How to Pronounce LITTLE American English

In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to go over the pronunciation

of the word ‘little’.

Because of the Flap T and the Dark L, the
pronunciation of the word ‘little’ is

pretty tough. Thanks so much to those who
suggested that I make a video on this topic.

Yesterday, Tom and I had a long discussion
about this word. With each do something differently

with our tongues when we pronounce it, and
we both agree, it’s incredibly hard to describe.

The thing that makes this word so hard is
the Flap-schwa-Dark L ending. Other words

that end with this sound combination: battle,
bottle, hospital, title, capital, total, metal,

subtle, ladle, middle, model, pedal, noodle,
cuddle, paddle. A lot of words!

So, we both decided, this is a really hard
topic to teach. You’re going to see some

up close, slow motion footage of the mouth,
and I’m going to do my best to describe

what’s happening.

In ‘little’ and all of the words I listed,
this is an unstressed, ending syllable. So

the syllable li- is stressed, and –ttle
is unstressed. That means it will be flatter

and lower in pitch than the stressed syllable.
Li–ttle, –ttle, li-, –ttle. Little,

DA-da, little.

We start with the L consonant. This is a Light
L because it starts the syllable. That means

it’s different from the second L, which
is at the end of the second syllable,

a Dark L.

The Light L can be made two different ways.
First, it can be made with the tip of the

tongue at the roof of the mouth, ll, like
this. Li-. Or, it can be made with the tongue

tip coming through the teeth. Ll, like this,
li-. In this case, it looks like the TH, but

the tongue is not relaxed, letting the air
vibrate it like it does for the TH. For this

L, the tongue is a little stiff, ll, ll. You’ll
see this L in the slow motion clip at the

end of the video.

The vowel in this stressed syllable is the
IH as in SIT vowel. A lot of people want to

go towards EE, lee, lee-ttle, but we want
IH, little – relax everything to get a more

accurate vowel sound. Ih, li-. The tip of
the tongue touches the back of the bottom

front teeth, and the front part arches up
towards the roof of the mouth, li, ih. Notice

how the pitch of my voice goes down. Li-.
This is the shape of a stressed syllable.

Now we get to the tough part, the unstressed,
second syllable. We have the Flap T followed

by the schwa/Dark L sound. Normally for the
Flap T, the tongue bounces against the roof

of the mouth and right back down. Uh-duh,
uh-duh. If this sounds like the R, that’s

because it is the same sound as the R in your
native language.

But the tongue does something a LITTLE different
in this word, little. Tom describes making

the Flap T in ‘little’ like this: The
tongue does a little release, then goes right

back to the roof of the mouth for the Dark
L. So the tongue doesn’t really do a full

bounce for the flap, just a little release.

I pronounce this a little differently. I don’t
release the tip of my tongue, I leave it right

where it is at the roof of the mouth, li-ttle,
uhl. Instead, I release the back part of the

tongue, pulling it back like we do for the
Dark L, while leaving the tip where it is.

Usually I make the dark sound of the Dark
L with the tongue tip down, but in this sound

sequence, I leave it up. I think you’ll
find, when you get the hang of it, that it

makes the word easier to pronounce. Let’s
break it down and practice putting a break

between the flap up and the Dark L. Litt-le,
litt-le. The back part of the tongue releases

down and back a little to make this dark sound,
ul. Little, little.

Let’s watch this word up close and in slow
motion.

Here, my tongue comes through my teeth for
the beginning L. The tongue tip slides down

behind the bottom front teeth, and the teeth
part. The front part of the tongue arches

up. This is the IH vowel.

Watch as the tongue tip goes to the roof of
the mouth. Now, of course you can’t see

it, but the back part of the pulls away and
back to make the dark L sound, uul. And the

tongue tip comes back down at the end of the
word. Let’s watch again.

This word is very common in the phrase ‘a
little bit’, where we have the schwa before,

and the stressed syllable ‘bit’ after.
The T at the end of ‘bit’ is going to

be a Stop T, if the sentence ends there or
if the next word begins with a consonant:

Are you tired?
A little bit

or

I’m a little bit frustrated.

Those were both stop Ts, bit, where we don’t,
tt, make the final release, but just cut off

the air for an abrupt stop. A little bit.

The ‘t’ at the end of ‘bit’ will be
a Flap T if it’s not the end of the sentence

and the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong.
For example:

Tell me a little bit about that.

Bit-a-bout, bit about. Bit-a-, bit-a-, bit-a-.
Here it’s a flap, which sounds like the

D between vowels in American English, and
might sound like the R in your own native

language. Bit a-, bit-a, bit-a, bit about.

I hope this has given you an idea of how to
practice this word. It’s a very common word,

so practice it a lot and get comfortable with
it. If there’s a word or phrase you’d

like help pronouncing, please put it in the
comments below.

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

在这个美式英语发音视频中,
我们将复习

“little”这个词的发音。

由于 Flap T 和 Dark L,
“little”这个词的发音

非常难读。 非常感谢那些
建议我制作关于这个主题的视频的人。

昨天,汤姆和我就这个词进行了长时间的讨论

当我们发音时,每个人都会用我们的舌头做不同的事情,
我们都同意,这很难描述。

让这个词变得如此困难的
是 Flap-schwa-Dark L 结尾。

以这种发音组合结尾的其他词:battle、
bottle、hospital、title、capital、total、metal、

severe、ladle、middle、model、pedal、noodle、
cuddle、paddle。 很多话!

所以,我们都决定,这是一个
很难教的话题。 你会看到一些

近距离的慢动作镜头
,我会尽力描述

正在发生的事情。

在“little”和我列出的所有单词中,
这是一个不重读的结尾音节。

所以音节 li- 是重读的,-ttle 是非重读
的。 这意味着它将

比重读音节更平坦,音调更低。
小-小,-小,小-,-小。 一点点,

哒哒,一点点。

我们从 L 辅音开始。 这是一个轻
L,因为它开始了音节。 这意味着

它与第二个 L 不同,后者
位于第二个音节的末尾

,即 Dark

L。Light L 可以用两种不同的方式制成。
首先,可以用

舌尖在嘴顶做,ll,像
这样。 李-。 或者,它可以用

舌尖穿过牙齿来制作。 Ll,像这样,
li-。 在这种情况下,它看起来像 TH,

但舌头没有放松,让空气
像 TH 一样振动它。 对于这个

L,舌头有点僵硬,ll,ll。 您将
在视频结尾的慢动作剪辑中看到这个 L。

这个重读音节中的
元音和 SIT 元音一样是 IH。 很多人想要

走向 EE、lee、lee-ttle,但我们想要
IH、little – 放松一切以获得更

准确的元音。 呃,李-。
舌尖抵住下门牙后部,舌尖

向上拱起,
朝向嘴顶,li,ih。 注意

我的音调是如何下降的。 李-。
这是重读音节的形状。

现在我们到了最难的部分,即非
重读的第二个音节。 我们有 Flap T,然后

是 schwa/Dark L 声音。 通常,
对于 Flap T,舌头会弹

回上颚并向下弹回。 呃呃
呃呃呃 如果这听起来像 R,那是

因为它与您的母语中的 R 发音相同

但是舌头
在这个词中的作用有点不同,小。 Tom

将 Flap T 描述为这样“小”地制作:
舌头稍微松开,然后直接

回到口腔顶部以获得 Dark
L。所以舌头并没有真正

为襟翼完全弹跳, 只是一点点释放。

我的发音有点不同。 我没有
松开我的舌尖,我把它留

在嘴顶的地方,小,
呃。 相反,我松开

舌头的后部,像我们为 Dark L 所做的那样将其拉回
,同时将舌尖留在原处。

通常我发出 Dark L 的黑暗声音时
舌尖向下,但在这个声音

序列中,我把它放在上面。 我想你会
发现,当你掌握它的窍门时,它

会让这个词更容易发音。 让我们
将其分解并练习

在襟翼向上和 Dark L. Litt-le,
litt-le 之间休息一下。 舌头的后部

向下和向后释放一点,以发出这种黑暗的声音,
ul。 一点点。

让我们近距离和慢动作看这个词

在这里,我的舌头从我的
牙齿开始L。舌尖滑到

下门牙后面,牙齿
分开。 舌头的前部

向上拱起。 这是 IH 元音。

观察舌尖到达口腔顶部
。 现在,您当然看不到

它,但后部拉开并
拉回以发出黑暗的 L 声音,uul。

舌尖在词尾回落
。 让我们再看一遍。

这个词在短语“a
little bit”中很常见,我们之前有 schwa,

之后有重读音节“bit”。
“位”末尾的

T 将成为停止 T,如果句子在那里结束
或下一个单词以辅音开头:

你累了吗?
有点

我有点沮丧。

那些都是停止 Ts,bit,我们没有,
tt,做最后的释放,但只是

为了突然停止而切断空气。 一点点。

如果它不是句子的结尾

并且下一个单词以元音或双元音开头,则“bit”末尾的“t”将是一个 Flap T。
例如:

告诉我一些关于那个的事情。

一点点,一点点。 一点一点,一点一点,一点一点。
这是一个襟翼,

在美式英语中听起来像是元音之间的 D,
在您自己的母语中可能听起来像

R。 一点点,一点点,一点点,一点点。

我希望这能让你知道如何
练习这个词。 这是一个非常常见的词,

因此请多多练习并熟悉
它。 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。

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