ENGLISH 10 Critical Words 511

Today you are getting the next video in the
100 most common words in English series,

this is video 5.

In this series, were studying the
real pronunciation.

This is likely different

from what you learned in English class.

You see, in American English, we have all sorts of words that are unstressed or even reduced:

that means we change the pronunciation.

The set of the 100 most common words in English contains many, many words that reduce.

If you haven’t already seen video 1

and the other videos in this series, I do suggest

you start there.

These videos build one on top of the next,

so click here to watch video one.

Today, were starting with number 41, the
word ‘so’.

Does this word reduce?

Yes it does.

Fully pronounced, it has the OH as
in NO diphthong.

So, so.

I don’t think so.

So.  Your hair looks so good.

So.

But you’ll hear it reduced to ‘suh’ when its used as a filler

word at the beginning of a sentence.

As a filler word, the word doesn’t really have meaning.

For example:  So what do you think?

So what do you think? So. So.

So you’re going to need another one.  So. So.

You’ll definitely hear Americans do this.

Number 42:  Up.

Hey, we found another word that doesn’t reduce.

This word will be stressed.

We’re on number 42 of the 100
most common words in English,

and this is only the third word that generally is always stressed.

How amazing that so many words are unstressed or reduce!

For this word, we have the UH as in BUTTER vowel and the P consonant, Up.

Up.

P is a stop consonant,

which means we stop the air, up-,

and release it, pp.

The release is very light.

Up, up.

Sometimes we don’t release stop consonants,

like if it’s at the end of a thought group:

What’s up?

What’s up?

There I’m not releasing the P.

What’s up?

Also we often skip the release if the next word begins with a consonant sound:

What’s up, Mom?

What’s up, Mom?

My lips came together for the P,

but then when they parted, rather than pp,

the light escape of air, I just went right into the M sound.

I think ‘up’ is so common because its used
in so many phrasal verbs.

Crack up, break up, throw up, act up,

creep up, butter up,

burn up, bone up, just to name a few.

There are so many phrasal verbs in English.

At the beginning of 2017, I made a new video every day going over phrasal verbs.

Click here to see that collection, or see the link in the video description.

Number 43:  Out.

Oh, this is funny.

This is another word that is common in phrasal verbs.

Work out, figure out, burn out, black
out,

block out, stand out, bring out.

Not surprising that some of these phrasal verb parts

are showing up on this list.

There are a bunch without.

And this word doesn’t reduce.

We have the OW diphthong, ow,

and the T consonant, out.

Out.

And just like P, T is a stop consonant.

We don’t usually release it: tt–

if it comes at the end of a thought group, or if the next word begins with a consonant.

Let’s look at some examples:  Watch out!

End of the phrase, an unreleased T.

Watch out.

I cut off the air, so it’s not: watch ow.

Watch ow.

That would just sound like there was no T.

But with the abrupt stop, watch out!

Without the falling intonation, it sounds like a T to us.

Watch out.

You cant back out now.

Out now.

There, the T was followed by a word beginning with a consonant,

another Stop T.

Out now.

Out now.

T is special:  if the next word begins with
a vowel or diphthong, then we flap it.

A single rra– against the roof of the mouth.

For example:  Get out of here.

Out of, out of.

Ra– ra–

A flap T to connect the two words.

And did you notice the reduction of OF?

Yep, that’s just the schwa.

‘Of’ is word number 4 in the 100 most common words in English list.

Number 44.  The word IF.

This word is usually a conjunction and then, it’s unstressed.

It’s said very quickly.

Call me if you get lost.

Call me if you get lost.

Call me if you get lost.

Here, its part of a string of unstressed words.

Low in pitch, flat, said quickly.  If, if, if.

Me if you– me if you– call me if you get lost.

You might even hear the word reduced at the beginning of a sentence,

just the F sound attached to the next word, no vowel:

If you want leave, that’s okay.

If she doesn’t care, that’s okay.

Ff, ff, ff, if you wanna.

If she– ff–

Reduced.

Number 45, the word about.

This word can be a preposition, an adverb, or an adjective.

It doesn’t reduce, none of the sounds change.

Sometimes its stressed in a sentence,

for example, I was out and about and thought I’d stop by.

About, about.

Its longer and it has more volume, a higher pitch: out and about.

But it can also be unstressed:

Its all about the timing.

Its all about the timing.

About the, about the, about the,

it’s lower in pitch and volume, and a little
less clear than when it was stressed, about.

Its all about the timing.

About the, about the, about the.

So, it can be unstressed, but nothing changes, it doesn’t reduce.

Since its a two-syllable word, it still has one syllable that’s stressed,

that’s a little clearer, even when the word is being used in an unstressed way.

Number 46.  The word ‘who’.

We already talked about one question word, and that is the word ‘what’.

That word can reduce, we do drop the T if the next word begins with a D.

But generally, question words don’t reduce.

Generally, they’re stressed.

Who was that?

Who does she think she is?

When ‘who’ begins a question, it doesn’t reduce.

It’s the H sound and the OO as in BOO vowel.

Who, who.

But sometimes we use the word ‘who’ in the middle of a sentence.

Then it can reduce.

For example:  Anyone who wants to come can come.

Anyone who wants.

Anyone who wants.

Did you notice how I reduced that?

I dropped the consonant!

It was just the OO vowel.

Oo, anyone who. Anyone who wants.

This is a reduction you might hear Americans do.

Number 47:  The word ‘get’.

A verb, this word is a content word and is generally stressed in a sentence.

So this is the 5th word we’ve found
in our list of the 100 most common words in English

that I feel confident I can say is
always stressed.

Just 5 out of 47!  Wow!

Unstressed and reduced words are so common!

Let’s talk about the pronunciation.

G consonant, EH as in BED vowel, and the T.

We already talked about an ending T in out.

The same rules apply here because the T comes at the end of the word,

just after a vowel or diphthong.

If the word ends a thought group or is followed by a consonant,

it will be a Stop T.

Example: I’ll get the biggest one.  Get the, get the, get the.

Abrupt stop.

I’ll get the biggest one.

If the next word begins with a vowel or a diphthong, then you will flap the T:

I don’t get it.

Get it, get it, ra–, ra–

I don’t get it.

Do you hear the Flap?  Get it.  I don’t get
it.

Number 48.  The word ‘which’.

This word can be stressed or unstressed,

depending on how it’s being used in a sentence.

But nothing changes, it doesn’t reduce.

So, stressed, it’s: which.

Which do you want?

Which, which.  Up-down shape of stress.

Which, which.

But unstressed, it’s lower in pitch and flat:  which, which.

The movie, which I saw last night, was terrible.

The movie which I– which, which, which, which.

Unstressed there, flat. Which. Which.

Let’s talk about the pronunciation.

It begins with WH.

This can be pronounced two ways:  first, a pure W sound.

This is how I’ve been pronouncing it.

Ww, ww, which, which.

The other way is to pronounce it, I think is more old-fashioned, with a: hh– hh– hh–

sound before. A little escape of air first.

Which. Which.  Do you hear that?  HH, hh, which.

This is actually how my Mom pronounces WH- words,

and I made a video with her about these two possible pronunciations.

Click here or in the description below to see that video.

W, IH as in SIT vowel, and CH.

Which.

Which stressed, and which, which, unstressed.

Quick question:  Did studying this word make you think of any other words?

Which and witch are homophones when you use the clean W for which.

That means they’re two totally different words, different spellings, different meanings,

but they have the same pronunciation.

Number 49:  Go.  A verb.

Let’s conjugate it:  I go, you go, she goes,

just add a light Z at the end: goes, goes, goes.

He goes, we go, they go.

Yes, in this form, I would say, this word is always stressed!

The G consonant and the OH diphthong.

Go.

Jaw drop, then lip rounding for the diphthong.

Oh.  Go, go.  Goes.

But you know what?

There’s another conjugation for this word:  the –ing form.

Going.

I’m going to go to the store.

I’m going to go to the mall.

There I’m using the –ing form and the infinitive.

Going to go.

Now, if you’ve seen any of my real-life English videos, or any of my speech analysis videos,

then you know the phrase ‘going to’ is very common,

and you know, we do reduce that.

What do we reduce it to?  Do you know?

Going to.

Let me say that in a sentence again: I’m going to go to the mall.

I’m gonna go.

There, did you hear it?

Gonna– gonna– gonna–

I’m going to go to the mall.

Right. It’s ‘gonna’.

One of the most common reductions in all of English.

Now, occasionally I get a comment from someone saying, ‘gonna’ is not proper English.  Hmm.

Not true.

I would never tell anyone to write it.

Ok?  Don’t write it!

But its perfectly natural and normal in spoken English.

It’s proper. It’s a beautiful reduction!

I made a video several years ago

where I took a couple of presidential speeches.

And I found examples of gonna.

So even world leaders giving important speeches to large groups of people

use this reduction.

If you’re interested in seeing that video, click here or in the description below.

What’s the pronunciation of gonna?

First syllable is stressed.  We have the G consonant,

the UH as in BUTTER vowel,

N, gun– gun– gun–

and then the schwa in the unstressed syllable.

Uh– uh– Gonna.  Gonna.

If you have not already noticed this reduction,

now that you’ve learned it,

you’re gonna hear it all the time.  It’s everywhere.

Gonna. You’re gonna hear it.

Number 50. Wow, we’re halfway down the list.

What is number 50?

Me.

A pronoun, which is a function word,

which means it will generally be unstressed in a sentence.

It doesn’t reduce, we don’t change any of the sounds,

but it’s flat in pitch, said quickly compared to the other stressed words in the sentence.

He gave me his number.

Gave and number are stressed,

the rest of the words, unstressed.

He gave me his number.

Me his, me his, me his,

both flat in pitch, unstressed.

Said very quickly.

Do you hear how I’m reducing the word ‘his’?

Dropping the H?

Wow, did we cover that?

Yeah, we did.

That was number 28.

We made it through the next set of 10.

Great job.

We’re starting to get into a few more words that are reliably stressed here.

I looked ahead and the next video has two of my favorite reductions.

Let’s keep going down this list

of the 100 most common words in English to study the pronunciation,

and I don’t mean the full or official pronunciation,

I mean how the word is actually used in a sentence in American English.

Look for the next installment in this series, coming soon.

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

今天,您将看到
英语系列中最常用的 100 个单词中的下一个视频,

这是视频 5。

在这个系列中,正在研究
真正的发音。

这可能

与您在英语课上学到的不同。

你看,在美式英语中,我们有各种不重读甚至减少的词:

这意味着我们改变了发音。

英语中最常用的 100 个单词的集合包含许多减少的单词。

如果您还没有看过视频 1

和本系列中的其他视频,我建议

您从那里开始。

这些视频建立在下一个之上,

因此请单击此处观看视频。

今天,从 41 号开始,
“so”这个词。

这个词会减少吗?

是的,它确实。

完全发音时,它有 OH 和
NO 双元音一样。

一般般。

我不这么认为。

所以。 你的头发看起来真好。

所以。

但是,当它用作句首的填充词时,您会听到它被简化为“suh”

作为填充词,这个词并没有真正的意义。

例如:那你怎么看?

所以你怎么看? 所以。 所以。

因此,您将需要另一个。 所以。 所以。

你肯定会听到美国人这样做。

42 号:向上。

嘿,我们发现了另一个不会减少的词。

这个词会被强调。 在英语中最常见

的 100 个单词中,我们排在第 42 位

而这只是第三个通常被强调的单词。

如此多的单词没有重读或减少,这真是太神奇了!

对于这个词,我们有 BUTTER 元音中的 UH 和 P 辅音 Up。

向上。

P是一个停止辅音,

这意味着我们停止空气,向上,

然后释放它,pp

。释放很轻。

上,上。

有时我们不释放停止辅音,

比如它在一个思想组的末尾:

怎么了?

这是怎么回事?

我没有发布 P。

怎么了?

此外,如果下一个单词以辅音开头,我们经常会跳过释放:

妈妈,怎么了?

怎么了,妈妈?

我的嘴唇凑到了 P,

但是当他们分开时,而不是 pp,

空气的轻微逸出,我直接进入了 M 音。

我认为“向上”之所以如此普遍,是因为它
用于许多短语动词中。

崩溃,分手,呕吐,行动起来,

爬行,黄油,

燃烧,骨头,仅举几例。

英语中有很多短语动词。

在 2017 年初,我每天都制作一个新的视频来检查短语动词。

单击此处查看该集合,或查看视频说明中的链接。

43 号:出局。

哦,这很有趣。

这是短语动词中常见的另一个词。

锻炼,弄清楚,精疲力尽,
熄灭,

阻挡,脱颖而出,带出。

毫不奇怪,其中一些短语动词

部分出现在此列表中。

有一堆没有。

这个词并没有减少。

我们有 OW 双元音 ow

和 T 辅音。

出去。

就像 P 一样,T 是一个停止辅音。

我们通常不释放它: tt–

如果它出现在一个思想组的末尾,或者如果下一个单词以辅音开头。

让我们看一些例子:当心!

这句话的结尾,一个未发布的T。

小心。

我切断了空气,所以它不是:注意哦。

观看哦。

那听起来就像没有T。

但是突然停止,小心!

如果没有降调,这对我们来说听起来像是一个 T。

小心。

你现在不能退。

现在出来。

在那里,T 后面跟着一个以辅音开头的单词,

另一个 Stop T.

Out now。

现在出来。

T 是特殊的:如果下一个单词
以元音或双元音开头,那么我们将其拍打。

一个单一的rra - 对着嘴巴的顶部。

例如:离开这里。

出,出。

Ra– ra–

一个襟翼 T 连接两个词。

您是否注意到 OF 的减少?

是的,这只是 schwa。

“Of”是英语列表中最常见的 100 个单词中的第 4 个单词。

44 号。IF 一词。

这个词通常是连词,然后不重读。

说得很快。

如果你迷路了给我打电话。

如果你迷路了给我打电话。

如果你迷路了给我打电话。

在这里,它是一串非重读单词的一部分。

音调低沉,平缓,快速的说道。 如果,如果,如果。

如果你——我如果你——如果你迷路了就给我打电话。

你甚至可能会在句首听到这个词的缩减,

只是下一个词的 F 音,没有元音:

如果你想离开,没关系。

如果她不在乎,没关系。

ff,ff,ff,如果你愿意的话。

如果她—— ff——

减少了。

45 号,关于这个词。

这个词可以是介词、副词或形容词。

它不会减少,任何声音都不会改变。

有时它会在一个句子中强调,

例如,我出去走走,以为我会停下来。

关于,关于。

它更长,音量更大,音高更高:到处走动。

但它也可以不被强调

:一切都与时机有关。

一切都与时机有关。

About the, about the, about the,

它的音调和音量都较低,
并且比强调的时候不太清晰,about。

一切都与时机有关。

关于,关于,关于。

所以,它可以是无压力的,但没有任何变化,它不会减少。

由于它是一个双音节词,它仍然有一个音节是重读

的,即使这个词以非重读的方式使用,它也会更清晰一些。

46 号。“谁”这个词。

我们已经讨论过一个疑问词,那就是“what”这个词。

这个词可以归约,如果下一个词以 D 开头,我们会去掉 T。

但一般来说,疑问词不会归约。

一般来说,他们有压力。

那是谁?

她以为她是谁?

当“谁”开始一个问题时,它不会减少。

它是 H 音和 BOO 元音中的 OO。

谁谁。

但有时我们在句子中间使用“谁”这个词。

然后可以减少。

例如:任何想来的人都可以来。

任何想要的人。

任何想要的人。

你注意到我是如何减少它的吗?

我放弃了辅音!

这只是OO元音。

哦,任何人。 任何想要的人。

这是你可能听到美国人做的减少。

数字 47:“得到”这个词。

动词,这个词是实词,一般在句子中重读。

因此,这是我们
在 100 个最常见的英语单词列表中找到的第 5 个单词

,我有信心可以说
总是重音。

47个中只有5个! 哇!

不重读和减少的词是如此普遍!

让我们谈谈发音。

G 辅音,EH 如 BED 元音和 T。

我们已经讨论过结尾 T in out。

相同的规则在这里适用,因为 T 出现在单词的末尾,

就在元音或双元音之后。

如果这个词结束了一个思想组或后面跟着一个辅音,

它将是一个停止 T。

例如:我会得到最大的一个。 得到,得到,得到。

突然停止。

我会得到最大的。

如果下一个单词以元音或双元音开头,那么你会拍打 T:

我不明白。

明白了,明白了,拉——,拉——

我不明白。

你听到襟翼了吗? 得到它。 我不
明白。

48 号。“哪个”这个词。

这个词可以重读或不重读,

具体取决于它在句子中的使用方式。

但是没有任何变化,它并没有减少。

所以,强调的是:哪个。

你要哪个?

哪个,哪个。 应力的上下形状。

哪个,哪个。

但是没有重音,它的音高和平坦度较低:哪个,哪个。

昨晚看的这部电影,太烂了。

我的电影——哪个,哪个,哪个,哪个。

那里没有压力,平坦。 哪个。 哪个。

让我们谈谈发音。

它以 WH 开头。

这可以通过两种方式发音:首先,纯 W 音。

这就是我的发音方式。

哇,哇,哪个,哪个。

另一种方式是发音,我认为更老式,前有:hh– hh– hh–

音。 先放一点空气。

哪个。 哪个。 你听到了吗? 嗯,嗯,哪个。

这实际上是我妈妈如何发音 WH- 单词

,我和她一起制作了一个关于这两种可能发音的视频。

单击此处或在下面的说明中查看该视频。

W,IH,如 SIT 元音和 CH。

哪个。

哪个强调,哪个,哪个,不强调。

快速提问:学习这个词有没有让你想到其他词?

当您使用干净的 W 表示 which 时,which 和witch 是同音字。

这意味着它们是两个完全不同的词,不同的拼写,不同的含义,

但它们的发音相同。

49 号:去。 一个动词。

让我们结合它:我去,你去,她去,

只需在末尾添加一个灯 Z:去,去,去。

他去,我们去,他们去。

是的,在这种形式下,我会说,这个词总是被强调的!

G 辅音和 OH 双元音。

去。

下巴下降,然后为双元音圆唇。

哦。 走,走。 去。

但你知道吗?

这个词还有另一种变位形式:-ing 形式。

去。

我要去商店。

我要去商场。

在那里,我使用了 -ing 形式和不定式。

要走了。

现在,如果您看过我的任何真实英语视频,或任何我的语音分析视频,

那么您就会知道“going to”这个短语很常见,

而且您知道,我们确实减少了它。

我们把它简化成什么? 你知道吗?

即将。

让我再说一遍:我要去商场。

我要走了。

在那里,你听到了吗?

要去–要去–

我要去商场。

对。 它’会'。

所有英语中最常见的缩略语之一。

现在,我偶尔会收到有人说“gonna”不是正确的英语的评论。 唔。

不对。

我永远不会告诉任何人写它。

好的? 不要写!

但它在英语口语中非常自然和正常。

这是正确的。 这是一个美丽的还原!

几年前我制作了一段视频

,在那里我做了几次总统演讲。

我发现了 gona 的例子。

因此,即使是世界各国领导人对一大群人发表重要演讲时也会

使用这种缩减。

如果您有兴趣观看该视频,请单击此处或下面的说明。

gona的读音是什么?

第一个音节重读。 我们有 G 辅音,

BUTTER 元音中的 UH,

N,gun–gun–gun–然后是非重读

音节中的 schwa。

呃——呃——会。 会的。

如果您还没有注意到这种减少,

那么既然您已经了解了它,

那么您将一直听到它。 它无处不在。

会的。 你会听到的。

50 号。哇,我们在名单的一半。

50号是什么?

我。

代词,它是一个虚词,

这意味着它通常不会在句子中重读。

它不会减少,我们不会改变任何声音,

但它的音调是平坦的,与句子中的其他重读词相比,它说得很快。

他给了我他的号码。

Give 和 number 是重读的

,其余的词是非重读的。

他给了我他的号码。

我他的,我他的,我他的

,音调平缓,没有重音。

非常快的说道。

你听到我是如何减少“他的”这个词的吗?

放弃H?

哇,我们报道了吗?

是的,我们做到了。

那是 28 号。

我们通过了下一组 10 号。

干得好。

我们开始进入更多在这里可靠强调的单词。

我向前看,下一个视频有两个我最喜欢的减少。

让我们继续阅读

这个 100 个最常用的英语单词列表来研究发音

,我不是指完整的或官方的发音,

我指的是这个词在美式英语中的句子中的实际使用方式。

寻找本系列的下一部分,即将推出。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachels 英语。