Learn English Perfect Pronunciation of Common English Vocabulary 611

What are the most common words in American English,

and how exactly do you pronounce them?

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

this is video 6.

In this series, we’re 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 American English contains many, many words that reduce.

If you haven’t already seen video 1 and the other videos in this series, I suggest you start there.

These videos build one on top of the next, so click here to watch video one.

Number 51: the word WHEN.

This word definitely reduces.

Fully pronounced, it’s the W sound,

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

When.

You may be thinking, I’ve heard this word pronounced differently.

You may have heard it pronounce hhwen.

Hhh— when.

WH- words can be pronounced with a “hh”

sound before the W.

It’s not necessary, and it’s not my preference.

I think, just keep it simple, just use a clean W sound.

When.

But in a sentence, this word can be unstressed and said more quickly.

Then you could write the vowel with the schwa or the IH as in SIT vowel in IPA.

“When”

becomes: when,

said very quickly.

If you don’t know what IPA, the International Phonetic Alphabet is,

I have a playlist of videos that goes over that.

Click here or in the description.

Let’s look at some example sentences.

When are you going to stop by?

When,

when are you—

I said that very quickly, unstressed.

When, when,

when are you going to stop by?

Another sentence:

It was better when we were kids.

When, when, when, when,

when we were, when we were,

Unstressed. Said very quickly.

It was better when we were kids.

You see, we don’t want every word in American English to be fully pronounced,

when.

Some of the understandability of English depends on the contrast

of stressed and unstressed syllables, clear and less clear.

Let’s look at number 52, the word ‘make’.

Now, this is a stressed word.

We have two categories of words in American English:

Content Words and Function Words.

Content words are nouns, verbs, like this verb ‘make’,

adjectives, and adverbs, and content words are what are generally stressed in a sentence.

“Make”:

M consonant, AY diphthong,

and the K sound,

is usually stressed in a sentence.

Make.

Make.

It has an up-down shape.

That’s the stressed shape of intonation.

Make.

That’s different from:

when, when, when,

which was flatter in pitch and lower.

Make,

longer,

shape of stress,

more clear.

Sentences:

I’ll make you one.

Make. Make.

It would make things easier.

Make. Make.

Number 53.

Here, we have a beautiful reduction.

It’s the word ‘can’.

If ‘can’ is a main verb, then it’s not reduced.

Who can help tomorrow?

I can.

Also, it doesn’t reduce if it’s a noun:

a can of soup.

But most of the time, ‘can’ is a helping verb, not a main verb,

and that means it reduces.

We change a sound.

Let’s go back to the example:

Who can help tomorrow?

I can.

In the question:

Who can help tomorrow?

‘Help’ is the main verb.

‘Can’ is the helping verb.

Did you hear how I pronounced it?

Who can help tomorrow?

Who can help?

It’s no longer ‘can’, but ‘kn’.

Who can—

Who can help?

Short, flat, no vowel.

We write it in IPA with the schwa.

Kn, kn, kn.

Try that.

Kn,

who can help?

I can see you.

‘See’

the main verb, ‘can’ the helping verb.

Kn, kn.

I can, I can see you.

That’s quite a reduction.

Very common.

Number 54: The word ‘like’.

This word can be used lots of different ways, so it can be an adverb,

a noun, or an adjective, which would mean it’s stressed,

or it can be a preposition or conjunction,

which means it will be a function word and is unstressed.

However, even when it’s unstressed,

this word does not reduce.

Let’s look at an example where it’s stressed.

I don’t like it.

Like.

I don’t like it.

Here, it’s stressed.

Like. Like.

Up-down shape of stress.

But what about this sentence?

He acted like nothing happened.

He acted like—

like, like, lower in pitch, much faster.

He acted like nothing happened.

He acted like nothing happened.

Like.

Unstressed.

None of the sounds change so it doesn’t reduce,

but it’s pretty different from the stressed version.

Like,

like.

Like, like, like.

One more example, and this is a really common use of the word.

We use this when we’re telling a story,

something that happened to us,

and we’re talking about what someone said or someone’s reaction.

For example:

Yesterday I saw Jim walking home from school,

and I was like,

“Do you need a ride?”

And he was like, “No, I’m just going to walk.”

I was like,

he was like,

she was like,

you were like,

like, like, like, like, like.

All of these are examples of ‘like’ unstressed.

Number 55: Time.

Now this word, a noun, an adjective, a verb, is always a content word.

That means it will likely be stressed.

This is only the 6th word in this list so far that is always stressed.

We’re on number 55.

That’s crazy.

So if you thought every word you spoke needed to be clear and fully pronounced,

I hope this series is helping to change your mind.

This word is pronounced with the True T, because it’s stressed,

and it has the AI as in BUY diphthong, and don’t forget that M.

Time.

Lips have to come together.

Time.

There is no case where the lips don’t come together for the M.

Always.

Time, time.

Crisp, clear True T, teeth come together for it:

ttt— time,

up-down shape of stress.

Let’s look at a sentence.

What time is it?

Time.

A noun.

Or, you do sit ups for a minute, and I’ll time you.

Time, time.

There, it’s a verb, still stressed, same pronunciation.

Number 56: No.

Another word, the seventh word, that will generally always be stressed.

There is not a case where it would usually reduce or be unstressed.

No. No.

Up-down shape:

No.

And please don’t ever forget the lip rounding that goes into this diphthong:

oohhh.

No.

No.

I have no idea.

He voted ‘no’ on the sugar tax.

No, no.

That was a simple one, wasn’t it?

What about 57?

57 is interesting.

The word ‘just’.

It’s either an adjective or an adverb,

and those are both content words, so it will generally be stressed.

And for the most part, we don’t reduce stressed words.

They’re important.

We only reduce and say quickly the words that are a little less important, the function words.

BUT.

This word is interesting because it has a T,

and T has its own set of funny rules.

If you’ve seen many of my videos, you know them.

I talk about the T pronunciations a lot.

If the T comes between two consonants,

we often drop that T.

Well, that’s a reduction.

Let me show you what I mean.

When the word ‘just’ is followed by a word that starts with a consonant,

there is a good chance that a native speaker will drop the T,

and just say: jus.

Jus’ instead of ‘just’.

I just thought, why not?

Just, just, just thought.

Just thought—

just—

The ST ending is followed by TH,

the T comes between two consonants,

we drop it:

jus’ thought, just’ thought.

I just missed the bus.

I just missed—

just missed the bus—

S-T-M, drop the T.

Jus’ missed, jus’ missed, I just missed the bus.

Now, if ‘just’ is followed by a word that begins with a vowel or diphthong, don’t drop the T.

Just make it a light, True T.

For example,

it’s just Alex.

Just Alex— just, tt, tt, just Alex.

It’s just Alex.

Number 58, another word that reduces.

This one is a function word: him.

And just like number 9, “have”,

number 16, “he”,

number 23, “his”,

number 29, “her”,

we often drop the H and link this to the word before.

For example, I gave him another one.

Gave ‘im, gave ‘im, gave ‘im.

A very common reduction.

We do this with these function words that begin with an H.

Simply schwa-M.

Gave ‘im.

Gave ‘im.

Another example:

We want him to succeed.

Want him, want him.

Wait, what’s happening to the T in ‘want’?

I’m dropping the H,

so it doesn’t come between two consonants.

Well, we’ll find out soon,

because that’s number 93 on the list of the 100 most common words in English.

59: Know.

You’re thinking, wait, we already did that.

That was number 56.

Yes, but, different word.

‘No’ and ‘know’ are homophones.

That’s right. That means they sound exactly the same,

even though they are two different words and they’re spelled differently.

Know.

Know.

A verb. Usually stressed in a sentence.

N consonant, OH diphthong:

know.

However, with really common phrases, we often make some reductions,

like how ‘going to’ becomes ‘gonna’.

And with the really common phrase “I don’t know”,

we make a reduction.

I dunno, I dunno, I dunno.

And, this can sound like the last sound is not OH:

I dunno, I dunno, I dunno, I dunno, o, o, o, o, o, o.

It’s more like a quick ‘uh’ there.

Certainly not: know, oh, oh, with a full and stressed OH diphthong.

I don’t know.

Number 60,

the last word for this video, the word “take”.

Usually a verb, sometimes a noun, it’s a content word.

And generally, it’s going to be stressed in a sentence.

Just like ‘time’,

it’s a one-syllable stressed word that begins with a True T,

tt, AY, then the AY diphthong, and the K sound.

Take.

Sentences:

Can you take me there?

Take, take, take.

Or, I need to take it back.

Take.

Take.

Take.

Longer, up-down shape, more time, a stressed syllable.

Okay,

so, we’ve gotten through our first 60 words in the 100 most common words in English list.

So far, there were only seven where I could say,

never do we reduce any part of this word in any case.

Wow!

I expect as we keep going that we’ll get more content words, but let’s see!

Let’s keep going down this list of the 100 most common words in English,

studying the pronunciation, and I don’t mean the full 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.

美式英语中最常见的词是什么,你是

如何发音的?

今天,你正在观看英语系列中最常用的 100 个单词中的下一个视频,

这是视频 6。

在这个系列中,我们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。

美式英语中最常见的 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。

数字 51:单词 WHEN。

这个词肯定会减少。

完全发音的是 W 音、

BED 元音中的 EH 和 N 辅音。

什么时候。

你可能在想,我听过这个词的发音不同。

你可能听说过它发音为 hhwen。

嗯——什么时候。

WH- 单词可以在 W 之前发出“hh”

音。

这不是必需的,也不是我的偏好。

我认为,保持简单,使用干净的 W 声音。

什么时候。

但是在一个句子中,这个词可以不重读,说得更快。

然后你可以用 schwa 或 IH 来写元音,就像 IPA 中的 SIT 元音一样。

“当”

变成:什么时候,

说得很快。

如果你不知道国际音标,国际音标是什么,

我有一个视频播放列表。

单击此处或在说明中。

让我们看一些例句。

你打算什么时候过来?

你什么时候,

什么时候——

我说得很快,毫不紧张。

你什么时候,什么时候,

什么时候停下来?

另一句话:

我们小时候更好。

什么时候,什么时候,什么时候,什么时候,

我们什么时候,什么时候,

没有压力。 非常快的说道。

我们小时候更好。

你看,我们不希望美式英语中的每个单词都完全

发音。

英语的一些可理解性取决于

重读音节和非重读音节的对比,清晰和不清晰。

让我们看一下数字 52,“制造”这个词。

现在,这是一个重读词。

美式英语中有两类词:

实词和功能词。

实词是名词、动词,例如动词“make”、

形容词和副词,实词是句子中通常强调的内容。

“Make”:

M 辅音、AY 双元音

和 K 音,

通常在句子中重读。

制作。

制作。

它有一个上下形状。

这就是强调的语调形式。

制作。

这不同于:

何时,何时,何时

,音高更平坦,更低。

使

应力的形状更长、

更清晰。

造句:

我给你做一个。

制作。 制作。

这会让事情变得更容易。

制作。 制作。

53 号。

在这里,我们有一个漂亮的还原。

就是“能”字。

如果“can”是主要动词,那么它不会被简化。

明天谁能帮忙?

我能。

此外,如果它是一个名词,它不会减少:

a can of soup。

但大多数时候,“can”是一个助动词,而不是主要动词

,这意味着它减少了。

我们改变声音。

让我们回到例子:

明天谁能帮忙?

我能。

在问题中:

明天谁能提供帮助?

“帮助”是主要动词。

“可以”是助动词。

你听到我的发音了吗?

明天谁能帮忙?

谁能帮忙?

它不再是“can”,而是“kn”。

谁能——

谁能帮忙?

短,平,没有元音。

我们用 schwa 用 IPA 编写它。

克,克,克。

试试看。

Kn,

谁能帮忙?

我能看见你。

“看见

”主要动词,“能”助动词。

克,克。

我可以,我可以看到你。

这是相当减少的。

很普通的。

数字 54:“喜欢”这个词。

这个词可以有很多不同的用法,所以它可以是副词

、名词或形容词,这意味着它是重读的

.

但是,即使不重读,

这个词也不会减少。

让我们看一个强调它的例子。

我不喜欢它。

喜欢。

我不喜欢它。

在这里,压力很大。

喜欢。 喜欢。

应力的上下形状。

但是这句话呢?

他装作什么都没发生过。

他表现得像——

像,像,音调更低,速度更快。

他装作什么都没发生过。

他装作什么都没发生过。

喜欢。

无压力。

没有任何声音发生变化,因此它不会减少,

但它与重音版本有很大不同。

喜欢,

喜欢。

喜欢,喜欢,喜欢。

再举一个例子,这是这个词的一个非常常见的用法。

当我们讲故事

,发生在我们身上的事情

,我们在谈论某人所说的或某人的反应时,我们会使用它。

例如:

昨天我看到吉姆放学回家

,我想,

“你需要搭车吗?”

他就像,“不,我只是要走路。”

我喜欢,

他喜欢,

她喜欢,

你喜欢,

喜欢,喜欢,喜欢,喜欢,喜欢。

所有这些都是“喜欢”不重读的例子。

55 号:时间。

现在这个词,一个名词,一个形容词,一个动词,总是一个实词。

这意味着它可能会受到压力。

到目前为止,这只是此列表中第 6 个始终强调的单词。

我们排在第 55 位。

这太疯狂了。

所以如果你认为你说的每一个词都需要清晰和完整的发音,

我希望这个系列能帮助你改变主意。

这个词用 True T 发音,因为它是重读的,

并且它具有 BUY 双元音中的 AI,不要忘记那个 M.

Time。

嘴唇必须靠在一起。

时间。

对于 M. Always,没有任何情况下嘴唇不会聚在一起

时间,时间。

清脆、清晰的 True T,牙齿齐齐:

ttt——时间,

压力的上下形状。

我们来看一个句子。

现在是几奌?

时间。

一个名词。

或者,你做一分钟仰卧起坐,我给你计时。

时间,时间。

在那里,它是一个动词,仍然重读,发音相同。

号码 56: 不。

另一个词,第七个词,通常会被强调。

通常情况下它不会减少或没有压力。

不。不。

上下形状:

不。请不要忘记进入这个双元音的唇形:

哦。

不,

不,

我不知道。

他对糖税投了反对票。

不,不。

那很简单,不是吗?

那么57呢?

57很有趣。

“公正”二字。

它要么是形容词,要么是副词

,都是实词,所以一般都会重读。

在大多数情况下,我们不会减少重音词。

他们很重要。

我们只减少并快速说出不太重要的词,即虚词。

但。

这个词很有趣,因为它有一个 T,

而 T 有自己的一套有趣的规则。

如果你看过我的很多视频,你就知道了。

我经常谈论 T 的发音。

如果 T 出现在两个辅音之间,

我们通常会去掉那个 T。

嗯,这是一个减少。

让我告诉你我的意思。

当“just”这个词后面跟着一个以辅音开头的词时

,母语人士很有可能会放弃 T

,只说:jus。

只是’而不是’只是'。

我只是想,为什么不呢?

只是,只是,只是想。

Justthought——just——

ST 词尾后跟 TH

,T 出现在两个辅音之间,

我们去掉它:

jus’thought,just’thought。

我只是错过了公共汽车。

我只是

错过了——只是错过了公共汽车

——S-T-M,放下 T。

现在,如果“just”后面跟着一个以元音或双元音开头的单词,不要去掉 T。

只要把它变成一个轻的,True T。

例如,

它只是 Alex。

只是亚历克斯——只是,tt,tt,只是亚历克斯。

这只是亚历克斯。

58号,另一个减少的词。

这个是虚词:他。

就像数字 9,“have”,

数字 16,“he”,

数字 23,“his”,

数字 29,“her”一样,

我们经常去掉 H 并将其链接到之前的单词。

例如,我给了他另一个。

给我,给我,给我。

很常见的减少。

我们用这些以 H 开头的虚词来做这件事。

简单的 schwa-M。

给我。

给我。

另一个例子:

我们希望他成功。

想要他,想要他。

等等,“want”中的 T 发生了什么?

我去掉了 H,

所以它不会出现在两个辅音之间。

好吧,我们很快就会知道,

因为这是英语中最常见的 100 个单词列表中的第 93 个。

59:知道

你在想,等等,我们已经这样做了。

那是56号。

是的,但是,不同的词。

“不”和“知道”是同音字。

那就对了。 这意味着它们听起来完全一样,

即使它们是两个不同的词并且拼写不同。

知道。

知道。

一个动词。 通常在句子中强调。

N辅音,OH双元音:

知道。

然而,对于真正常见的短语,我们经常会做一些简化,

比如“going to”如何变成“gonna”。

并且使用非常常见的短语“我不知道”,

我们进行了简化。

我不知道,我不知道,我不知道。

而且,这听起来像最后一个声音不是哦:

我不知道,我不知道,我不知道,我不知道,o,o,o,o,o,o。

它更像是一个快速的“呃”。

当然不是:知道,哦,哦,带有完整且重读的 OH 双元音。

我不知道。

第 60 号,

这个视频的最后一个词,“take”这个词。

通常是动词,有时是名词,是实词。

一般来说,它会在一个句子中被强调。

就像“时间”一样,

它是一个单音节重读词,以真 T、

tt、AY、AY 双元音和 K 音开头。

拿。

句子:

你能带我去吗?

拿,拿,拿。

或者,我需要收回它。

拿。

拿。

拿。

更长,上下形状,更多时间,重读音节。

好的,

所以,我们已经完成了英语列表中 100 个最常用单词中的前 60 个单词。

到目前为止,我只能说七个,

无论如何我们都不会减少这个词的任何部分。

哇!

我希望随着我们继续前进,我们会得到更多内容,但让我们拭目以待!

让我们继续阅读英语中最常用的 100 个单词的列表,

研究发音,我不是指完整的官方发音,

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 Rachel 的英语。