English Vocabulary Essentials with Perfect Pronunciation Learn English with Rachels English 711

If you want to speak natural, clear English,

the 100 most common words in American English is a good place to start.

This video is part of a series where we’re studying the real pronunciation of these words.

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.

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

If you haven’t already seen video 1, and 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.

This is video seven, we’re studying words 61-70.

Number 61 is the word ‘people’.

This is the first time we’re starting one of these videos

with a word that is NOT an example of a word that will be unstressed.

This word is a noun, a content word, and generally, it will be stressed.

Now, this is a tricky word.

And I don’t have too many videos where I go over the specific pronunciation of a single word,

but I do happen to have one where I talk about this word,

so I’ll put in a clip here that will go through the pronunciation, step-by-step.

It’s a two-syllable word with stress on the first syllable.

Da-da. People.

It begins with the P consonant sound, lips are together for that, pp-.

Then we open into the EE as in SHE vowel, pe-, pe-.

So the tongue tip is down here, but the front part of the tongue is stretching up towards the roof of the mouth

, pe-, pe-.

Now we have the P, schwa, L sound.

This is unstressed, so it’s going to be low in pitch and very fast,

-ple, -ple, -ple.

People.

So the lips will come together again for the P.

People. -ple.

Then we go into the schwa/Dark L sound.

Don’t worry about making a separate schwa sound, just go straight into the Dark sound of the Dark L.

So, to make that sound, your tongue will pull back,

so the back part of the tongue here is shifting towards the throat a bit,

people, ull, ull.

And that’s how we get that dark sound.

Now, it should be very short because it’s unstressed, people, people.

The second half of the Dark L involves bringing the tongue tip to the roof of the mouth.

People.

But you can actually leave that out.

A lot of people will just make, people, ull, the Dark sound to signify the Dark L

and not necessarily bring the tongue tip up.

People, people.

Let’s do a couple of example sentences with people.

I’m a people person.

People, people.

Up-down shape of stress, longer, more clear than the unstressed words:

I’m a– I’m a– I’m a people person.

What does ‘people person’ mean?

It means that I’m very social.

I like interacting with a lot of people, I’m very outgoing, I’m an extrovert.

I have room for three more people in my car.

People, people.

Stressed.

Number 62.

Is it as clear as ‘people’?

No.

It’s the word ‘into’.

‘Into’ is a preposition.

And prepositions are function words, which means they’ll generally be unstressed i n a sentence.

Let me show you what I mean.

I ran into my teacher at the movies.

I ran into my teacher at the movies.

Ran, teach-, mov-.

These are the stressed syllables.

All the others, including the word ‘into’, unstressed.

Less clear, low in pitch, flatter, given less time.

Into.

If it was clear and fully pronounced, it would have that up-down shape of stress, into, and a True T.

The final vowel would be the OO as in BOO vowel.

Into.

But that’s not how I pronounced it.

I ran into my teacher.

Into. Into. Into.

A couple things are different.

First of all, it’s not stressed so it’s flat in pitch, low in pitch.

Second, two sounds have changed.

The T sounds more like a D, and the final vowel is the schwa.

Into. into. Into. into.

So instead of ‘into’, it’s: into, into.

This T is not following the rules of T pronunciations.

The rules are, after an N, we can drop a T completely, but if not, it’s a True T.

But many Americans will say ‘into’ more of a D or Flap T sound connected to the N.

If you only learned the stressed pronunciation of this and every word in American English,

your English wouldn’t sound too natural, because we use so many reductions so frequently.

Number 63: the word ‘year’.

A noun, a content word.

This is a word that will generally be stressed in a sentence.

No reduction here.

Year. Year.

Up-down shape of stress.

Longer, clearer than the unstressed words in a sentence will be.

A lot of people have problems with the pronunciation of this word because of the Y sound.

Year.

How is it different from ‘ear’?

I actually have a video on that.

Let me put in a little clip here.

‘Year’ and ‘ear’ are exactly the same except for the Y sound.

The main vowel is the IH as in SIT vowel,

but I do feel like we squeeze it a little bit, so it sounds a little more like EE.

IH, ear.

EE, ear.

Ear.

Let’s take a look.

First, the word ‘ear’.

For the IH or EE vowel, the jaw drops just a bit, and the corners of the lips pull out wide, just a little.

The tongue tip is down here, touching the back of the bottom front teeth.

The front part arches towards the roof of the mouth without touching it.

Next is the schwa-R sound.

Look for the tongue pulling back as the lips flare.

The tongue pulls back and up, with the tip pointing down so it’s not touching anything.

Now, let’s take a look at ‘year’.

The jaw dropped a little bit more here.

Why?

To accommodate the movement of the tongue.

While the tip is down in the same position for the next vowel,

the middle part of the tongue actually touches the roof of the mouth and pushes forward a bit.

yy, yy.

At the same time, the throat closes off down here,

yy–, yy–, yy–, to add a different dimension to the sound.

Ee, yy, ee, yy.

Let’s watch the Y several times to see that motion

of the tongue pulling down from the roof of the mouth: yy, yy.

Now, the lips flare and the tongue pulls back for the R.

Now let’s compare the beginning position of these two words.

‘Ear’ is on the left and ‘year’ is on the right.

Notice that the jaw has dropped more for the forward motion of the tongue on the roof of the mouth for ‘year’.

Also, the corners of the lips are more relaxed

than for the initial vowel in ‘ear’, where they pull slightly out.

You can see this from the front as well.

The jaw has dropped more for the tongue movement.

So, we have the tongue movement, which is different for the Y, as well as the Y sound in the throat, yy.

This is how we want to start the word ‘year’: yy, yy, year.

Now I’ll say the minimal pair several times.

Can you hear the difference?

Year. Ear.

Year. Ear.

Year. Ear.

Year.

Let’s do a sentence or two.

We’re going to Italy this year.

Year. Year.

It’s the last word in the thought group,

and naturally in American English, our energy and our pitch goes down in a sentence,

so the ending word is often less clear, even if it’s stressed,

even if it’s a content word like ‘year’.

But it still has the length of a stressed syllable.

We’re going to Italy this year.

Year, year.

A little bit of that up-down shape of stress.

What year were you born?

Year, year.

There the word ‘year’ is closer to the beginning of the sentence, so it’s a little clearer.

Year.

Number 64: Another great reduction.

The word ‘your’.

This is related to the word ‘or’, which was number 31.

Fully pronounced, ‘your’ and ‘or’ rhyme with ‘more’ or ‘wore’.

But they’re almost never fully pronounced.

They’re almost always reduced in a sentence, ‘yer’, ‘er’.

So the vowel changes to the schwa.

Stressed: Your.

Fully pronounced, longer, up-down shape of stress.

But in a sentence: yer, yer.

Unstressed, low in pitch, said quickly.

Yer.

Sample sentence: What’s your name?

Yer, yer, yer.

Yer name.

Can I borrow your car?

Yer, yer, yer.

Borrow your car?

In this question: Can I borrow your car?

Can I bor– car– Those are the two stressed syllables.

‘Can’ and ‘your’ reduced: can–, your–, and ‘I’ is unstressed.

Can I borrow your car?

What would it sound like if they were all stressed?

If they were all said very clearly, fully pronounced?

Can I borrow your car?

Can I borrow your car?

Can I borrow your car?

Can I borrow your car?

Completely unnatural.

Can I borrow your car?

It’s so important to learn about reductions,

and learn about the unstressed pronunciation of words,

so that you can sound more natural, more relaxed, and be more easily understood.

You’re in the right place for this.

Okay, let’s keep going.

Number 65: Good.

This is our first word in the 100 most common words in English list that’s primarily an adjective.

An adjective is a content word.

Content words are nouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs.

And content words are what are generally will be stressed in a sentence.

Good. Good.

Up-down shape.

Good.

Longer, clearer.

The O here represents the UH sound, like in push, or book.

Good. Uh.

The D is a stop consonant, and stop consonants have two parts, a stop of air, and a release.

Good. Good. Stop and release.

But with stop consonants, it’s common to skip the release.

Then, the D becomes a lot more subtle.

I want to show you what I mean.

Good. ddd–

My tongue is lifted into position for the D, and my vocal cords make a sound.

Dddd. Good. Good. Good.

Do you hear it at the end?

It’s clearer on its own.

Dddd–

But of course, we never use it that way.

It’s always part of a word or sentence.

And that can mean it’s harder here: good, good, ddd–, good.

Pronouncing your D this way will help your English sound natural.

If you’re linking the D into a word that begins with a vowel or diphthong,

then it will sound like a flap.

Let’s look at an example.

I feel good about the project.

Good about, good about.

Goo– ddd– Good about.

There, the next word begins with a vowel sound, so I flap the tongue and connect the two words.

Good about.

It’s a good restaurant.

Good—dd—restaurant.

There, I make a very quick D sound in the vocal cords, before going into the R.

Good restaurant.

66, the word ‘some’.

This word generally reduces and can be said very quickly in sentences.

It depends on how the word is being used.

For example, if it’s being used to show that something was great, or unique, like,

“That was some party!”, then it’s fully pronounced.

Also, if it can be switched out for the word ‘certain’, then it’s stressed:

Some days I work from home, and some days I go to the office.

Fully pronounced: some, some.

Up-down shape, length, UH as in butter vowel.

But usually, it’s not stressed, it’s actually reduced.

Then it’s more like: some, some, some.

Flat, low in pitch, said very quickly, and the vowel reduces to the schwa.

Some. Some. Some.

We pronounce it this way when we use ‘some’ to mean an unknown amount, or unit, or thing.

Some water.

May I have some water?

Some, some.

We need some more volunteers.

Some, some. Some more.

Some.

Said very quickly, low in pitch, flat: some.

Stressed: some.

Unstressed: sum.

Number 67, the word “could”.

Actually, we’ve already gone over this word.

We did that when we talked about ‘would’, number 37.

Number 68. Another word that reduces, the word ‘them’.

A pronoun, which is a function word.

Fully pronounced, the word has the voiced TH, which I know is a tricky sound,

the EH as in BED vowel, and the M consonant.

Them.

I have good news for you if the TH is one of your hardest sounds:

This reduction involves dropping the TH.

So, let me give you an example sentence.

We gave them the tickets.

Gave ‘em.

We gave ‘em money.

Gave ‘em. Gave ‘em.

You might be thinking, wait, we already studied ‘gave ‘im’,

and it was when we were talking about “him!” Yes.

Both ‘him’ and ‘them’ sound the same when reduced.

So, “we gave him money”

will sound just like “we gave them money.”

It doesn’t matter that they sound the same.

We use a pronoun when we’ve established who we’re talking about.

So these two pronouns sounding the same shouldn’t add any confusion to your conversation.

You can pronounce it quickly with the TH: them, them, them, them.

But you’ll also hear it with the TH dropped, and this is something you can do in conversational English too.

Number 69: See.

This is a verb, a content word, and generally yes, this will always be stressed in a sentence.

We’re on number 69 here of the 100 most common words in English,

and there have only been a handful of words where it’s never stressed.

Wow. Unstressed words? So common.

Reductions? So common.

See is a simple word, just two sounds, the S consonant and the EE as in SHE vowel.

See. See.

Stressed with an up-down shape: see, see.

And it will be one of the longer syllables in a sentence.

I didn’t see you there. See. See.

Or: The CEO asked to see me.

See.

Number 70: the word ‘other’.

This word can be used as an adjective, a noun, a pronoun,

so, this word can be both a content word and a function word.

It can be stressed or unstressed.

For example, stressed: I don’t love it, on the other hand, it is cheaper.

Other. Other.

Or, I read about that just the other day.

Other. Other.

It’s usually stressed, but it can be unstressed.

For example, Someone or other will help out.

Someone or other.

Or other, or other, or other, or other.

Other, other, other.

Lower in pitch, a little mumbled, less clear.

However, I don’t change any of the sounds so it’s just unstressed, not reduced.

In the stressed syllable, we have the UH as in BUTTER vowel and voiced TH, oth, oth.

Just the very tip of the tongue comes through the teeth for that TH.

Oth, th, th, th. Other.

Then the schwa R ending in the unstressed syllable.

Other.

Wow.

We’re getting close to the end.

We’ve studied 70 of the 100 most common words in English.

Let’s keep going down this list, studying 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 Rachel’s English.

如果你想说自然、清晰的英语,

美式英语中最常用的 100 个单词是一个很好的起点。

该视频是我们正在研究这些单词的真实发音的系列视频的一部分。

这可能与您在英语课上学到的不同。

你看,在美式英语中,我们有各种各样的不重读甚至减少的词。

这意味着我们改变发音。

这组美式英语中最常用的 100 个单词包含很多很多减少的单词。

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。

这是视频七,我们正在学习单词 61-70。

数字 61 是“人”这个词。

这是我们第一次在其中一个视频开始时

使用的单词不是不重读的单词示例。

这个词是名词,是实词,一般都会重读。

现在,这是一个棘手的词。

而且我没有太多的视频来介绍单个单词的特定发音,

但我碰巧有一个我谈论这个词的视频,

所以我会在这里放一个剪辑来了解发音 , 一步步。

这是一个双音节单词,第一个音节有重音。

哒哒。 人们。

它以 P 辅音开始,嘴唇并拢为此,pp-。

然后我们打开 EE,如 SHE 元音、pe-、pe-。

所以舌尖在这里向下,但舌头的前部向上延伸到上颚

,pe-,pe-。

现在我们有了 P、schwa、L 的声音。

这是没有压力的,所以它的音调很低而且非常快,

-ple,-ple,-ple。

人们。

因此,P.人民的嘴唇将再次聚在一起

。 -ple。

然后我们进入 schwa/Dark L 声音。

不用担心发出单独的 schwa 音,直接进入 Dark L 的 Dark 音。

所以,要发出那个声音,你的舌头会向后拉,

所以这里的舌头后部向喉咙移动 位,

人,呃,呃。

这就是我们得到那种黑暗声音的方式。

现在,它应该很短,因为它没有压力,人,人。

Dark L 的后半部分涉及将舌尖带到口腔顶部。

人们。

但你实际上可以忽略它。

很多人只会发出黑暗的声音来表示黑暗的L

,而不一定要把舌尖抬起来。

人,人。

让我们用人做几个例句。

我是一个人。

人,人。

重音的上下形状,比不重读的词更长,更清晰:

I’m a– I’m a– I’m a people person。

“人人”是什么意思?

这意味着我很社交。

我喜欢和很多人互动,我很外向,我是一个外向的人。

我的车里还有另外三个人的空间。

人,人。

强调。

数字

  1. 它和“人”一样清楚吗?

不,

这是“进入”这个词。

“进入”是介词。

介词是虚词,这意味着它们在句子中通常不重读。

让我告诉你我的意思。

我在看电影时遇到了我的老师。

我在看电影时遇到了我的老师。

跑,教-,动-。

这些是重读音节。

所有其他的,包括“进入”这个词,都没有重读。

不太清晰,音调低,更平坦,时间更短。

进入。

如果它清晰且完全发音,它将具有上下重音的形状,into 和 True

T。最后的元音将是 BOO 元音中的 OO。

进入。

但这不是我的发音方式。

我碰到了我的老师。

进入。 进入。 进入。

有几件事是不同的。

首先,它没有压力,因此音高平坦,音高低。

其次,两个声音发生了变化。

T 听起来更像是 D,最后的元音是 schwa。

进入。 进入。 进入。 进入。

所以不是“进入”,而是:进入,进入。

这个 T 不遵循 T 发音的规则。

规则是,在一个 N 之后,我们可以完全删除一个 T,但如果不是,它是一个 True T。

但是许多美国人会说“进入”更多与 N 相关的 D 或 Flap T 声音。

如果你只学会了 在美式英语中强调这个和每个单词的发音,

你的英语听起来不会太自然,因为我们经常使用这么多的减法。

数字 63:“年”这个词。

一个名词,一个内容词。

这是一个通常会在句子中强调的词。

这里不减。

年。 年。

应力的上下形状。

比句子中的非重读单词更长、更清晰。

由于Y音,很多人对这个词的发音有疑问。

年。

它与“耳朵”有何不同?

我实际上有一个视频。

让我在这里放一个小片段。

除了 Y 音之外,“年”和“耳”完全一样。

主要元音是 SIT 元音中的 IH,

但我确实觉得我们将它挤压了一点,所以听起来更像 EE。

我听见。

EE,耳朵。

耳朵。

让我们来看看。

首先,“耳朵”这个词。

对于 IH 或 EE 元音,下巴稍微下垂,唇角拉得稍微宽一点。

舌尖向下,接触下门牙的后部。

前部向嘴顶拱起,但不接触它。

接下来是 schwa-R 声音。

当嘴唇张开时,寻找舌头向后拉。

舌头向后和向上拉,尖端朝下,所以它不会碰到任何东西。

现在,让我们来看看“年”。

这里的下巴又掉了一点。

为什么?

以适应舌头的运动。

下一个元音时,舌尖处于相同位置时,

舌头的中部实际上接触到上颚并向前推了一点。

yy,yy。

同时,喉咙在这里关闭,

yy–,yy–,yy–,为声音添加不同的维度。

嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯

让我们看 Y 几次,看看

舌头从上颚拉下的动作:yy,yy。

现在,嘴唇张开,舌头向后拉来表示 R。

现在让我们比较这两个词的开始位置。

“耳朵”在左边,“年份”在右边。

请注意,对于“一年”,由于舌头在口腔顶部的向前运动,下巴下降得更多。

此外,唇角

比“ear”中的初始元音更放松,它们稍微向外拉。

您也可以从正面看到这一点。

下巴因舌头运动而下降更多。

所以,我们有舌头运动,这对于 Y 是不同的,以及喉咙中的 Y 声音,yy。

这就是我们要如何开始“年”这个词:yy, yy, year。

现在我会说几次最小对。

你能听出区别吗?

年。 耳朵。

年。 耳朵。

年。 耳朵。

年。

让我们做一两句话。

今年我们要去意大利。

年。 年。

它是思想组中的最后一个词,

在美式英语中,我们的精力和音调自然会在一个句子中下降,

所以结尾词通常不太清楚,即使它是重音的,

即使它是一个像“年”这样的内容词 .

但它仍然有重读音节的长度。

今年我们要去意大利。

年,年。

有点那种上下起伏的压力。

你出生在哪一年?

年,年。

那里的“年”这个词更接近句子的开头,所以更清楚一点。

年。

编号 64:又一次大幅减少。

“你的”这个词。

这与单词“or”有关,它是第 31 号。

完全发音时,“your”和“or”与“more”或“wore”押韵。

但它们几乎从未完全发音。

它们几乎总是在一个句子中被简化,“yer”,“er”。

所以元音变成了schwa。

强调:你的。

完全明显、较长、上下的应力形状。

但一句话:耶,耶。

没有重音,音调低,快速地说。

耶。

例句:你叫什么名字?

耶,耶,耶。

你的名字。

我可以借你的车吗?

耶,耶,耶。

借你的车?

在这个问题中:我可以借你的车吗?

Can I bor– car- 这是两个重读音节。

‘can’ 和 ‘your’ 减少:can–, your– 和 ‘I’ 没有重读。

我可以借你的车吗?

如果他们都感到压力,那听起来会怎样?

如果他们都说得很清楚,完全发音?

我可以借你的车吗?

我可以借你的车吗?

我可以借你的车吗?

我可以借你的车吗?

完全不自然。

我可以借你的车吗?

学习减音非常重要

,学习单词的无重读发音,

这样你才能听起来更自然、更放松、更容易理解。

你来对地方了。

好吧,让我们继续。

65 号:很好。

这是我们在英语列表中最常用的 100 个单词中的第一个单词,它主要是一个形容词。

形容词是一个内容词。

实词是名词、动词、形容词和副词。

实词是通常会在句子中强调的内容。

好的。 好的。

上下形状。

好的。

更长,更清晰。

这里的 O 代表 UH 的声音,比如在 push 或 book 中。

好的。 呃。

D是一个塞音,塞音有两个部分,一个停止空气和一个释放。

好的。 好的。 停止并释放。

但是对于停止辅音,跳过释放是很常见的。

然后,D 变得更加微妙。

我想告诉你我的意思。

好的。 ddd——

我的舌头抬起到 D 的位置,我的声带发出声音。

呸呸呸。 好的。 好的。 好的。

最后听到了吗?

它自己更清楚。

Dddd——当然,我们从不那样使用它。

它始终是单词或句子的一部分。

这可能意味着这里更难:好,好,ddd–,好。

以这种方式发音你的 D 将有助于你的英语听起来自然。

如果你将 D 连接到一个以元音或双元音开头的单词中,

那么它听起来就像一个拍子。

让我们看一个例子。

我对这个项目感觉很好。

很好,很好。

Goo–ddd– 很好。

在那里,下一个单词以元音开头,所以我拍打舌头并将两个单词连接起来。

很好。

这是一家不错的餐厅。

好——dd——餐厅。

在那里,我在声带中发出非常快速的 D 音,然后进入 R.

Good 餐厅。

66,“一些”这个词。

这个词通常会减少并且可以在句子中非常快速地说出来。

这取决于如何使用这个词。

例如,如果它被用来表明某事很棒或独特,例如

“那是某个派对!”,那么它就是完全发音的。

另外,如果可以换成“确定”这个词,那就强调:

有些日子我在家工作,有些日子我去办公室。

完全发音:一些,一些。

上下形状,长度,UH 如黄油元音。

但通常情况下,它并没有被强调,它实际上是减少了。

然后它更像是:一些,一些,一些。

平坦,音调低,说得很快,元音减少到 schwa。

一些。 一些。 一些。

当我们使用“some”来表示未知的数量、单位或事物时,我们会这样发音。

一些水。

我可以喝点水吗?

一些,一些。

我们需要更多的志愿者。

一些,一些。 多一点。

一些。

说得很快,音调低,平:一些。

强调:一些。

非重读:总和。

第 67 条,“可以”这个词。

实际上,我们已经讨论过这个词。

当我们谈论“将”时,我们这样做了,第 37

号。第 68 号。另一个减少的词,“他们”这个词。

代词,是虚词。

完全发音,这个词有浊音 TH,我知道这是一个棘手的声音,

在 BED 元音中的 EH 和 M 辅音。

他们。

如果 TH 是您最难的声音之一,我有个好消息要告诉您:

这种减少涉及删除 TH。

所以,让我给你一个例句。

我们把票给了他们。

给他们。

我们给了他们钱。

给他们。 给他们。

你可能会想,等等,我们已经研究过“给我”,

而且是在我们谈论“他!”的时候。 是的。

“他”和“他们”在减少时听起来是一样的。

所以,“我们给了他钱

”听起来就像“我们给了他们钱”。

它们听起来相同并不重要。

当我们确定我们在谈论谁时,我们会使用代词。

所以这两个听起来一样的代词不应该给你的谈话带来任何混乱。

你可以用 TH 快速发音:他们,他们,他们,他们。

但是你也会在 TH 下降时听到它,这也是你可以在会话英语中做的事情。

编号 69:见。

这是一个动词,一个实词,通常是的,这将始终在句子中被强调。

在英语中最常见的 100 个单词中,我们排在第 69 位,

而且只有少数几个单词从未强调过。

哇。 不重音的词? 如此常见。

削减? 如此常见。

See 是一个简单的词,只有两个音,S 辅音和 SHE 元音中的 EE。

看。 看。

强调上下形状:看,看。

它将是句子中较长的音节之一。

我没在那儿看到你。 看。 看。

或者:CEO 要求见我。

看。

编号 70:“其他”一词。

这个词可以用作形容词、名词、代词,

所以,这个词既可以是实词,也可以是虚词。

它可以被强调或不被强调。

例如,强调:我不喜欢它,另一方面,它更便宜。

其他。 其他。

或者,我前几天读到过。

其他。 其他。

它通常是有压力的,但也可以是无压力的。

例如,有人或其他人会帮忙。

某人或其他人。

或其他,或其他,或其他,或其他。

别的,别的,别的。

音调低一些,含糊不清,不太清楚。

然而,我没有改变任何声音,所以它只是没有压力,没有减少。

在重读音节中,我们有 UH,如 BUTTER 元音和浊音 TH, oth, oth。

那个 TH 只是舌尖穿过牙齿。

喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔喔 其他。

然后 schwa R 以非重读音节结尾。

其他。

哇。

我们已经接近尾声了。

我们研究了英语中最常见的 100 个单词中的 70 个。

让我们继续阅读这个列表,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 Rachel 的英语。