make it.

In many languages, the R is made by bouncing the front part of the tongue against the roof of the mouth.

Rr– rr–

In American English, this sound is the T or D between vowels.

But it’s quite different from the American R.

Rrrr— You can’t hold out rra– rra–

But you should be able to hold out the American R.

This consonant is voiced.

There are two ways to make this sound.

In the first way, the front part of the tongue pulls back and up, like this.

The tongue can be stretched so it’s long and skinny.

Or it can be pulled into itself so it’s fatter and thicker.

And that’s what we want here.

We’re making the tongue fatter and thicker so it’s not as long.

The back doesn’t move. This is happening in front

The middle part of the tongue lifts up towards the roof of the mouth.

You can touch the sides of the tongue

to the sides of the roof of the mouth here

or to the inside or bottom of the side teeth here.

The front part of the tongue is hanging in the middle of the mouth

not touching anything.

This sound is forward and focused because of the position of the lips.

The corners come in, pushing the lips away from the face.

This lip position will be a little more relaxed

when the R comes at the end of the syllable.

We’ll compare this way on the left,

with the other way to make an R on the right.

The R can also be made by flipping the tongue tip up.

The lips flare the same way.

Some native speakers make the R one way, and some, the other.

Native speakers get the correct sound no matter the mouth position.

But I found that non-native speakers often drop the jaw

too much in this second method.

And it makes the sound hollow. RR–

The jaw doesn’t need to drop very much for this sound. Rr–

So keep these in mind as you work on one of these two methods.

Here’s the R sound on its own, not part of a word.

You can see the lips flare.

Think of creating a little space on the inside of your lips and your teeth.

Notice how little jaw drop there is.

We don’t need to drop the jaw to pull the tongue back and up.

The word ‘rest’.

When the R is at the beginning of a word,

we tend to make the lips a tight circle.

Again, little jaw drop as the middle of the tongue lifts to the roof of the mouth.

The word ‘proud’.

When R is in a beginning consonant cluster,

the lips may not be as tight as in the beginning R.

The word ‘mother’, at the end of the syllable,

the lip position for the R is definitely more relaxed than the beginning R.

But the lips still flare.

Here, we compare the lip position of the beginning R in ‘rest’ above,

to the ending R in ‘mother’ below.

The ending R lip position is much more relaxed.

Thinking about the lip position will help you make a better R sound.

As you work on this consonant, practice very slowly.

Thinking about all 3 things at once.

Very little jaw drop, the tongue position, and the lip position.

Remember, you can hold out this sound.

So that’s how you want to practice it.

Rrrrr–

Hold it out for 5 or 10 seconds.

Hold it out as long as you can.

When you practice it in a word, do the same.

Rest

Proud

Mother

The R sound

Rest

Proud

Mother

Example words. Repeat with me.

Read. Rr– Read.

Great. Rr– Great.

Try. Rr– Try.

Later. Rr– Later.

Right. Rr– Right.

Other. Rr– Other.

This video is one of 36 in a new series, The Sounds of American English.

Videos in this set will be released here on YouTube twice a month,

first and third Thursdays, in 2016 and 2017.

But the whole set can be all yours right now.

The real value of these videos is watching them as a set, as a whole,

to give your mind the time to take it all in and get the bigger picture.

Most of the materials you’ll find elsewhere just teach the sounds on their own in isolation.

It’s a mistake to learn them this way.

We learn the sounds to speak words and sentences, not just sounds.

Move closer to fluency in spoken English.
Buy the video set today!

Visit rachelsenglish.com/sounds

Available as a DVD or digital download.

在这个美式英语发音视频中,

我们将学习如何发出 R 辅音。

这确实是美式英语中最难的声音之一。

在我讨论如何制作之前,我想谈谈如何不制作它。

在许多语言中,R 是通过将舌头的前部与口腔顶部弹跳来构成的。

Rr– rr–

在美式英语中,这个声音是元音之间的 T 或 D。

但是和美式R有很大的不同

。Rrrr——你不能发rra——

rra——但是你应该能伸出美式R。

这个辅音是浊音。

有两种方法可以发出这种声音。

在第一种方式中,舌头的前部向后向上拉,就像这样。

舌头可以伸展,所以它又长又瘦。

或者可以将其拉入自身,使其更胖更厚。

这就是我们想要的。

我们正在让舌头变得更肥更厚,所以它不会那么长。

后背不动。 这发生在前面

舌头的中部向口腔顶部抬起。

您可以在这里将舌头的两侧触摸

到口腔顶部的两侧,

或者在这里触摸侧齿的内侧或底部。

舌头的前部悬在嘴巴中间,

不接触任何东西。

由于嘴唇的位置,这种声音是向前和集中的。

角落进来,把嘴唇从脸上推开。

当 R 出现在音节的末尾时,这个嘴唇位置会更放松一些。

我们将在左边比较这种方式,

在右边制作 R 的另一种方式。

R也可以通过向上翻转舌尖来制作。

嘴唇以同样的方式张开。

一些以母语为母语的人会以一种方式使用 R,而另一些则使用另一种方式。

无论嘴巴位置如何,母语人士都能听到正确的声音。

但是我发现在第二种方法中,非母语人士经常会下巴

太多。

它使声音变得空洞。

RR– 这个声音不需要下巴太多。 Rr–

因此,当您使用这两种方法之一时,请记住这些。

这是 R 音本身,而不是单词的一部分。

你可以看到嘴唇张开。

想想在你的嘴唇和牙齿内侧创造一个小空间。

注意下巴下垂的程度。

我们不需要放下下巴来将舌头拉回来和向上拉。

“休息”这个词。

当 R 位于单词的开头时,

我们倾向于使嘴唇紧圈。

再一次,当舌头的中部抬起到嘴巴的顶部时,下巴会稍微下垂。

“骄傲”二字。

当R在一个起始辅音簇中时

,嘴唇可能不像在起始R中那么紧

。‘mother’这个词,在音节的末尾,

R的嘴唇位置肯定比起始R更放松。

但嘴唇仍然张开。

在这里,我们将上面“rest”中开头 R 的嘴唇位置与

下面“mother”中的结尾 R 进行比较。

结束的 R 唇位置更加放松。

考虑唇部位置将帮助您发出更好的 R 音。

当你练习这个辅音时,练习得非常慢。

同时考虑所有 3 件事。

很少下巴下垂,舌头位置和嘴唇位置。

请记住,您可以保持这种声音。

所以这就是你想要练习的方式。

Rrrrr——

坚持5到10秒。

尽可能地坚持下去。

当你练习一个单词时,也这样做。

Rest

Proud

Mother

The R 音

Rest

Proud

Mother

例句。 跟我重复一遍。

读。 Rr——阅读。

伟大的。 Rr——太好了。

尝试。 RR——试试。

之后。 Rr——稍后。

对。 Rr——没错。

其他。 Rr–其他。

该视频是新系列“美式英语之声”中的 36 个视频之一。

这套视频将在 2016 年和 2017 年每月两次在 YouTube 上发布

,第一个和第三个星期四。

但现在整套视频都可以归你所有。

这些视频的真正价值在于将它们作为一个整体观看

,让您有时间全神贯注并获得更大的图景。

您可以在其他地方找到的大多数材料都只是孤立地教授声音。

以这种方式学习它们是错误的。

我们学习声音来说出单词和句子,而不仅仅是声音。

更接近流利的英语口语。
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访问

rachelsenglish.com/sounds 以 DVD 或数字下载的形式提供。