English MovieHow To Speak English Like an American With Top Gun English Movies To Learn English

In today’s video you’re going to learn English with movies, and when we study this way,

you’ll be able to understand American movies and TV effortlessly, without subtitles.

Today’s video uses the trailer for the movie Top Gun: Maverick.

You know, this movie was supposed to be out this month for a summer blockbuster, but because

of the coronavirus, it got pushed back to December. We’ll see what happens.

We’re going to go as in-depth as we can on the way Americans speak, how they speak,

so you’ll not only be able to understand everything, but you’re going to understand what Americans do

with English, in a way that will allow you to imitate perfectly. You might be the next Tom Cruise.

Maybe so, sir.

We’re going to be doing this all summer.

June through August, stick with me every Tuesday, they’re all great scenes and there’s going to be so

much to learn that can transform the way you speak and understand English.

And as always, if you like this video or you learn something, please like and subscribe with notifications.

You’re going to watch the clip then we’re going to do a full pronunciation analysis together.

This is going to help so much with your listening comprehension

when it comes to watching English movies in TV. But there’s going to be a training section.

You’re going to take what you’ve just learned and practice repeating it, doing a reduction, flapping a T,

just like you learned in analysis. Okay, here’s the scene.

Thirty plus years of service. Combat medals. Citations.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Yet you can’ get a promotion, you won’t retire.

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

You should be at least a two-star admiral by now.

Yet you are here.

Captain.

Why is that?

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

The end is inevitable, Maverick. Your kind is headed for extinction.

Maybe so, sir.

But not today.

And now the analysis.

Thirty plus years of service.

Okay to start, let’s go ahead and write out thirty and plus. It would almost always be written this way

with the digit and then the plus sign, but as we talked about the sounds, we’ll write it out.

Now you probably noticed that the T in thirty is a flap T.

This follows the rules in that it comes after an R before a vowel. Like in dirty, this is a T that we would flap.

So rather than being ttt, a true T, the tongue simply flaps against the roof of the mouth. Thirty da-da-da thirty.

Thirty. Thirty. Thirty plus–

Thirty plus–

Thirty plus–

And we have first syllable stress on thirty.

Thirty, so stressed, then unstressed, the ending unstressed EE sound. Thirty plus–

Thirty plus– thirty plus– thirty plus years of service.

Some stress on plus, then we also have stress on years, and ser–vice.

So of and –vice, are both unstressed. Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service. So those are our longer syllables with the up-down shape of stress.

The other syllables are going to be shorter, but everything links together we don’t want to feel

any separation between the words. Thirty plus years of service, would not be natural sounding American English.

We need this contrast and then we also need the linking. Thirty plus years of service. No breaks there.

Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service.

Thirty plus years of service.

Combat medals.

Okay, now in this little two-word phrase, you tell me what are the most stressed syllables?

Combat medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals. The most stress probably on combat, the adjective here describing the kind of medal.

Combat medals. And then also some stress on the noun. Combat medals. The second syllable of combat

is unstressed, it has a stop T, bat bat bat, because the next word begins with a consonant.

So again, the T is not released. Combat medals. Medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals.

This D can also be a flap just like thirty, medals, rararara, because it comes between two vowel sounds.

Here, it’s the EH as in bed vowel and then the schwa L combination. Medals, medals, medals. Combat medals.

The vowel here in the unstressed syllable is AH, but we don’t want it to be AA,

that would be stressed, we want it to be ah, ah, combat, combat medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals.

Combat medals. Citations.

Citations. Do you feel how it’s that middle syllable that’s stressed? Citations.

The letter A here is TAY, the AY as in say diphthong. That letter A can have several different pronunciations.

Here it’s: ay, ay, citations. The letter C makes the S sound.

Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

The letter I makes the AI diphthong. The letter I, so many of the letters, almost all of the letters in American English

can have various different pronunciations, which makes English so hard you can’t necessarily tell

the pronunciation by looking at it. Citations. SH schwa N, and then Z, a weak ending Z sound.

Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

The stress is really important in American English. We want to know what stressed, and what’s unstressed,

so that we can feel that we make a peak on that stressed syllable. We definitely don’t want all syllables

to feel the same. Citations. That would have the right pitch, but not the right rhythm.

It’s not DA-DA-DA but it’s da-DA-da. The first one is very short and the last one is very short. Citations. Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

Also I should point out this T in ta– is a true T because it starts a stressed syllable.

So if a T starts a stressed syllable, and it’s not part of the TR cluster, then it will be a true T. Tay, tay, citations.

Citations.

Citations.

Citations.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Okay, now we have a much longer phrase. I want you to listen to it a few times and see

what you think is the most stressed word.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

I hear it is the last word. In the last forty years– years– he sort of holds on to the beginning Y consonant a little bit.

Years. Draws out the length and it definitely has that up-down shape. Now certainly, we have other syllables

that are stressed in the sentence, but I think this is the most stressed in the phrase.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Let’s look at our other stressed syllables and do we have any reductions?

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Everything links together really smoothly. So let’s take it bit by bit.

Only man to shoot down–

Only man to shoot down–

Only man to shoot down–

Only man to shoot down– So we have stress on OH. Only man– not on the word ‘to’, that’s a preposition,

usually not going to be stressed. Shoot and down, both have some stress and length.

Did you notice that the word ‘to’ wasn’t pronounced ‘to’ it was reduced. Man to– man to–

Flap T or a D sound and the schwa. Man to– man to– only man to–

Only man to–

shoot down–

I have a friend named Amanda, and we often as a nickname, as a way to shorten it, call her just ‘Manda’.

Manda. And it sounds just like these two words together: man to– Manda, Manda, Manda,

when you make that a flap T.

Only man to–

shoot down–

Only man to shoot down–

Only man to shoot down–

So we have two letters T here. The first one is a flap T, or it’s sort of like a D sound, and then the second T

is a stop T. Shoot down. Which means we stop the air, but we don’t release the T, that would be shoot down.

We definitely don’t hear that. It’s just shoot down, shoot down.

Shoot down–

Now a word of caution with the word down, a lot of my students, especially students whose native language is

Chinese, but not just those students, have a hard time with the word down. It’s the OW diphthong,

OW, plus the N consonant. And they kind of mix the N into the diphthong and nasalize it. Down.

We don’t want that at all. We want it to be completely un-nasal in the diphthong.

Dow– Dow– Dow– nnn– Dow– nnn–

And then you can practice it that way splitting off the N, make sure you’re not going down,

and mixing the two into a nasal diphthong sound. Down, down, shoot down.

Shoot down– shoot down– shoot down three enemy planes.

Then we have three words, and they’re all stressed, so we have quite a few words and syllables that are

stressed in this sentence. Three enemy planes. I want to point out that even in a stressed word,

if it has more than one syllable, it will have unstressed syllables. So the only syllable stressed here is EH.

Enemy. Nemy. Nemy. Nemy. Then the rest of the syllables are unstressed and said very quickly.

Three enemy.

Three enemy.

Three enemy.

Three enemy.

Now, we have a vowel to vowel link here. We have the EE vowel in three and the EH vowel in enemy.

Some students feel like they need to split that up a little bit to make it clear, the change between words,

you don’t need to do that in English. And we don’t want you to do that. We want it to glide together smoothly.

Three enemy. Three enemy.

If you have a hard time linking them together, it can help to think of, in this particular case, with this particular link,

a Y consonant. So you could think of the word as being yenemy, three enemy, three enemy, three enemy.

If you link it together, that might help you smooth it out you don’t want to make a very big heavy Y,

but a little light Y glide consonant to link those two words together,

might help you make a smooth transition.

Three enemy.

Let’s talk a little bit about the consonant cluster here. It’s TH unvoiced and R consonant.

Thr, thr, thr, thr, thr, thr. His TH almost has like a T quality in it. I think when I listen to it on repeat.

But it’s definitely not: three, three, three, that’s something that a lot of non-native speakers do, they substitute in TR

instead of THR and then it sounds like a tree, you know, like, oh, a tree. But we don’t want to be saying tree.

We want to be saying three , three , three. So let your tongue tip come lightly through your teeth,

don’t build up the air, don’t put pressure there, don’t bite on the tongue at all, that will make it sound more like a T.

We want th– the easy passage of air. Three, three, three enemy planes.

Three enemy planes-

in the last forty years.

In the last forty years. So in and the, both said so incredibly quickly.

Let’s just listen to: in the last–

in the last–

I actually think it sounds like the TH is dropped. In the, in the, in the, in the, in the, in the.

It’s just IH as in sit, N linking right into the schwa. In the, in the, in the, in the, in the, in the.

You can only do this if you do it very, very quickly. It’s low in pitch, it’s low in volume, try that.

In the, in the, in the, in the. You should be able to do it without moving your jaw at all.

Your lips, your face, should be totally relaxed, the only thing moving is the tongue inside the mouth.

You want to take away all the extra movement that

you don’t need so that you can say this as quickly as you need to. In the, in the, in the, in the last forty years.

The last forty years.

The last forty years.

The last forty years.

Okay, again, we’re going to write out the word ‘forty’.

Our T again is a flap T because it comes after an R and before a vowel.

The vowel is the EE as in she vowel. Forty, forty, forty. Thirty, thirty, thirty.

These all have a flap T which can sound like a D. Dadadada forty forty.

Forty–

years.

Now we have some stressed words other than years, let’s listen to the phrase again:

In the last forty years–

In the, in the, last forty, and then we’ve already marked years. So the unstressed syllable of forty is unstressed.

We have stress in the word last with the AA vowel. Notice the T is dropped there.

It’s very common to drop the T in an ending cluster like ST when the next word begins with a consonant,

the next word begins with F, so we’re gonna drop that T to smoothly connect. Last forty, last forty.

Last forty–

So out of all of our letters T here on this page, we have a flap T, in we have a stop T in combat,

we have a true T in citations, because it begins a stressed syllable, but then the next T is actually

part of the TION ending, and that’s an SH sound. In the word to, the reduction is da, flap T, not a true T.

In the word shoot, it’s a stop T. And in the word last, its dropped.

So out of all of the T sounds in this particular part of this conversation, there’s only one true T.

And then we even have as the T and the TH, it’s fully pronounced in one case and then dropped in another.

So you really need to study how Americans speak and what happens with reductions and linking

and dropping sounds, in order to figure out how they do things so smoothly.

But after you study this, and you look at this part of the video several times, you’ll be able to go back

and imitate that audio, and that’s when it really gets fun,

when you can not only understand what’s happening with American English, but when

you can imitate it yourself in a way that sounds natural. It really can feel freeing to do that.

And that’s what this video series is all about this summer.

Last forty years. Last forty years. Last forty years. Yet you can’t get a promotion–

Okay in this next phrase, what’s the most stressed word do you think?

Yet you can’t get a promotion–

Yet you can’t get a promotion–

Yet you can’t get a promotion–

I’m feeling can’t, and promotion, as being really stressed. Yet you, really low in volume, low in energy,

harder to hear, right? Let’s listen to just those two words together.

Yet you–

Yet you–

Not very clear, but that’s what we need. We need that less clear to provide contrast with our more

clear syllables. That’s what makes up the character of American English. So we have yet, with the stop T,

yet, yet, yet, yet, Yet you– Yet you– Yet you– Yet you–

Yet you–

can’t get a promotion–

Can’t get a promotion– Okay we have an N apostrophe T ending in the word can’t.

That can be pronounced three ways. One of them is can’t, with a true T, one of them is can’t, with a stop T,

and one of them is can with the T totally dropped. I’m having a hard time deciding if I think it’s a stop T,

or a dropped T, because if I listen to it three times thinking it’s a stop T, that’s what I hear.

If I listen to it three times thinking it’s dropped, that’s what I hear. So at any rate, it’s not a true T.

We’ll call it a stop T, very subtle, very quick, can’t get, can’t get, can’t get, can’t get, can’t get, can’t get.

Not a big lift but just a tiny little break there before the G: can’t get, can’t get.

Can’t get–

The vowel is the AA vowel. When it’s followed by N it’s not really a pure AA anymore, it’s not ca– ca–

but cauh– it starts with a little less jaw drop and the back of the tongue relaxes, which brings in a sound

sort of like UH. Ca-uh, ca-uh, can’t can’t can’t can’t can’t.

And we know that this is different than the word can, because if the word was you can get a promotion,

then we wouldn’t stress it, we would say, you can get, you can get, you can get.

That would be reduced to the schwa. The word can’t never reduces, always has this AA vowel in it.

Can’t get,

a promotion.

Now we have get and a, not stressed, along with the first syllable of promotion, that’s a schwa there.

Pro–

So we have get a pro– but that’s not how it’s pronounced, it’s pronounced: get a, get a, get a, get a,

flap T linking into the schwa, and the schwa links right into the PR. That’s what helps us link everything together,

is we just don’t stop the sounds. Get a, get a, get a, get a pro, get a pro, get a pro, get a promotion.

Get a promotion–

Again we have a TION ending and that is SH schwa N. Tion, tion, tion. It’s not: shen, shon, it’s shun, shun.

Try to make it with a no vowel at all. N absorbs the schwa, so just try to make SHN and say that quickly.

SHN SHN promotion.

Promotion–

Get a promotion.

Get a promotion–

you won’t retire.

I wrote the word you here, but it is so, so subtle. You, you, you, you.

I almost just hear it as a superlight weak Y sound in the throat, but

I could even see someone saying it’s totally dropped.

You won’t retire–

You won’t retire. So we have two stressed syllables there, and again, I feel like I’m hearing this

N apostrophe T as a stop T. Won’t, won’t , won’t , won’t. Won’t retire.

Be careful here, some people say something more like: won– wo, oh, oh, won– but it’s woah–

So your lips start in a circle for the W, then they loosen up a little bit for the first half of the OH diphthong,

then they have to round again. Woah– If you miss that second rounding, then you’re not gonna get the

correct sound there. Won’t, won’t, won’t retire.

You won’t retire.

You won’t retire.

You won’t retire.

Again, this T is a True T, why? Because it starts a stressed syllable. Tire, retire. Retire.

Retire–

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

What do you hear as the most stressed syllables in that phrase there?

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Despite your best– A little bit of stress on best. A little bit of stress on efforts. But more on refuse and die.

Okay, let’s look at the rest of the words, the rest of the syllables, do we have any T’s that change from a true T?

Do we have any reductions? How do we link all of this together and provide the rhythmic contrast we need?

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

Let’s just look at the first two words: despite– despite your– so this T is a stop T because the next sound

is a consonant sound, the Y consonant. Also we want this to be a schwa in DE, and a schwa in RE,

retire, so don’t say re– retire, say ruh– retire. Duh– despite, despite, the letter I here makes the AI diphthong.

Despite. Stop T. So it’s different from dropped T because that would be despie– the sound would be the same,

AI but it would change shape, AI, it would go up and then come down. Despie–

but when we cut it off, despite, despite.

Despite–

your best–

That cutoff is a stop of air, and that signifies the T. Now the word your, is reduced it becomes the schwa R.

Those two sounds blend together. The R absorbs the schwa.

So you don’t even need to try to make a vowel there. It’s just yy–rr– yrr, yrr, yrr, yrr, yrr, yrr.

Say that as quickly as you can. Your, despite your, despite your.

Despite your–

best efforts.

Best efforts. So we have an ST cluster. If the next word began with the consonant, we would drop that T,

but it doesn’t, it begins with the EH as in bed vowel. So we will link that with a light true T.

Best efforts, best, best efforts.

Best efforts–

We don’t want to say efforts. We see a letter O here, maybe you want to do some lip rounding,

but it’s not, it’s a schwa. Effor–

And remember just like we said here, schwa is absorbed by the R so you don’t even need to try to make a vowel

right from F into R. Effor– for for for. Efforts. Efforts.

Efforts–

you refuse to die.

Efforts, you re–

So we have three unstressed syllables here. We have the unstressed syllable of efforts, the word you,

which doesn’t reduce. He could have said yuh, but he said you, but he said it low and unstressed.

You, you, you. You re– you re–

Then again just like retire, we have refuse, with a schwa, not refuse, but re re refuse,

Refuse–

to die–

You refuse to die. Now, I listen to this quite a few times to decide, do I think this is a true T in to or a flap T?

I think it’s a true T. Refused to. But it’s got the schwa. It’s not to it’s to to to, it’s low in pitch, it’s said very quickly.

Refuse to die, before the stressed word die. Now I want to talk about this word, refuse, so it can be pronounced

two different ways, it can be unstressed, re, R schwa, actually, you know what, it’s not the schwa,

it’s the IH as in sit vowel, which brings up something interesting. This is actually an IH as well,

as is despite, if I look it up, I see it’s an IH, refuse is an IH, so why am I saying it’s a schwa?

I’ve always said to me, the IH as in sit, unstressed sounds just like the schwa.

Re re re re re refuse. Retire. Re re re re refuse. Retire.

In the word themselves, they pretty much sound the same to me. So I always tell students, don’t worry

about an unstressed syllable like this, do whichever one helps you say it more quickly.

But I love this, when I look something up and I find, oh man I’m wrong.

The official pronunciation does show an IH,

if you say it with a schwa that doesn’t really matter. What matters is that it’s said very quickly.

With this word, we actually have two different pronunciations.

Two different meanings but same spelling. So the first one is how it’s used here, it’s a verb.

We have the R consonant, IH vowel, unstressed. And then in a stressed syllable, we have the F consonant,

the JU as in few diphthong, and the Z. Refuse, refuse. That’s the verb.

And it means no way will this person do something.

Refuse–

The other pronunciation of it is a noun, and it’s refuse. So now, the first syllable is stressed,

we have the EH as in bed syllable there and then in our unstressed syllable, we still have the JU diphthong

but we have an S at the end instead, and this is the noun and this is just another word for trash.

So two different words, two different meanings, same spelling, but different pronunciation.

Refuse. Refuse.

Refuse–

to die.

You should be at least a two star Admiral by now.

You should be at least– some stress there. You should be at least a two star Admiral by not by now.

Two star Admiral by now.

You should be at least a two star Admiral by now.

You should be at least a two star Admiral by now.

You should be at least a two star Admiral by now.

Let’s look at our first four words here. You should be at–

You should be at–

You should– The D, the letter L is always silent in this word, the D is very subtle and actually, you can drop it,

you can think of it as being dropped, before a word that begins to the consonant: shuh– shuh– shuh–

So it’s SH and schwa,

you should be, you should be, you should be, you should be at– you should be at– you should be at–

Be linking right into at which reduces, at at at, I would write that with the schwa and a stop T.

Be at, be at, be at, be at, be at, you should be at, you should be at, you should be at.

You should be at–

least a two star Admiral by now.

Four less clear words before we have some of our words with stressed syllables.

You should be at least a two star–

You should be at least a two star–

You should be at least a two star–

At least a– Now, here, T in an ST cluster but the next sound is the schwa.

So we do hear a true T linking into that. Least a, least a. At least a two star.

Now this is a T starting a stressed syllable, so that will be a True T. Two star, two star, two star Admiral by now.

AA. There we have that AA vowel again. Hope you feel pretty good about it because it’s in this sentence,

it’s in this conversation quite a bit. Two star Admiral by now.

At least a two star Admiral by now.

At least a two star Admiral by now.

At least a two star Admiral by now.

Admiral, Admiral. I love that word. It really is clear that the first syllable is stressed,

and the second two are unstressed. Miral, miral, miral. Don’t say MEERAL or anything like that.

Miral, miral, miral.

Admiral–

Both unstressed syllables have the schwa. Schwa followed by R. It gets absorbed by the R.

Schwa followed by L, it gets absorbed by the L. M, N, R, L. All absorb the schwa.

So they’re called syllabic consonants. You don’t need to try to make a schwa there. It’s just

Mm, rr, ll. M right into the R sound, and then a dark L. Miral, miral, miral, miral. Admiral.

Admiral–

by now.

By now, by now. A little bit of stress on now, but it’s the end of the phrase, his voice has lost some of the energy,

it’s lower in pitch.

By now–

Yet here you are.

Okay in this little four-word sentence, what is the stress?

Yet here you are–

Yet here you are.

Here and are, more stressed, everything links together very smoothly. We have a stop T in yet,

because the next word begins with a consonant, the H consonant. Yet here you are.

Yet here you are.

Yet here you are.

Yet here you are.

Captain.

Captain. Ca– again, that AH vowel in our stressed syllable. Captain.

Captain–

A light true T here. Now why would this one be a true T? The rule is if it’s part of a consonant cluster, like in PT,

that it’s a True T, although we’ve definitely seen exceptions to that, haven’t we?

ST followed by a constant, it’s dropped, but here, part of the PT cluster, it is a light true T.

And again, captain, tain, tain, captain. Don’t try to make a vowel there. Schwa N. Captain.

Captain–

Actually, I just looked it up because I was curious. Dictionary.com shows both schwa N or IH,

N, as an ending and as i’ve said before, to me, they sound the same.

Captain–

Why is that?

Why is that? Why is that? Most stress on the question word. Why is that?

And then the pitch sort of falls down from that. Why is– really link that AI diphthong, why is,

into the IH as in sit vowel.

You might need to feel like you go through the glide consonant Y to help you link them.

Why is that? Then a weak Z.

TH, AH as in bat vowel, stop T. Now why is this a stop T? It’s not followed by a consonant.

It’s a stop T because T is a stop T if it’s followed by a consonant,

or it’s the end of a thought group, like it is here.

Why is that?

Why is that?

Why is that?

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s– more stress there, mysteries, sir. One has a little bit of stress, sir has a little bit of stress.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

Let’s look at the other words the word its. Vowel is dropped. It’s just the TS cluster before the W of one.

It’s one, it’s one, it’s one, it’s one. It’s not uncommon to pronounce it’s that way.

You can even do that with what’s and let’s. Like if I was going to say let’s go, I might say:

let’s go, let’s go I’m ready to go. Let’s go. That’s can also be reduced to just the TS cluster. It’s one.

It’s one of–

life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of– the word of, I would write that with the schwa and the V.

You can drop the V sound but he doesn’t. It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

The word mysteries can be pronounced as three or two syllables, mys-ter-ies or mys-teries.

I actually think he’s doing it as three but this middle syllable is so fast.

Mysteries, mysteries, mysteries.

Mysteries–

sir.

And there’s not really a break between mysteries and sir. Mysteries, sir.

So even though an IPA, this would be written with the Z.

It’s more like an S that just keeps going into the stressed sound sir, into the stressed word, sir. Mysteries, sir.

Mysteries, sir.

Everything in this phrase really smoothly connected.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

Okay, our stress here. The end is inevitable, Maverick.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

End has the most stress, I would say. Now, the word the, here is pronounced the.

The rule is that’s what we do when the next word begins with a vowel, and here the next word begins with EH,

the EH vowel. Usually it would be the, but here it’s the, the end, the end.

Now do Americans always follow this rule? No. But if you noticed it, that’s what’s going on.

The end. The end is inevitable. Inevi–dadadadada Do you hear that?

That’s a flap T because it comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds. Inevitable.

So it’s a four syllable word with second syllable stress. Inevitable. Five syllable word with second syllable stress.

Unstressed, then stressed, then three unstressed. Inevitable.

Inevitable.

And everything links together really smoothly. D into beginning IH, Z into beginning IH.

The end is inevitable.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

The end is inevitable, Maverick.

Maverick. This is another word that can be pronounced as three or two syllables

depending on if you drop the middle. Ma-ver-ick. Just like mys-ter-y. Or Mave-rick.

Maverick.

Dropped, the feeling of the vowel, and make this like, feel like a cluster. Rick, Rick, maverick.

And that’s what he did. He does not release the K. K is a stop sound just like T and we can skip the release at the

end of a thought group like he does here. Or when the next word begins with a consonant.

It’s a little bit less of a strong rule. The T is almost always a stop T in these cases.

K it’s a little bit more likely to release it, but he doesn’t. Maverick. Maverick.

Maverick.

Sort of an abrupt stop of air there, signifies the K.

Maverick.

Your kind is headed for extinction.

Now let’s look at our next sentence. The word your. The last time we saw that, it was reduced.

It wasn’t your, it was your, your, does that happen again? Listen.

Your kind is headed for extinction.

Your kind is headed for extinction.

Your kind is headed for extinction.

Honestly, I almost don’t even really hear an R sound. Ye ye ye ye ye kind.

Your kind–

is headed for extinction.

Your kind is headed– Stress on kind, head, headed for extinction.

So the word your, definitely reduced. We have stress on kind, it’s the AI diphthong, and your links right into kind ,

then the D links right into the IH vowel for our unstressed syllable is.

Weak Z sound links right into the H.

Kind is headed–

Kind is headed. The ED ending after a D is schwa D. Headed. Headed. Could you think of that?

I’m sorry I said schwa, but I wrote IH because you can also think of it as schwa D. Headed. Headed. Headed.

Headed–

for extinction.

The word for, now I know this word usually reduces, is it for? Let’s listen.

Headed for–

Headed for, headed for. It’s not for. It is fur fur fur. I would write that with a schwa.

Fur fur, reduced, headed for extinction.

Headed for extinction.

Headed for extinction.

Headed for extinction.

T here starting a stressed syllable, that’s a true T. Unstressed IH, K sound, the letter X here is interesting,

it makes KS and the syllable break actually happens between K and S so it’s actually IK, and then ST cluster.

Extinction.

So in the stressed syllable, STING, I’m just gonna write this over here, we’re getting crowded there. Extinction.

Extinction.

Extinction.

Extinction.

In the stressed syllable, we have the IH as in sit vowel but that’s followed by the NG consonant.

Now here, it’s the letter N. But it’s not made at the front of the mouth, like N, it’s made at the back,

with the back of the tongue like NG and that’s because it’s followed by a K sound.

Exting—, that’s the back of the tongue lifting to the soft palate.

When IH is followed by an NG sound, it’s not really IH, it’s more like EE,

you’ll notice this in the word sing, or ring, it’s not IH, sing, but sing, sing.

Extinct, extinction. Extinction. Sort of a tricky word. You might want to slow it down as you practice it. Extinction.

Extinction.

Maybe so, sir.

Maybe so, sir. A little bit of stress on may– much more on so, a little bit of stress on sir.

And everything links together really smoothly, doesn’t it? Maybe so, sir.

Maybe so, sir.

Maybe so, sir.

Maybe so, sir.

But not today.

But not today. Okay, so I think this T is actually dropped, I don’t really hear it as a stop, but

I hear the UH going right into the N. But not, but not, but not. But not today.

But not today. Stress on not. But not today.

But not today.

But not today.

But not today.

But not today. Not today. So we have two Ts here. These words will link together with the true T.

But not, but not today. But not today. And it’s not to, today. It’s to, to, schwa. To to today.

But not today. But not today.

But not today.

But not today.

But not today.

Listen to this whole conversation one more time.

Thirty plus years of service. Combat medals. Citations.

Only man to shoot down three enemy planes in the last forty years.

Yet you can’ get a promotion, you won’t retire. Despite your best efforts, you refuse to die.

You should be at least a two-star admiral by now.

Yet you are here.

Captain.

Why is that?

It’s one of life’s mysteries, sir.

The end is inevitable, Maverick. Your kind is headed for extinction.

Maybe so, sir.

But not today.

Now for the fun part. You’ll look at the notes we took together and you’ll hear a part of the conversation

on a loop three times. Then there’s a space for you to repeat. For example, you’ll hear this:

Maybe so, sir.

Then you’ll repeat it: maybe so, sir. Try to imitate everything about this exactly.

So when you see this then you’ll repeat it. Maybe so, sir.

You’ll also have the opportunity to listen and repeat in slow motion.

This will be important for you if you’re more of a beginner,

or if you’re having a hard time focusing on linking or the melody.

Maybe you’ll want to do it both ways, but the important thing is here is your opportunity

to take what you learned and put it into your body and your own habit.

That’s what’s going to transform your speaking. You might do well to work with the audio section of this video

every day for a week imitating the rhythm, and the simplifications will get easier each time you do it.

If you can’t keep up with the native speaker, do the slow-motion imitation. Okay here’s our audio training section.

Don’t forget to come back and do this audio again tomorrow, and the next day.

You want to build habits here, so you don’t need to think about it so much when you’re speaking in conversation.

You can focus on the words and not the expression or pronunciation.

Don’t forget, this is part of a series, all summer long, 13 videos, 13 scenes from movies.

Check out each one. Learn something new each time.

I make new videos on the English language every Tuesday, and I’d love to have you back here again.

Please subscribe with notifications and continue your studies right now with this video.

And if you love this video, share it with a friend. That’s it guys and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

在今天的视频中,您将通过电影学习英语,当我们这样学习时,

您将能够毫不费力地看懂美国电影和电视,无需字幕。

今天的视频使用了电影壮志凌云:特立独行的预告片。

你知道,这部电影本应该在这个月上映的暑期大片,但

因为冠状病毒,它被推迟到了 12 月。 我们会看看会发生什么。

我们将尽可能深入地研究美国人说话的方式,他们的说话方式,

这样你不仅能够理解一切,而且你会理解美国人

用英语做什么,在一个 这样你就可以完美地模仿。 你可能是下一个汤姆克鲁斯。

也许是这样,先生。

我们整个夏天都会这样做。

六月到八月,每个星期二都和我在一起,它们都是很棒的场景,还有

很多东西要学,可以改变你说和理解英语的方式。

和往常一样,如果你喜欢这个视频或者你学到了一些东西,请喜欢并订阅通知。

您将观看该剪辑,然后我们将一起进行完整的发音分析。

当您在电视上观看英语电影时,这将对您的听力理解有很大帮助。 但是会有一个培训部分。

你将把你刚刚学到的东西拿来练习重复,做一个减少,拍一个T,

就像你在分析中学到的一样。 好了,现场来了。

服务三十多年。 战斗奖牌。 引文。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

但是你不能升职,你不会退休。

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

你现在应该至少是个两星上将了。

然而你在这里。

队长。

这是为什么?

这是人生的奥秘之一,先生。

末日不可避免,特立独行。 你们的种族正走向灭绝。

也许是这样,先生。

但不是今天。

现在分析。

服务三十多年。

好的开始,让我们继续写出三十及以上。 它几乎总是

用数字和加号这样写,但是当我们谈到声音时,我们会把它写出来。

现在你可能注意到了,30 中的 T 是一个拍音 T。

这符合规则,因为它出现在元音之前的 R 之后。 就像在脏话中一样,这是我们会拍打的 T。

所以与其说是 ttt,一个真正的 T,舌头只是简单地拍打着上颚。 三十哒哒三十。

三十。 三十。 三十加–

三十加–

三十加–

我们的第一个音节重读在 30 上。

三十,如此重读,然后无重读,结尾无重读的EE音。 三十多——

三十多——三十多——三十多年的服务。

加上一些压力,然后我们也对年限和服务有压力。

So of 和 –vice 都没有重读。 服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。 所以这些是我们较长的音节,具有上下重音的形状。

其他音节会更短,但所有内容都联系在一起,我们不想感觉到

单词之间有任何分离。 三十多年的服务,不会是自然的美式英语。

我们需要这种对比,然后我们也需要链接。 服务三十多年。 那里没有休息。

服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。

服务三十多年。

战斗奖牌。

好的,现在在这个小两个词的短语中,你告诉我重读的音节是什么?

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。 最重的可能是战斗,这里形容勋章的形容词。

战斗奖牌。 然后在名词上也有些重音。 战斗奖牌。 战斗的第二个音节是非重读的

,它有一个停止T,bat bat bat,因为下一个单词以辅音开头。

同样,T 没有被释放。 战斗奖牌。 奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

这个 D 也可以像三十、奖章、rararara 一样是一个拍音,因为它位于两个元音之间。

在这里,它是床元音中的 EH,然后是 schwa L 组合。 奖牌,奖牌,奖牌。 战斗奖牌。

这里非重读音节中的元音是AH,但我们不希望它是AA,

那会被重读,我们希望它是啊,啊,战斗,战斗奖章。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。

战斗奖牌。 引文。

引文。 你觉得重读的那个中间音节是怎么回事? 引文。

这里的字母 A 是 TAY,AY 就像双元音一样。 那个字母 A 可以有几种不同的发音。

这里是:是的,是的,引文。 字母 C 发出 S 的声音。

引文。

引文。

引文。

字母 I 构成 AI 双元音。 字母I,这么多的字母,几乎所有的美式英语中的字母

都可以有各种不同的读音,这让英语变得很难看,你不一定能

看出来读音。 引文。 SH schwa N,然后是 Z,一个微弱的结尾 Z 音。

引文。

引文。

引文。

引文。

压力在美式英语中非常重要。 我们想知道什么是重读,什么是非重读,

这样我们就可以感觉到我们在那个重读音节上达到了顶点。 我们绝对不希望所有音节都有

相同的感觉。 引文。 那将有正确的音调,但不是正确的节奏。

这不是 DA-DA-DA 但它是 da-DA-da。 第一个很短,最后一个很短。 引文。 引文。

引文。

引文。

引文。

另外我应该指出 ta– 中的这个 T 是一个真正的 T,因为它开始一个重读音节。

因此,如果一个 T 开始一个重读音节,并且它不是 TR 集群的一部分,那么它将是一个真正的 T。 Tay,tay,引文。

引文。

引文。

引文。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

好的,现在我们有一个更长的短语。 我想让你听几次,

看看你认为最重的词是什么。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

我听说这是最后一句话。 在过去的四十年——几年——他有点坚持开头的 Y 辅音。

年。 画出长度,它肯定有上下的形状。 当然,我们

在句子中还有其他重读音节,但我认为这是短语中重读最多的音节。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

让我们看看我们的其他重读音节,我们有任何减少吗?

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

一切都非常顺利地联系在一起。 所以让我们一点一点来。

只有一个人可以击落–

只有一个人可以击落–

只有一个人可以击落–

只有一个人可以击落– 所以我们对 OH 有压力。 only man——不是在“to”这个词上,这是一个介词,

通常不会被强调。 射击和向下,都有一些压力和长度。

你有没有注意到“to”这个词没有发音为“to”,它被简化了。 Man to- man to-

Flap T 或 D 音和 schwa。 男人对-男人对- 只有男人对-

只有男人对-

击落–

我有一个朋友叫阿曼达,我们经常作为昵称,作为缩短它的一种方式,称她为“曼达”。

曼达。 听起来就像这两个词在一起:man to– Manda,Manda,Manda,

当你做出一个襟翼 T 时。

只有 man

to–击落–

Only man to shoot down– 只有 man to shot- -

所以我们这里有两个字母 T。 第一个是襟翼 T,或者有点像 D 音,然后第二个 T

是停止 T。击落。 这意味着我们停止空中,但我们不释放 T,那会被击落。

我们绝对听不到。 就是打下来,打下来。

击落——

现在对击落这个词要小心一点,我的很多学生,尤其是母语是

中文的学生,但不仅仅是那些学生,对击落这个词感到很困难。 它是 OW 双元音,

OW,加上 N 辅音。 他们将 N 混合到双元音中并将其鼻化。 向下。

我们根本不想要那个。 我们希望它在双元音中完全没有鼻音。

Dow– Dow– Dow– nnn– Dow–

nnn– 然后你可以这样练习,将 N 分开,确保你没有向下,

然后将两者混合成鼻双元音。 下来,下来,射击。

击落——击落——击落三架敌机。

然后我们有三个单词,它们都是重读的,所以这句话中有很多单词和音节是

重读的。 三架敌机。 我想指出,即使在一个重读词中,

如果它有多个音节,它也会有非重读音节。 所以这里唯一重读的音节是 EH。

敌人。 内米。 内米。 内米。 然后剩下的音节不重读,说得很快。

三敌。

三敌。

三敌。

三敌。

现在,我们在这里有一个元音到元音的链接。 我们有 EE 元音在三个和 EH 元音在敌人。

有些学生觉得他们需要把它分开一点来说明,单词之间的变化,

你不需要用英语来做。 我们不希望你这样做。 我们希望它能够顺利滑行。

三敌。 三敌。

如果你很难将它们联系在一起,在这种特殊情况下,通过这个特殊的链接考虑一个 Y 辅音可能会有所帮助

。 所以你可以把这个词想象成yenemy,三个敌人,三个敌人,三个敌人。

如果你把它连在一起,那可能会帮助你把它弄平,你不想做一个很大很重的 Y,

但是一点轻的 Y 滑音辅音将这两个词连接在一起,

可能会帮助你顺利过渡。

三敌。

让我们在这里稍微谈谈辅音簇。 它是 TH 清音和 R 辅音。

苏,苏,苏,苏,苏,苏。 他的 TH 几乎像 T 一样。 我想当我重复听的时候。

但绝对不是:三、三、三,这是很多非母语人士都会做的事情,他们用 TR

代替 THR,然后听起来像一棵树,你知道,就像,哦,一棵树。 但我们不想说树。

我们想说三,三,三。 所以让你的舌尖轻轻地穿过你的牙齿,

不要积聚空气,不要在那里施加压力,根本不要咬舌头,这会让它听起来更像一个T。

我们想要th- - 空气容易通过。 三,三,三架敌机。

三架敌机——

在过去的四十年里。

在过去的四十年里。 所以in和the,两人都说得非常快。

让我们听听:在最后——

在最后——

我实际上认为这听起来像是 TH 被丢弃了。 在,在,在,在,在,在,在。

这只是 IH 就坐,N 直接连接到 schwa。 在,在,在,在,在,在,在。

只有当你非常非常快地做到这一点时,你才能做到这一点。 音调低,音量低,试试看。

在,在,在,在。 你应该可以在不移动下巴的情况下做到这一点。

你的嘴唇,你的脸,应该完全放松,唯一能动的是嘴里的舌头。

你想去掉所有你不需要的额外动作,

这样你就可以在需要的时候尽快说出来。 在过去的四十年中,在,在,在。

过去四十年。

过去四十年。

过去四十年。

好的,再一次,我们要写出“四十”这个词。

我们的 T 又是一个拍音 T,因为它出现在 R 之后和元音之前。

元音是 EE,就像她元音一样。 四十,四十,四十。 三十,三十,三十。

这些都有一个襟翼 T,听起来像 D. Dadadada 四十四十。

十年。

现在我们有一些除年以外的重读词,让我们再听一下这句话:

在过去的四十年——

在过去的四十年,然后我们已经标记了年。 所以四十的非重读音节是非重读的。

AA元音的最后一个单词有重音。 注意 T 被丢弃在那里。

当下一个单词以辅音开头,下一个单词以 F 开头时,将 T 丢弃在像 ST 这样的结尾集群中是很常见的

,所以我们要丢弃该 T 以顺利连接。 最后四十,最后四十。

最后四十——

所以在这一页上的所有字母 T 中,我们有一个襟翼 T,在战斗中我们有一个停止 T,

我们在引文中有一个真正的 T,因为它开始一个重读音节,但是 next T 实际上

是 TION 结尾的一部分,那是一个 SH 音。 在to这个词中,减少是da,flap T,而不是真正的T。

在shoot这个词中,它是一个停止T。在last这个词中,它被丢弃了。

所以在这个对话的这个特定部分的所有 T 音中,只有一个真正的

T。然后我们甚至有 T 和 TH,它在一种情况下完全发音,然后在另一种情况下被删除。

所以你真的需要研究美国人的说话方式,以及减少和连接

和丢弃声音会发生什么,以便弄清楚他们是如何如此流畅地做事的。

但是当你学习了这个,并且你多次看这部分视频之后,你就可以

回去模仿那个音频,那才是真正有趣的

时候,你不仅可以理解美国英语正在发生的事情 ,但是当

您可以以听起来自然的方式自己模仿时。 这样做真的很自由。

这就是这个视频系列今年夏天的全部内容。

过去四十年。 过去四十年。 过去四十年。 然而你不能升职——

好吧,在下一个短语中,你认为最重音的词是什么?

然而你不能升职——

你不能升职——

但你不能升职——

我感觉不能升职,而且升职真的很压力。 然而你,音量真的很低,能量很低,

更难听到,对吧? 让我们一起听这两个词。

然而你——

然而

你—— 不是很清楚,但这正是我们所需要的。 我们需要不那么清晰来与我们更

清晰的音节形成对比。 这就是美式英语的特点。 所以我们还有

呢 促销——好的,我们有一个以单词 can’t 结尾的 N 撇号 T。

这可以用三种方式发音。 其中一个是can’t,有一个真正的T,一个是can’t,有一个停止T,

还有一个是can,T完全下降。 我很难决定我认为这是一个停止 T

还是一个下降 T,因为如果我听了三遍认为这是一个停止 T,那就是我听到的。

如果我听了三遍以为它掉线了,那就是我听到的。 所以无论如何,这不是一个真正的T。

我们称它为一个停止T,非常微妙,非常快,不能得到,不能得到,不能得到,不能得到,不能得到 ,得不到。

不是很大的电梯,只是在 G 之前有一个小小的休息:不能得到,不能得到。

无法得到

——元音是AA元音。 当它后面跟着 N 时,它不再是真正的纯 AA,它不再是 ca–ca–

而是 cauh–它开始时下巴下垂少一点,舌头后部放松,这带来了

一种类似 UH 的声音 . Ca-uh,ca-uh,不能不能不能不能不能不能。

而且我们知道这与“可以”这个词不同,因为如果这个词是“你可以得到晋升”,

那么我们就不会强调它,我们会说,你可以得到,你可以得到,你可以得到。

那将被简化为schwa。 “can’t never reduce”这个词,总是有这个 AA 元音在里面。

拿不到

,升职。

现在我们有了 get 和 a,不重读,以及 Promotion 的第一个音节,那里是 schwa。

Pro–

所以我们有一个 pro– 但这不是它的发音方式,它是这样发音的:get a,get a,get a,get a,

flap T 链接到 schwa,schwa 直接链接到 PR。 这就是帮助我们将一切联系在一起的原因

,我们只是不停止声音。 获得,获得,获得,获得专业,获得专业,获得专业,获得晋升。

升职——

我们再次有一个 TION 结尾,那就是 SH schwa N. Tion, tion, tion。 不是:慎,顺,是顺,顺。

试着让它完全没有元音。 N 吸收了 schwa,所以试着制作 SHN 并快速说出来。

SHN SHN 促销。

升职——

获得升职。

升职——

你不会退休。

我在这里写了你这个词,但它是如此,如此微妙。 你,你,你,你。

我几乎只是听到喉咙里发出超轻的微弱 Y 音,但

我什至可以看到有人说它完全掉线了。

不会退休——你不会退休。 所以我们在那里有两个重读音节,我觉得我听到这个

N 撇号 T 作为停止 T。不会,不会,不会,不会。 不会退休。

这里要小心,有些人说的更像是:won–wo,哦,哦,won–但它是哇–

所以你的嘴唇开始为 W 画一个圆圈,然后在前半部分放松一点 的OH双元音,

然后他们必须再次轮回。 哇——如果你错过了第二轮,那么你就不会在

那里得到正确的声音。 不会,不会,不会退休。

你不会退休。

你不会退休。

你不会退休。

同样,这个 T 是一个 True T,为什么? 因为它以重读音节开头。 轮胎,退休。 退休。

退休——

尽管你尽了最大的努力,但你拒绝死去。

你听到的那个短语中最重音的音节是什么?

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

尽管你最好——对最好的有点压力。 努力上有点压力。 但更多的是拒绝和死亡。

好的,让我们看看剩下的单词,剩下的音节,我们有没有从真正的 T 改变的 T?

我们有减免吗? 我们如何将所有这些联系在一起并提供我们需要的节奏对比?

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

让我们只看前两个词:尽管——尽管你——所以这个 T 是一个停止 T,因为下一个声音

是一个辅音,Y 辅音。 此外,我们希望这是 DE 中的 schwa,RE 中的 schwa,

retire,所以不要说 re-retire,说 ruh-retire。 呃——尽管,尽管如此,我这里的字母是 AI 双元音。

尽管。 停止 T。所以它与放下的 T 不同,因为那会很绝望——声音会是一样的,

AI 但它会改变形状,AI,它会上升然后下降。 Despie——

但是当我们切断它时,尽管如此,尽管如此。

尽管 -

你最好 -

那个截止是空气的停止,这表示 T。现在你的这个词被减少它变成了 schwa R。

这两个声音混合在一起。 R 吸收 schwa。

所以你甚至不需要尝试在那里发出元音。 只是 yy–rr– yrr,yrr,yrr,yrr,yrr,yrr。

尽快说出来。 你的,尽管你的,尽管你的。

尽管你——

尽了最大的努力。

尽力而为。 所以我们有一个 ST 集群。 如果下一个单词以辅音开头,我们会去掉那个 T,

但它没有,它以 EH 开头,就像在床元音中一样。 因此,我们将把它与真正的 T 联系起来。

尽力而为,尽力而为。

最好的努力——

我们不想说努力。 我们在这里看到一个字母 O,也许你想做一些圆唇,

但它不是,它是一个 schwa。

Effor– 记住就像我们在这里所说的那样,schwa 被 R 吸收,所以你甚至不需要尝试

从 F 到 R 的元音。 Effor– for for for。 努力。 努力。

努力——

你拒绝死亡。

努力,你重新——

所以我们这里有三个非重读音节。 我们有努力的非重读音节,你这个词,

它不会减少。 他本可以说是,但他说的是你,但他说的很低,没有压力。

你你你。 你重新——你重新——

然后就像退休一样,我们有拒绝,有一个施瓦,不是拒绝,而是重新拒绝,

拒绝——死——你拒绝死。 现在,我听了好几遍来决定,我认为这是真正的T in to还是Flap T?

我认为这是一个真正的T。拒绝。 但它有施瓦。 不是到是到,它的音调很低,说得很快。

拒绝死,在重读词死之前。 现在我想谈谈这个词,拒绝,所以它可以用

两种不同的方式发音,可以不重读,re,R schwa,实际上,你知道吗,它不是 schwa,

它是坐元音中的 IH, 提出了一些有趣的事情。 这实际上也是一个 IH

,尽管如此,如果我查一下,我发现它是一个 IH,拒绝是一个 IH,所以我为什么说它是一个 schwa?

我一直对我说,IH 就像坐姿一样,无重音听起来就像 schwa。

重重重重拒绝。 退休。 重重重拒绝。 退休。

就它们本身而言,它们对我来说听起来几乎一样。 所以我总是告诉学生

,不要担心像这样的非重读音节,选哪个能帮助你说得更快。

但我喜欢这个,当我查找某些东西时,我发现,哦,伙计,我错了。

官方发音确实显示了一个 IH,

如果你用一个并不重要的 schwa 说它。 重要的是它说得很快。

有了这个词,我们实际上有两种不同的读音。

两种不同的意思,但拼写相同。 所以第一个是它在这里的使用方式,它是一个动词。

我们有 R 辅音,IH 元音,不重读。 然后在重读音节中,我们有 F 辅音

,JU 和 Z。拒绝,拒绝。 那是动词。

这意味着这个人绝对不会做某事。

拒绝

——它的另一个发音是名词,是拒绝。 所以现在,第一个音节是重读的,

我们在 bed 音节中有 EH,然后在我们的非重读音节中,我们仍然有 JU 双元音,

但我们在末尾有一个 S,这是名词,这只是 垃圾的另一种说法。

所以两个不同的词,两种不同的意思,相同的拼写,但不同的发音。

拒绝。 拒绝。

拒绝——死。

你现在应该至少是两星上将了。

你至少应该有一些压力。 你现在至少应该是两星上将了。

现在是两星海军上将。

你现在应该至少是两星上将了。

你现在应该至少是两星上将了。

你现在应该至少是两星上将了。

让我们看看这里的前四个字。 你应该在– 你应该在–

你应该– D,字母L在这个词中总是无声的,D很微妙,实际上,你可以放弃它,

你可以认为它被放弃了 ,在以辅音开头的单词之前: shuh– shuh– shuh–

所以是 SH 和 schwa,

你应该是,你应该是,你应该是,你应该是 - 你应该是 - 你 应该在 - 直接

链接到哪个减少,在,我会用 schwa 和停止 T 来写。

在,在,在,在,在,你应该在,你 应该在,你应该在。

你现在应该

至少是一个两星的海军上将。

在我们有一些带有重读音节的单词之前,有四个不太清楚的单词。

你至少应该是两星——

你应该至少是两星——

至少应该是两星——至少是—— 施瓦。

所以我们确实听到了一个真正的 T 链接。 最少一个,最少一个。 至少两星。

现在这是一个以重读音节开头的 T,所以这将是一个真正的 T。两星,两星,两星海军上将。

AA。 我们又看到了那个 AA 元音。 希望你对此感觉良好,因为它在这句话中

,在这个对话中相当多。 现在是两星海军上将。

至少现在是两星上将。

至少现在是两星上将。

至少现在是两星上将。

海军上将,海军上将。 我喜欢这个词。 很明显,第一个音节是重读音节

,后两个是非重读音节。 米拉尔,米拉尔,米拉尔。 不要说 MEERAL 或类似的东西。

米拉尔,米拉尔,米拉尔。

海军上将——

两个非重读音节都有 schwa。 Schwa 其次是 R。它被 R.

Schwa 其次是 L,它被 L. M,N,R,L 吸收。全部吸收 schwa。

所以它们被称为音节辅音。 你不需要尝试在那里做一个 schwa。 这只是

Mm, rr, ll。 M 右转入 R 音,然后是暗 L。 Miral,miral,miral,miral。 上将。

海军上将——

现在。

到现在,到现在。 现在有点压力,但是这句话结束了,他的声音失去了一些能量,

它的音调更低了。

现在——

然而你在这里。

好的,在这个四字小句中,重音是什么?

然而你

在这里——然而你在这里。

这里和现在,更强调的是,一切都非常顺利地联系在一起。 我们还有一个停止 T,

因为下一个单词以辅音开头,即 H 辅音。 然而你在这里。

然而你在这里。

然而你在这里。

然而你在这里。

队长。

队长。 Ca——又是重读音节中的 AH 元音。 队长。

船长

——这里是一个真正的 T 字。 现在为什么这会是一个真正的T? 规则是,如果它是辅音簇的一部分,就像在 PT 中一样

,它就是真 T,尽管我们肯定看到过例外,不是吗?

ST 后跟一个常数,它被丢弃了,但在这里,作为 PT 集群的一部分,它是一个轻量级的真正

T。再次,船长,tain,tain,船长。 不要试图在那里发元音。 Schwa N. 船长。

船长——

实际上,我只是因为好奇才查到的。 Dictionary.com 显示 schwa N 或 IH,

N 作为结尾,正如我之前所说,对我来说,它们听起来一样。

队长——

这是为什么呢?

这是为什么? 这是为什么? 最强调疑问词。 这是为什么?

然后音高就从那里掉下来了。 Why is - 真正将 AI 双元音、why is 连接

到 IH 中,就像在坐元音中一样。

您可能需要感觉像是通过滑音辅音 Y 来帮助您将它们联系起来。

这是为什么? 然后是弱 Z.

TH, AH 就像蝙蝠元音一样,停止 T。现在为什么这是一个停止 T? 它后面没有辅音。

它是一个停止 T,因为如果 T 后面跟着一个辅音,

或者它是一个思想组的结尾,就像它在这里一样,它就是一个停止 T。

这是为什么?

这是为什么?

这是为什么?

这是人生的奥秘之一,先生。

这是生活中的一种——那里有更多的压力,谜团,先生。 一个人有一点压力,先生有一点压力。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

这是人生的奥秘之一,先生。

这是人生的奥秘之一,先生。

让我们看看它的其他词。 元音被删除。 它只是 W 之前的 TS 集群。

一个,一个,一个,一个,一个。 以这种方式发音并不少见。

你甚至可以用 what’s 和 let’s 来做到这一点。 就像如果我要说走吧,我可能会说:

走吧,走吧,我准备好了。 我们走吧。 这也可以简化为 TS 集群。 是一个。

这是——

生命的奥秘之一,先生。

它是其中一个词,我会用 schwa 和 V 来写。

你可以去掉 V 的声音,但他没有。 先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

mysteries 这个词可以发音为三个或两个音节,mys-ter-ies 或 mys-teries。

我实际上认为他在做三个,但是这个中间音节太快了。

谜,谜,谜。

谜团——

先生。

谜团和先生之间并没有真正的隔阂。 谜团,先生。

因此,即使是国际音标,这也会用 Z 书写。

它更像是一个 S,只是不断进入重读音 sir,进入重读单词,sir。 谜团,先生。

谜团,先生。

这句话中的一切都非常顺利地联系在一起。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

先生,这是人生的奥秘之一。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

好的,我们的压力在这里。 末日不可避免,特立独行。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

我会说,结束的压力最大。 现在,单词the,在这里发音为the。

规则是当下一个单词以元音开头时我们会这样做,这里下一个单词以 EH 开头,

即 EH 元音。 通常它会是,但这里是,结束,结束。

现在美国人总是遵守这个规则吗? 不,但如果你注意到了,那就是正在发生的事情。

结束。 结局是必然的。 Inevi–dadadadad 你听到了吗?

那是一个拍音 T,因为它出现在两个元音或双元音之间。 必然。

所以它是一个有第二个音节重音的四音节词。 必然。 五音节单词,第二个音节重读。

无重读,然后有重读,然后是三个无重读。 必然。

必然。

一切都非常顺利地联系在一起。 D 进入 IH 开头,Z 进入 IH 开头。

结局是必然的。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

末日不可避免,特立独行。

特立独行。 这是另一个可以发音为三个或两个音节的单词,

具体取决于您是否放下中间。 妈的。 就像 mys-ter-y 一样。 或特立独行。

特立独行。

Dropped,元音的感觉,和make this like,感觉像一簇。 瑞克,瑞克,特立独行。

这就是他所做的。 他没有释放 K。K 就像 T 一样是停止音,我们可以

像他在这里所做的那样在思想组结束时跳过释放。 或者当下一个单词以辅音开头时。

这不是一个强有力的规则。 在这些情况下,T 几乎总是一个停止 T。

K 它更有可能释放它,但他没有。 特立独行。 特立独行。

特立独行。

那里的空气突然停止,象征着 K.

Maverick。

你们的种族正走向灭绝。

现在让我们看看我们的下一句话。 你的这个词。 我们上次看到它时,它被减少了。

不是你的,是你的,你的,这种事还会发生吗? 听。

你们的种族正走向灭绝。

你们的种族正走向灭绝。

你们的种族正走向灭绝。

老实说,我几乎没有真正听到 R 音。 耶耶耶耶你善良。

你们的种族——

正在走向灭绝。

你们的同类正在前进——强调善良,前进,走向灭绝。

所以你这个词,肯定减少了。 我们对 kind 有重读,它是 AI 双元音,你链接到 kind ,

然后 D 链接到 IH 元音,因为我们的非重读音节是。

弱 Z 音直接连接到

H。Kind is headed——

Kind 是 headed。 D 之后的 ED 结尾是 schwa D. Headed。 为首。 你能想到吗?

对不起,我说的是 schwa,但我写了 IH,因为您也可以将其视为 schwa D. Headed。 为首。 为首。

走向——

走向灭绝。

for这个词,现在我知道这个词通常会减少,是for吗? 让我们听听。

冲向——

冲向,冲向。 这不是为了。 它是毛皮毛皮。 我会用 schwa 来写。

毛皮,减少,走向灭绝。

走向灭绝。

走向灭绝。

走向灭绝。

这里的T开始一个重读音节,那是一个真正的T。非重读IH,K音,这里的字母X很有趣,

它使KS和音节中断实际上发生在K和S之间,所以它实际上是IK,然后是ST集群。

灭绝。

所以在重读音节中,STING,我只想在这里写这个,我们那里越来越拥挤了。 灭绝。

灭绝。

灭绝。

灭绝。

在重读音节中,我们有 IH 作为坐元音,但后面是 NG 辅音。

现在这里是字母N。但它不像N那样发在嘴的前面,而是

发在后面,舌后部像NG,那是因为它后面跟着一个K音。

吐出—,就是舌根上扬到软腭。

当 IH 后面跟着一个 NG 声音时,它不是真正的 IH,它更像 EE,

你会在 sing 或 ring 这个词中注意到这一点,它不是 IH,sing,而是 sing,sing。

绝种,灭绝。 灭绝。 有点棘手的词。 您可能希望在练习时放慢速度。 灭绝。

灭绝。

也许是这样,先生。

也许是这样,先生。 对五月有一点压力——更多的是,对先生有一点压力。

一切都非常顺利地联系在一起,不是吗? 也许是这样,先生。

也许是这样,先生。

也许是这样,先生。

也许是这样,先生。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。 好的,所以我认为这个 T 实际上被丢弃了,我并没有真正听到它作为停止,但

我听到 UH 直接进入 N。但不是,但不是,但不是。 但不是今天。

但不是今天。 强调不。 但不是今天。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。 今天不行。 所以我们这里有两个 T。 这些话将与真正的T联系在一起。

但不是,但不是今天。 但不是今天。 今天不是这样。 这是到,到,施瓦。 到今天。

但不是今天。 但不是今天。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。

但不是今天。

再听一遍整个对话。

服务三十多年。 战斗奖牌。 引文。

近四十年来唯一击落三架敌机的人。

但是你不能升职,你不会退休。 尽管你尽了最大的努力,你还是拒绝死去。

你现在应该至少是个两星上将了。

然而你在这里。

队长。

这是为什么?

这是人生的奥秘之一,先生。

末日不可避免,特立独行。 你们的种族正走向灭绝。

也许是这样,先生。

但不是今天。

现在是有趣的部分。 你会看到我们一起做的笔记,你会听到对话的一部分

循环播放三遍。 然后有一个空间让你重复。 例如,您会听到:

也许是这样,先生。

然后你会重复一遍:也许是这样,先生。 试着准确地模仿这一切。

所以当你看到这个然后你会重复它。 也许是这样,先生。

您还将有机会以慢动作聆听和重复。

如果您是初学者,

或者您很难专注于链接或旋律,这对您来说很重要。

也许你会想两种方式都做,但重要的是你

有机会把你学到的东西应用到你的身体和你自己的习惯中。

这就是要改变你说话的方式。 您可能会在一周内每天使用该视频的音频部分来

模仿节奏,并且每次这样做都会变得更容易。

如果您跟不上母语人士的步伐,请进行慢动作模仿。 好的,这是我们的音频培训部分。

别忘了明天再回来做这个音频,第二天。

你想在这里建立习惯,所以你在谈话时不需要考虑太多。

您可以专注于单词而不是表达或发音。

别忘了,这是一个系列的一部分,整个夏天,13 个视频,13 个电影场景。

检查每一个。 每次都能学到新东西。

我每周二都会制作新的英语视频,我希望你能再次回到这里。

请订阅通知并立即通过此视频继续学习。

如果您喜欢这个视频,请与朋友分享。 就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。