How to Pronounce IMPORTANT American English
In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to go over the pronunciation
of the word ‘important’.
This is a tough word, and I’ve gotten lots
of requests for it. Thanks for putting in
your request, I’m glad to do it for you.
I’m going to give you two different ways
to pronounce this word. Either one is okay,
one is more common. Neither of them are what
you’ll find when you look in a dictionary.
If you look in a dictionary, it says the pronunciation
is: important.
Important, with two fully pronounced True
T’s. Dictionaries haven’t really caught
up when it comes to the habits of Americans
and the pronunciation of the letter T. ‘Important’
is way over-pronounced. Check out the series
Tom and made where we only used True T, no
reductions, and no contractions by clicking
here or in the description. You’ll see how
unnatural it sounds. So the pronunciations
we’ll study today will involve Stop T’s.
The natural way to speak American English.
This is a three-syllable word with stress
on the middle syllable: im-POR-nt, da-DA-da,
important. That means the middle syllable
will have the up-down shape of stress and
will be the loudest, longest, clearest syllable.
The first T comes in the pattern T-schwa-N.
If you’ve seen my video on ‘mountain’,
then you know this is a Stop T. Mount-ain,
stop the air. Import-ant, stop the air. Don’t
make a True T sound, important. The second
T can either be a Stop T or a True T: important
or important. Let’s watch up close and in
slow motion to see how these sounds are made.
The jaw drops just a little bit for the opening
vowel, the IH as in SIT vowel. The tongue
tip is down and forward. Then the lips come
together for the M sound. The lips are in
position for the P, closed. The next sound
is the AW as in LAW sound.
But when AW is followed by the R consonant,
it is not a pure AW anymore. Instead of AW,
it’s aw, aw. My lips are rounding a bit
more, AW, aw, and my tongue pulls back a little
bit. That brings the sound further back in
my mouth. –Po-, -po-, instead of aw, aw.
The reason is the R. The tongue pulls back
and up for the R, so it’s influencing this
vowel. I’m blending the R position with
the pure AW position to get impo-r-. Let’s
see what this R-influenced AW vowel looks
like.
The lips release from the P into this modified
AW. Notice how the lips are quite rounded—more
rounded than in a pure AW vowel. Also, see
how the inside of the mouth is dark. We don’t
really see the tongue. This is because it’s
pulling back. Impo-. As the AW moves into
the R consonant, the lips relax just a bit.
The tip of the tongue is pulled back and up.
Remember that this is our stressed syllable,
im-por-. –Por-. Make sure you give it some
length, and that the pitch falls off, up-down,
impor-. This is the character of a stressed
syllable.
Now we have another unstressed syllable. The
front, flat part of the tongue goes to the
roof of the mouth for the N. Don’t worry
about making a clear schwa sound. Go from
the position of the R, with the tip pulled
back and up, into the N, with the front of
the tongue against the roof of the mouth.
Stop the air for just a second before you
make the N sound.
It’s not “porant” [2x], smooth, but
–portant [2x] , with a Stop. Make this stop
once your tongue is in position for the N.
Portant. To finish, you can either stop the
air at the end, important. Or, you can make
a True T, important, tt, tt.
Important, important. Either way, we stop
the first T. This word is tough, but watch
this video several times, practice out loud,
slowly, and I think you’ll start to get
the hang of it. If there’s a word or phrase
you’d like help pronouncing, put it in the
comments below.
Also, I’m happy to tell you my book, American
English Pronunciation, is available for purchase.
If you want an organized, step-by-step resource
to build your American accent, click here
to get the book, or see the description below.
I think you’re going to love it.
That’s it, and thanks so much for using
Rachel’s English.