New Year New Accent Improve your American Accent

Welcome to 2016, welcome to your new accent.

How long have you been studying English? How
happy are you with your pronunciation? It’s

a new year, and it’s a new opportunity to
get fluency in spoken American English. The

Sounds of American English, and how they relate
to stress, are the building blocks of American

English. So I’ve made a new set of 36 videos,
totaling nearly 3 hours, that is truly special

for the way integrates understanding stress
into learning sounds.

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

It’s a mistake to learn this way – we learn
sounds to speak words and sentences, not just

sounds! For beginners, you can focus on the
different sounds, and how they’re made.

More advanced learners can focus on the subtleties
of how sounds are affected by stress to put

the finishing touches on their American accent.
Every vowel and diphthong video teaches the

sounds in the context of stress, so you’re
working on the overall character of American

English, which is so important.

These videos have a mix of explanations, images,
and slow motion speech study. I recommend

watching all of the videos at once, several
times. It’s a lot of information. Give your

mind the time to take it all in and get the
bigger picture. Then go back and study individual

sounds. Imitate and practice the example words
out loud.

Today’s the day. This set of videos is now
available. You can buy the download for just

$27. That’s less than a dollar per video.
You can download the videos to your device

or simply stream them. Go to RachelsEnglish.com/sounds

to purchase, and you’ll get instant access

to all of the videos. If a DVD is more your
style, I’ve got you covered. The set is

available as a DVD as well.

If you can’t afford to purchase, you’ll
still get access to the videos. The videos

in this collection will be released on YouTube
twice a month, every first and third Thursday

until May 2017. But why wait? Get the whole
set now, study the sounds as a unit, and get

fluency in your spoken English. Make 2016
YOUR year. Welcome to 2016, welcome to your

new accent.

Here’s a sneak peak: the video on the AA
as in BAT vowel.

In this American English pronunciation video,
we’re going to learn how to pronounce the

AA as in BAT vowel.

This is a sound that changes depending on
the following sound. So, it can either be

a pure vowel or a modified vowel. We’ll
go over both in this video.

To make the pure AA vowel, the jaw drops quite
a bit, AA.

The tip of the tongue stays forward; it’s
touching the back of the bottom front teeth,

AA. The back part of the tongue stretches
up.

The tongue is wide, AA. Because the tongue
is high in the back and low in the front,

you can see a lot of it. This is different
from the ‘ah’ as in ‘father’ vowel, for example,

where the tongue presses down in the back
and you see more dark space in the mouth.

AA, AH.

You can also see the corners of the mouth
pull back and up a little bit. AA.

Let’s take a look at the pure AA vowel up
close and in slow motion.

The tongue tip is down and the back of the
tongue lifts. Here’s the word ‘sat’.

The tongue position is easy to see because
of the jaw drop needed for this vowel.

When AA is in a stressed syllable, the vowel
will go up and come down in pitch, AA. Sat,

AA. In an unstressed syllable, the vowel is
flatter and lower in pitch, quieter, aa. This

vowel is unstressed in the second syllable
of ‘backtrack’. Let’s look up close

and in slow motion.

In the first, stressed syllable, the jaw drops,
and we see the corners of the lips pull back

and up for the stressed AA. In the unstressed
syllable, the jaw drops less. Let’s compare

them.

On top is the stressed AA. You can see the
jaw drops more. For the unstressed AA, the

corners of the lips are a little more relaxed
than in the stressed version, where they pull

slightly back and up.

Generally, the unstressed version of a vowel
or diphthong is more relaxed and doesn’t

take the full mouth position, in this case,
a little less jaw drop, and relaxed lips.

This is because unstressed syllables are shorter,
so we don’t take the time to make the full

position.

At the beginning of this video, I said the
AA vowel is not always a pure AA. This vowel

changes when it’s followed by a nasal consonant.
When it’s followed by the M or N sounds,

the tongue relaxes in the back, making an
UH sound after AA. AA-UH. It’s not a pure

AA sound. Unfortunately, this change is not
represented in the International Phonetic

Alphabet. It’s still written with the same
AA symbol. So, you just have to know when

it’s followed by [m] or [n], it’s different.

We don’t say ‘man’, aa, ‘man’, with
a pure AA. We say ‘man’, aa-uh, aa-uh,

relaxing the tongue and corners of the lips
before the consonant. You can think of this

UH relaxation as the ‘uh’ as in ‘butter’
sound or schwa sound. Let’s look up close

and in slow motion at the word ‘exam’.

First we see the familiar shape of the mouth,
when the AA is in a stressed syllable. Watch

how the relaxation that happens: the corners
of the lips relax in. The tongue will relax

down in the back. And the lips close for the
M consonant.

This relaxation of the corner of the lips
and back of the tongue happens when the AA

vowel is followed by the N consonant as well.
For example, the word ‘hand’. Haa-uhnd.

Hand.

So, when you see this symbol followed by this
symbol or this symbol, it’s no longer a

pure AA. Think of relaxing out of the vowel,
AA-UH.

If the next sound is the NG consonant, it’s
a little different. Rather than ‘aa-uh’,

the vowel changes into AY. It’s really like
the AY as in SAY diphthong. First, the middle

part of the tongue lifts towards the roof
of the mouth, then the front part of the tongue.

Let’s watch ‘gang’ up close and in slow
motion.

The position for the first sound looks a lot
like AA, but the part of the tongue lifting

up is more forward. Gaaaang. Then the front
part of the tongue arches up towards the roof

of the mouth, while the tongue tip remains
down.

When you see this symbol followed by this
symbol, it’s no longer a pure AA. It’s

more like AY. Gang. Thanks.

Pure stressed AA: Sat, aa
Pure unstressed AA: backtrack, aa

AA, aa, AA, aa.

AA vowel modified by M: exam, aa-uh
AA vowel modified by N: man, aa-uh

AA vowel modified by NG: gang, ay

Example words. Repeat with me:
Chapter, can, act, last, bank, bypass.

I hope this video helps you understand this
sound. That’s it, and thanks so much for

using Rachel’s English.

欢迎来到 2016,欢迎你的新口音。

你学习英语多久了?
你对自己的发音有多满意? 这

是新的一年,这是一个新的机会
来流利地说美国英语。

美式英语的声音,以及它们
与压力的关系,是美式

英语的基石。 所以我制作了一组新的 36 个视频,
总时长近 3 小时,这

对于将理解压力
融入学习声音的方式来说确实很特别。

您可以在其他地方找到的大多数材料
只是单独教授声音。

以这种方式学习是错误的——我们学习
声音是为了说出单词和句子,而不仅仅是

声音! 对于初学者,您可以专注于
不同的声音,以及它们是如何制作的。

更高级的学习者可以专注于
声音如何受到压力影响的微妙之处,从而

为他们的美国口音画龙点睛。
每个元音和双元音视频都

在压力的背景下教授声音,因此您
正在研究美式英语的整体特征

,这非常重要。

这些视频混合了解释、图像
和慢动作语音学习。 我建议一次

观看所有视频,多次观看
。 这是很多信息。 让你的

头脑有时间去全面了解并获得
更大的图景。 然后回去研究个别的

声音。 大声模仿和练习
例句。

今天是这一天。 这组视频现在
可用。 您只需 27 美元即可购买下载

。 每个视频不到一美元。
您可以将视频下载到您的设备

或直接流式传输它们。 前往

RachelsEnglish.com/sounds 购买,您将可以立即

访问所有视频。 如果 DVD 更符合您的
风格,我可以满足您的需求。 该套装也

可作为 DVD 使用。

如果您买不起,您
仍然可以访问这些视频。

该集合中的视频将每月在 YouTube 上发布
两次,分别是第一个和第三个星期四,

直到 2017 年 5 月。但为什么要等呢?
现在获取整套,作为一个单元学习声音,并

流利地说你的英语。 让 2016 年成为
你的一年。 欢迎来到 2016,欢迎你的

新口音。

这是一个潜行高峰:AA 上的视频与
BAT 元音一样。

在这个美式英语发音视频中,
我们将学习如何

像 BAT 元音一样发音 AA。

这是根据以下声音而变化
的声音。 因此,它既可以

是纯元音,也可以是修饰元音。 我们
将在这段视频中讨论这两个问题。

为了发出纯AA元音,下巴下降了
很多,AA。

舌尖向前; 它正在
接触下门牙的后部,

AA。 舌头的后部
向上伸展。

舌头很宽,AA。 因为舌头后
高前低,所以

可以看到很多。 这
与“父亲”元音中的“啊”不同,例如

,舌头在后面向下压
,你会看到嘴里有更多的黑暗空间。

啊,啊。

您还可以看到嘴角
向后和向上拉一点。 AA。

让我们近距离和慢动作看一下纯 AA 元音

舌尖向下,
舌后部抬起。 这里是“坐”这个词。

由于这个元音需要下颚下垂,所以很容易看到舌头的位置

当 AA 在重读音节中时,元音
会在音高上上升和下降,AA。 星期六,

AA。 在非重读音节中,元音
更平,音调更低,更安静,aa。 这个

元音在“backtrack”的第二个音节中没有重读
。 让我们近距离观察

慢动作。

在第一个重读音节中,下巴下垂
,我们看到唇角

为重读 AA 向后拉。 在非
重读音节中,下巴下垂较少。 让我们比较

一下。

最上面是强调的AA。 你可以看到
下巴掉得更多。 对于无压力的 AA,

嘴唇的角
比有压力的版本稍微放松一点,它们会

稍微向后和向上拉。

一般来说,元音或双元音的非重读版本
更放松,不会

占据全嘴位置,在这种情况下
,下巴下垂少一点,嘴唇放松。

这是因为非重读音节较短,
所以我们不会花时间来做完整的

位置。

在这个视频的开头,我说过
AA 元音并不总是纯 AA。

当后面跟着一个鼻辅音时,这个元音会发生变化。
当它后面跟着 M 或 N 音时

,舌头在后面放松,
在 AA 之后发出 UH 音。 AA-呃。 这不是纯粹的

AA 声音。 不幸的是,这种变化

国际音标中没有体现。 它仍然用相同的
AA 符号书写。 所以,你只需要知道

它什么时候跟着 [m] 或 [n],它是不同的。

我们不会用纯 AA 说“人”、“人”、“人”
。 我们说“男人”,aa-uh,aa-uh,在辅音前

放松舌头和唇角
。 您可以将这种

UH 放松视为“uh”,如“butter”
声音或 schwa 声音。 让我们

仔细看看“考试”这个词。

首先,我们看到熟悉的嘴巴形状
,AA 位于重读音节中。 观察

放松是如何发生的:
唇角放松。舌头

在后面放松。
M 辅音时嘴唇闭合。

当 AA

元音后面跟着 N 辅音时,唇角和舌后部就会放松。
例如,“手”这个词。 哈-嗯。

手。

因此,当您看到此符号后跟此
符号或此符号时,它不再是

纯 AA。 想想放松元音
AA-UH。

如果下一个声音是 NG 辅音,那就
有点不同了。 元音不是“aa-uh”,而是

变为 AY。 它真的很像
SAY 双元音中的 AY。 首先,

舌头的中部向口腔顶部抬起
,然后是舌头的前部。

让我们近距离和慢动作观看“帮派”

第一个声音的位置看起来
很像AA,但舌头

上扬的部分更靠前。 高昂。 然后舌头的前
部向上拱向

嘴巴的顶部,而舌尖保持
向下。

当您看到此符号后跟此
符号时,它不再是纯 AA。

更像是AY。 刚。 谢谢。

纯重音 AA:Sat,aa
纯无重音 AA:回溯,aa

AA,aa,AA,aa。

AA 元音 M 修饰:exam,aa-uh
AA 元音 N 修饰:man,aa-uh

AA 元音 NG 修饰:gang,ay

例句。 跟我重复一遍:
章节,可以,行动,最后,银行,绕过。

我希望这个视频能帮助你理解这个
声音。 就是这样,非常感谢您

使用 Rachel 的英语。