Can you Say... These CONTRACTIONS English Pronunciation

Well hey there! I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

So I’ve been talking about modal verbs

over the last few weeks, about all of their different uses.

Now, don’t worry if you missed out on them,

the links are right here.

But one way to make sure that you don’t miss out on

any of my weekly English lessons here is to subscribe!

Subscribe by clicking the red button down there.

You’ll get a message telling you as soon as

there’s a new lesson here on the mmmEnglish channel,

so you can keep studying with me and keep up-to-date

with all of the new lessons.

Okay so we’ve been talking about modal verbs a lot

and in this lesson

I want to focus on the way

that they sound when they’re spoken.

So this is a pronunciation lesson.

That means you have to be ready to join in!

Say the words out loud with me.

You must do this!

Well, you must do it

if you want to improve your pronunciation

and I’m pretty sure that you do.

Let’s get our modal verbs up on the screen.

We’ve got could, should, would, may, might, can, will,

must and shall.

For the record, I hardly ever use shall

and amongst all of my native English speaking

friends and family,

I hardly ever hear it.

It’s quite formal

and perhaps even a little old-fashion now.

It’s the kind of thing that I would hear

my English grandma say

but not my friends.

So I’m actually just going to remove it from this lesson.

I’m going to get in trouble for that!

But I want to focus this pronunciation lesson

on contractions

and ‘shall’ is very rarely contracted anyway.

And one final disclaimer.

You are practising with me and my

Australian accent here,

which is a reasonably standard one

but there are differences between

native English-speaking accents.

Okay enough of that,

let’s just get started with these words,

‘could’, ‘should’ and ‘would’.

Now the first thing

that you need to pay attention to here

is that the L in all of these three words is silent.

Don’t try and pronounce that out.

It’s actually easier than you think!

‘Would’ is pronounced just like ‘wood’

and ‘could’ and ‘should’ are also the same.

Could, should, would.

So let’s look at all of the possible contractions

for these modals.

Now we learn in earlier lessons

that any of these modal verbs

can be used to talk about the past

simply by adding ‘have’

followed by the past participle verb.

So in spoken English ‘have’ is often contracted

or shortened.

‘Could have’ is often said

could’ve.

So the ‘have’ is shortened to just ’ve.

Now if you’re listening to native English speakers

you might not even hear that sound.

‘Could have’ can also sound like

coulda.

You coulda brought the dog.

You could’ve. You could have brought the dog.

And the contracted pronunciation of ‘have’ is the same

for all of the modal verbs.

‘Should have’ becomes

should’ve

or shoulda.

We shoulda left earlier.

We should’ve left earlier.

‘Would have’ becomes

would’ve

or woulda.

My dad would have known what to do.

My dad woulda what to do.

‘Might’ and ‘have’ become

might’ve

or mighta.

She mighta taken the keys.

She might have taken the keys.

‘May’ and ‘have’

may’ve

or even maya - if you’re listening to a native speaker.

I may have lost his address.

I maya lost his address.

‘Must’ and ‘have’ becomes

must’ve

or musta.

We musta left our tickets in the car!

We must have left our tickets in the car!

Remember, it’s okay to use these contractions

in informal writing

but in formal writing, exams, reports and letters,

use the full word ‘have’.

And if you are ever unsure, just write ‘have’,

it’s not too formal.

Okay so when we use

these modal verbs in a negative sentence,

‘not’ is often contracted to the modal verb.

They’re pushed together - that’s what a contraction is.

So ‘could’ and ‘not’ is contracted and it sounds like

couldn’t.

Shouldn’t, wouldn’t.

So the ‘not’ sounds like

at the end of the modal verb.

Okay let’s go through this in a little bit more detail.

We’ve got /‘kʊd/

/ənt/

/‘kʊd(ə)nt/

I couldn’t believe it! It was such a surprise!

I couldn’t believe it!

/‘ʃʊd/

/ənt/

/‘ʃʊd(ə)nt/

Shouldn’t we wait for Sam?

Shouldn’t we wait?

/‘wʊd/

/ənt/

/‘wʊd(ə)nt/

They wouldn’t ask you for money

unless they really needed it.

They wouldn’t ask you.

/‘mʌɪt/

/ənt/

/‘mʌɪt(ə)nt/

or /‘mʌɪt(ə)nt/ depending on the accent.

You mightn’t believe me, but I’m telling the truth!

You mightn’t believe me!

/ˈmʌs/

/ənt/

/ˈmʌs(ə)nt/

Notice that the middle ‘T’ is not pronounced

in the negative form.

It’s mustn’t,

not must-n’t.

You mustn’t wear those shoes in the house.

You mustn’t wear those shoes.

Now of course, there are a few irregular negatives

which you already know.

‘Will not’ is won’t.

‘Can not’ is can’t.

‘Shall not’ is shan’t.

And ‘may’ doesn’t even contract with ‘not’.

You just need to say ‘may not’.

Okay so now are you ready for level 10

pronunciation training?

These contractions get a little bit more difficult

when we start using negative modal verbs

to refer to the past with ‘have’.

Then we have a structure that looks like this:

the subject with the modal verb

with ‘not’, ‘have’

and then the past participle verb.

And yes, all three words

can be contracted together in spoken English.

Okay get ready for this!

‘Could not have’

couldn’tve.

Although you’ll never see it written like this in English

but you will hear it spoken like this, all the time,

by native English speakers.

I could not have done that.

I could not have.

I could not have done that.

So ‘should not have’ becomes

shouldn’t’ve.

The kids should not have been in the room.

The kids should not.

The kids should not have been in the room.

‘Would not have’

wouldn’tve.

He would not have approved this plan.

He would not have.

He would not have approved this plan.

‘Might not have’

mightn’tve.

She might not have heard you say that.

She might not have.

She might not have heard you say that.

‘Must not have’

mustn’t’ve.

They mustn’t’ve.

They must not have brought their son.

That one’s tricky!

So that’s it for this pronunciation lesson.

It was a lot to take in, wasn’t it?

A lot of tongue twisting.

But you really should go back and watch

this lesson a few times and practise out loud with me.

Practise with me!

You can’t improve your pronunciation just by listening

can you?

You need to imitate me, you need to copy me

as I say all of the different contractions

through this lesson and all of the example sentences.

In fact, imitating a native English speaker

is a really great way to practise and improve

your pronunciation.

It’s going to help you to sound more natural

as you speak English

because you can listen to the sounds

that you should be making

and imitate them straight after.

Now if you want to keep practising like this,

by imitating me,

then try one of my imitation lessons right here,

or here - that one’s good as well.

Thanks for watching and I’ll see you

next week for another lesson here on mmmEnglish.

Bye for now!

啊你好啊! 我是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

所以在过去的几周里,我一直在谈论情态动词

,关于它们的所有不同用途。

现在,如果您错过了它们,请不要担心

,链接就在这里。

但是,确保您不会

错过我的每周英语课程的一种方法是订阅!

点击下方的红色按钮订阅。

当 mmmEnglish 频道上有新课程时,您会收到一条消息通知您

因此您可以继续和我一起学习并及时

了解所有新课程。

好的,所以我们一直在谈论情态动词

,在本课中,

我想关注

它们在说话时的发音方式。

所以这是一堂发音课。

这意味着您必须准备好加入!

跟我大声说出来。

你必须这样做!

好吧,

如果你想提高你的发音,你必须这样做

,我很确定你会这样做。

让我们在屏幕上显示情态动词。

我们有可能,应该,会,可能,可能,可以,会,

必须和应该。

郑重声明,我几乎从不使用

shall,在我所有以英语为母语的

朋友和家人中,

我几乎从没听过它。

它现在很正式

,甚至可能有点过时了。

这是我会听到

我的英国奶奶说

但不是我的朋友说的话。

所以我实际上只是要把它从本课中删除。

我会为此惹上麻烦的!

但我想把这节发音课的重点

放在收缩上

,无论如何,“应该”很少收缩。

最后一个免责声明。

你在这里和我和我的

澳大利亚口音一起练习,

这是一个相当标准的口音,

以英语为母语的口音之间存在差异。

好了,

让我们从

“可以”、“应该”和“将”这些词开始。

现在

首先需要注意的

是,这三个词中的 L 都是静音的。

不要试图把它说出来。

它实际上比你想象的要容易!

“Would”的发音就像“wood”一样

,“could”和“should”也是一样的。

可以,应该,愿意。

所以让我们看看

这些模态的所有可能的收缩。

现在我们在前面的课程中

了解到,这些情态动词中的任何一个

都可以用来谈论过去,

只需在过去分词动词后面加上“have”

因此,在口语中,“have”经常被

缩略或缩短。

‘Could have’ 常被称为

could’ve。

所以’have’被缩短为’ve’。

现在,如果您正在听以英语为母语的人,

您甚至可能听不到那种声音。

‘Could have’ 也可以听起来像

cana。

你可以把狗带来。

你本来可以的。 你本来可以带狗的。

并且所有情态动词的“have”的缩写发音都是相同

的。

‘应该有’ 变成

should’ve

或 shoulda。

我们应该早点离开。

我们应该早点离开的。

‘Would have’ 变成

would’ve

或 willa。

我爸爸会知道该怎么做的。

我爸爸会怎么做。

‘Might’ 和 ‘have’ 变成

可能的

或可能的。

她可能拿走了钥匙。

她可能拿走了钥匙。

‘May’ 和 ‘have’

may’ve

甚至 maya - 如果你听的是母语人士的话。

我可能丢失了他的地址。

我可能把他的地址弄丢了。

‘Must’ 和 ‘have’ 变成

must’ve

或 musta。

我们必须把票忘在车上了!

我们一定把票忘在车上了!

请记住,在非正式写作中使用这些缩写是可以的,

但在正式写作、考试、报告和信件中,

使用完整的单词“have”。

如果你不确定,就写“有”,

这不太正式。

好的,所以当我们

在否定句中使用这些情态动词时,

“不”通常收缩为情态动词。

它们被推到一起——这就是收缩。

所以“可以”和“不”是收缩的,听起来像是

不能。

不应该,不会。

所以“不”听起来像是情

态动词的结尾。

好的,让我们更详细地介绍一下。

我们有 /‘kʊd/

/ənt/

/‘kʊd(ə)nt/

我简直不敢相信! 这真是一个惊喜!

我简直不敢相信!

/‘ʃʊd/

/ənt/

/‘ʃʊd(ə)nt/

我们不应该等山姆吗?

我们不应该等待吗?

/‘wʊd/

/ənt/

/‘wʊd(ə)nt/

他们不会向你要钱,

除非他们真的需要。

他们不会问你。

/‘mʌɪt/

/ənt/

/‘mʌɪt(ə)nt/

或 /‘mʌɪt(ə)nt/ 取决于口音。

你可能不相信,但我说的是实话!

你可能不相信我!

/ˈmʌs/

/ənt/

/ˈmʌs(ə)nt/

注意中间的“T”不发音

为否定形式。

不可以,

不可以。

你不能在家里穿那双鞋。

你不能穿那双鞋。

当然,现在有一些

你已经知道的不规则否定词。

“不会”是不会。

“不能”就是不能。

“不应”是不应。

而“可能”甚至不与“不”收缩。

你只需要说“可能不会”。

好的,现在你准备好接受 10 级的

发音训练了吗?

当我们开始使用否定情态动词

用“have”来指代过去时,这些收缩会变得有点困难。

然后我们有一个看起来像这样的结构:

带有“not”、“have”的情态动词的主语

,然后是过去分词动词。

是的,

在口语中,这三个词都可以收缩在一起。

好的,为此做好准备!

‘不可能’

不可能。

虽然你永远不会看到它用英语写成

这样,但你会一直

听到母语是英语的人这样说。

我不能那样做。

我不能。

我不能那样做。

所以“不应该”变成了“不应该”

孩子们不应该在房间里。

孩子们不应该。

孩子们不应该在房间里。

‘不会’

不会。

他不会批准这个计划。

他不会的。

他不会批准这个计划。

“可能没有”可能没有

她可能没有听到你这么说。

她可能没有。

她可能没有听到你这么说。

‘不能有’

不能。

他们一定没有。

他们一定没有带来他们的儿子。

那个很棘手!

这就是本次发音课的内容。

有很多东西要吸收,不是吗?

很多舌头扭曲。

但是你真的应该回去

把这节课看几遍,和我一起大声练习。

跟我一起练!

你不能仅仅通过听来提高你的发音,

可以吗?

你需要模仿我,你需要模仿

我说的所有不同的缩略语

通过这节课和所有的例句。

事实上,模仿以英语为母语的人

是练习和提高发音的好方法

这将帮助你在说英语时听起来更自然

因为你可以听到你应该发出的声音

并在之后立即模仿它们。

现在,如果你想通过模仿我来继续这样练习,

那么就在这里或这里尝试我的模仿课程

之一——那个也很好。

感谢您的收看,我们

下周见,在 mmmEnglish 上再上一堂课。

暂时再见!