Linking Consonant to Consonant American English Pronunciation

In this American English pronunciation video,

we’re going to go over

linking consonant to consonant.

Linking is an important part

of American English.

If we break between each word,

it sounds very choppy.

But in American English,

we like to link words together

for a smooth sound.

I’ve already made videos on linking

Vowel to Vowel and Consonant to Vowel.

Linking Consonant to Consonant

happens all the time in American English.

In that sentence right there

it happened four times:

ng-kk, nt-tt, nt-hh, and ll-th.

We can’t cover every example

of linking consonant to consonant

as there are simply too many combinations

for this video,

but I will give you some examples.

First let’s talk about

linking the same consonant.

Take the example ‘gas station’.

It’s not ‘gas station’,

with two separate S’s, it’s ‘gas station’:

one S, connecting the two words.

I’m going to the gas station.

I already used this example

last year when I took a road trip.

Click here to see that video,

or go to the video description.

Another example: some might, some might.

Again, not some might, but some might,

connected with one M. Some might think so.

The rule gets a little complicated

when we bring in Stop Consonants.

The six stop consonants are

t, d, p, b, k, and g.

When these meet in between two words,

like ‘hot today’,

you have to stop the air

to signify the first consonant,

then release the sound into the next word.

So, it’s not ‘hahtoday’,

but ‘hot today’, with a stop.

So to make that stop,

I’m just holding the air in my throat,

for a fraction of a second.

Another example, ‘bad dog’.

It’s not ‘baadog’, but bad dog, with a stop.

This is true in general when we’re linking

a stop consonant to any other consonant.

For example, peanut butter –

stopped T, released B, peanut butter.

Not ‘peanuh butter’, with no stop,

but also not ‘peanut butter’

with a released T, but peanut butter.

Flip phone.

Here we stop the sound

with the lips in position for the P,

then go straight into the F consonant

without releasing the P.

Flip phone, flip phone.

It’s not ‘flip phone’, with a full release,

and it’s not flihphone, with no stop of air.

We have to stop the air.

Flip phone, flip phone.

This way of linking ending stop consonants

to words that begin with another consonant

is a great trick to add to your English

if you haven’t already.

Some students have trouble with this,

and add an additional schwa sound between

words in order to link in these situations.

So ‘hot sauce’ becomes something more like

‘hot-uh-sauce’.

So remember,

don’t release that ending stop consonant,

just stop the air.

For all other cases,

you’ll just need to isolate

the two sounds in question and practice.

Let’s take for example ‘It’s a tough one’.

Here we’re linking the F and W sounds.

Practice them separately, ff, ww, ff, ww.

Now practice them together,

sliding slowly from one sound to the other

ff-ww, ff-ww.

Really think about what you’re moving

to transition in-between these two sounds.

In this case, my bottom lip was touching

the bottom of the top front teeth, ff,

and then the lips round out.

My tongue doesn’t have to move.

Ff-ww, ff-ww,

tough one, tough one.

Tough one. It’s a tough one.

So, isolate the sounds,

practice them separately,

practice them together slowly, speed them up

and put them back

into the context of the words

and eventually the sentence.

Let’s look at one more example.

We’ll link the N sound to the R sound:

On Rachel’s desk.

Here, my lips and tongue have to move.

Nn, rr, nn, rr.

Now link them together slowly:

nn, rr.

You may see my lips are rounding

a little bit as I’m making the N,

that’s in preparation for the R.

The tongue goes from having the top part

of the front of the tongue

at the roof of the mouth here, NN, to having

the front part of the tongue touching nothing.

As the tongue pulls back for the R

So for the R, the middle part of the tongue

is touching the roof of the mouth, or maybe

the insides of the teeth, about here.

Nn-rr. Onn-Rr, Onn-Rrachel’s.

I’m really feeling the tongue move up

and then back,

on Rachel’s, on Rachel’s.

On Rachel’s desk.

Check out the other videos that I’ve made,

that address some

consonant to consonant linking.

Take any short text and look for words

that should link consonant to consonant.

For each case,

think about what kind of linking it is.

Is the consonant the same?

Is the first consonant a stop consonant?

Practice it slowly.

Linking is a crucial part of smoothing out speech,

sounding American.

Put an example of a simple sentence

where you would need to link

consonant to consonant below in the comments.

Practice with the sentences

that everyone else puts!

That’s it, and thanks so much for using

Rachel’s English.

在这个美式英语发音视频中,

我们将讨论如何

将辅音连接到辅音。

链接是美式英语的重要组成部分

如果我们在每个单词之间打断,

这听起来很不稳定。

但是在美式英语中,

我们喜欢将单词连接在一起

以获得流畅的声音。

我已经制作了有关将

元音与元音和辅音与元音联系起来的视频。

将辅音连接到辅音

一直在美式英语中发生。

在那句话中,

它发生了四次:

ng-kk、nt-tt、nt-hh 和 ll-th。

我们无法涵盖

所有将辅音连接到辅音的示例,

因为该视频的组合太多了,

但我会给你一些例子。

首先让我们谈谈

连接同一个辅音。

以“加油站”为例。

不是“加油站”,

有两个单独的S,而是“加油站”:

一个S,连接两个词。

我要去加油站。

去年我在公路旅行时已经使用了这个例子。

单击此处查看该视频,

或转到视频说明。

另一个例子:有些可能,有些可能。

同样,不是有些可能,而是有些可能,

与一个 M 相关联。有些人可能会这么认为。

当我们引入停止辅音时,规则变得有点复杂。

六个停止辅音是

t、d、p、b、k 和 g。

当这些在两个词之间相遇时,

例如“今天很热”,

您必须停止空气

以表示第一个辅音,

然后将声音释放到下一个词中。

所以,这不是’hahtoday',

而是’hot today',停顿一下。

所以为了停下来,

我只是把空气憋在喉咙里

,几分之一秒。

另一个例子,“坏狗”。

这不是’baadog',而是坏狗,有一个停止。

当我们将停止辅音连接到任何其他辅音时,这通常是正确的

例如,花生酱 -

停止 T,释放 B,花生酱。

不是没有停止的“花生酱”,

也不是

带有释放T的“花生酱”,而是花生酱。

翻盖手机。

在这里,我们

将嘴唇放在 P 的位置停止声音,

然后不松开 P 直接进入 F 辅音

翻盖手机,翻盖手机。

它不是“翻盖手机”,完全释放,也不是翻盖手机

,没有停播。

我们必须停止空气。

翻盖手机,翻盖手机。 如果您还没有添加到您的英语中,

这种将结尾停止辅音连接

到以另一个辅音开头的单词的方式

是一个很好的技巧

一些学生对此有疑问,

并在单词之间添加额外的 schwa 声音

以便在这些情况下进行链接。

所以“辣酱”变得更像

“辣酱”。

所以请记住,

不要释放结尾停止辅音,

只需停止空气。

对于所有其他情况,

您只需要

隔离两个有问题的声音并练习。

让我们以“这是一个艰难的”为例。

在这里,我们将 F 和 W 声音联系起来。

分别练习,ff,ww,ff,ww。

现在一起练习,

从一种声音慢慢滑到另一种声音

ff-ww,ff-ww。

真正考虑一下您要

在这两种声音之间转换的内容。

在这种情况下,我的下唇接触

到上前牙的底部,ff,

然后嘴唇变圆。

我的舌头不用动。

Ff-ww,ff-ww,

艰难的一个,艰难的一个。

艰难的一个。 这是一个艰难的。

所以,分离声音,

分开

练习,一起慢慢练习,加快速度,

然后把它们

放回单词的上下文中

,最终回到句子的上下文中。

让我们再看一个例子。

我们将把 N 音与 R 音联系起来:

在 Rachel 的桌子上。

在这里,我的嘴唇和舌头必须移动。

nn,rr,nn,rr。

现在慢慢地将它们连接在一起:

nn,rr。

你可能会看到我的嘴唇

在做 N 的时候有点圆,

那是为 R 做准备。

舌头从舌头前

部的顶部到嘴巴的顶部,NN,到

舌头的前部没有接触任何东西。

当舌头拉回 R

所以对于 R,舌头的中间部分

接触到嘴巴的顶部,或者可能

是牙齿的内侧,大约在这里。

Nn-rr。 Onn-Rr,Onn-Rrachel 的。

我真的感觉到舌头

在 Rachel 的,在 Rachel 的上移,然后移回来。

在瑞秋的桌子上。

查看我制作的其他视频,这些视频

解决了一些

辅音链接。

取任何短文本并寻找

应该将辅音连接到辅音的单词。

对于每种情况,请

考虑它是哪种链接。

辅音是一样的吗?

第一个辅音是塞音吗

慢慢练习。

链接是平滑语音的关键部分,

听起来像美国人。

举一个简单句子的例子

,您需要

在评论中将辅音链接到辅音。

其他人写的句子练习!

就是这样,非常感谢您使用

Rachel 的英语。