Learn English the RIGHT Way English Speaking Pronunciation of the Most Common English Words 811

Today you’re getting the next video in the 100 most common words in English series, this is video 8.

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 do suggest you start there.

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

Today, we start with number seventy-one,
and that’s the word ‘than’.

Fully pronounced, we have voiced TH, AA
as in BAT, followed by the M consonant.

Than.

Than.

When AA is followed by N, we relax the back of the tongue and change the sound: thaaa— thaa— than.

Than.

Aa-uh, aa-uh.

So it’s not aahh thaaan, thaaan, but
‘than’, aa-uh, aa-uh, aa-uh.

There’s an extra sound in there from relaxing the back of the tongue, sort of like an UH vowel.

Thaaaa— Than.

Than.

Than.

But we don’t need to focus too much on
the full pronunciation of this word

since it is a word that reduces.

Remember, when a word reduces, that’s
called a reduction,

and that’s when we change or drop a sound.

So rather than saying ‘than’ in a
conversation, it will be ‘thn’.

We change the vowel to the schwa, which
is absorbed by the N,

so you don’t even need to think about making a vowel there.

Than, than, than, from the TH to the N.

Very fast.

Than.

We use this with comparisons: she’s
taller than I am, than, than, than I am.

They’re older than we are.

Than, than, older than.

Taller than, older than, than, than, than.

A reduction, not a fully pronounced word.

If you go around fully pronouncing every
word, it will not sound natural,

so you need to know and use these reductions.

Number seventy-two, a very similar word, ‘then’.

THAN is used with comparisons, and
THEN is used with timing,

sequences, and if/then statements.

It got really dark, then it stormed all night.

Or: if we go grocery shopping, then we can cook dinner.

You won’t always hear it reduced, but often you will.

I reduced it in both of those sentences.

Fully pronounced, it has the EH vowel.

Theh— THEN.

But reduced, we change it to the schwa.

Then it sounds just like ‘than’ when we reduce it.

Then, then.

It was really dark, and then it stormed all night.

Then, then, then.

And then it, and then it, and then it.

And then it stormed.

Those three unstressed words together
are not very clear:

and then it.

And then it.

And then it.

‘And’ reduces, ‘then’ reduces, ‘it’ is said
quickly with a Stop T.

Some people might think, that’s very
unclear, that’s not good English,

but I want to stress that it is.

Good English is made up of a contrast

between stressed words and unstressed words.

You have to have the unstressed words
for this contrast.

And then it stormed all night.

And then it stormed all night.

If we go grocery shopping, then we can cook dinner.

Then we can cook dinner, then we can,
then we can, then we can, then we can then we can.

Do you hear that ‘can’ reduction?

That was number 53.

It’s interesting that our first two in this video,

two different words, sound exactly the
same when they reduce.

THAN and THEN both become ‘thn’.

That’s okay.

This is true of a few other reductions as well.

Because of the context of the sentence,
there isn’t confusion.

Number 73, the word ‘now’.

This is one word that doesn’t reduce.

It’s an adverb, and adverbs are one of four
kinds of content words:

adverbs, verbs, nouns, and adjectives.

We generally don’t reduce content words,
or make them sound unstressed.

Generally, these are stressed in a sentence.

This is what provides that contrast that I
was talking about

being so important in American English.

Stressed and unstressed or reduced.

Long and short.

NOW has the N consonant and the OW diphthong.

For the diphthong, we start by dropping the jaw,

then let the jaw come up as you round the lips, ow, now.

Now.

For the N, keep the tongue nice and wide as it lifts for the sound, nnn, now.

Now.

Number 74, the word ‘look’.

What part of speech is the word ‘look’?

It’s a verb most of the time.

Look at me!

It can also be a noun: She gave me a look.

Noun, verb, these are both content words.

Stressed words.

And yes, this word will be stressed in a sentence.

There are six different pronunciations
possible for the letters O-O.

I made a video about all of the possible
pronunciations recently,

I’ll put a link to that video at the end of this video,

also, in the description below.

In this word, the pronunciation of OO is ‘uh’ like in ‘push’.

Uh, uh, luh, look, look.

It’s not ‘Luke’, oo, oo, where your lips round more.

Luke.

The lips are more relaxed: uh, look, look.

Number 75: the word ‘only’.

This is another content word.

At the beginning of this 100 word series, most of the words we were covering were reductions.

Now we’re getting down the list, we’re
getting a lot more content words.

I can tell you one mistake that I hear all
the time with the pronunciation of this word.

Instead of ‘only’, people will say ‘only’.

Uh, uh, uh, uh.

The vowel is more like the AH as in Father
or the AW as in Law.

But the correct pronunciation is a diphthong.

That means we change the mouth position.

Ohh.

Jaw drop then lip rounding.

Oh, oh Only.

So make sure your mouth isn’t staying stationary.

Oh, oh, only.

Only, oh, oh.

There has to be that movement, jaw drop,
then lip rounding.

Right after the Oh diphthong, a flat, wide
tongue goes to the roof of the mouth for the N,

only, then light L, IH vowel, unstressed, only.

Another possible mistake here is to make the unstressed syllable too relaxed.

Then it sounds like: only, ih, ih, ee, ee.

It should be ee.

The tip of the tongue is down but the front
part is arched

reaching towards the roof of the mouth.

Ee.

If it’s too far away from the roof of the
mouth, then it sounds like IH instead of EE.

Only.

Only.

You’re the only one.

If only it were true.

Number 76 the word ‘come’.

This is a verb.

So yes, it’s a Content word.

And generally, we don’t reduce this or
make it unstressed in a sentence.

It’s one of the stressed words.

Oh, Come on.

Why don’t you come over for dinner?

It’s the K consonant, the UH as in butter
vowel, and the M consonant.

Come.

Come by later.

Cuh, cuh, ahh

This vowel is very relaxed.

If there’s any tension in the back of your
tongue, it will sound different.

Cuh, uh, come.

Keep it relaxed.

Come on over.

Number 77.

It’s.

Not with an apostrophe.

That’s the contraction ‘it is’.

This word is showing possession.

It’s pronounced just like IT apostrophe S
but it has a different meaning

and is grammatically different.

Where’s the remote?

It’s in its usual place.

Here, I used IT apostrophe S as a Contraction, it is,

and then also without the apostrophe showing possession, the usual place of the remote.

It’s not unusual for Americans to drop the
vowel and just make this the TS cluster.

It’s gone.

It’s gone.

There I’m using the contraction ‘it is’.

Ts. Ts.

It’s gone.

This can also happen with the possessive
‘its’ though it might be a little less common.

Let’s look at an example.

Where’s the remote?

Its usual place.

Its usual place.

There I’m just making the TS sounds.

But usually, this word is not at the
beginning of a sentence,

then I would pronounce the vowel.

Its, its, its, its.

The watch is in its case.

Its. Its. Its.

Said quickly.

So even though I’m not dropping the
vowel, It’s still unstressed.

I’m saying it very quickly.

This is not a stressed word.

Number 78, the word ‘over’.

This is usually a preposition.

That’s not a Content word.

So usually this word won’t be stressed.

It will be unstressed.

But no sounds reduce.

We don’t change or drop anything.

Just like ‘only’

we start with the OH diphthong, jaw drop,
then lip rounding.

Oh. Oh.

Over.

A quick v schwa R, ver, ver, ver, ver.

Unstressed.

The schwa is absorbed by the R so you don’t need to try to make a vowel in that second syllable.

Just make a quick, low simple R sound.

Ov— rrrrr— Over.

Over.

For the V sound at the bottom of the lip comes up to gently vibrate on the bottom of the top front teeth.

Over.

We jumped over the creek.

We jumped over the creek.

‘Jumped’ and ‘Creek’ are stressed.

The rest of the words, including ‘over’ are unstressed.

We jumped over the creek.

We jumped over the creek.

We traveled all over Italy.

All over.

All over.

Over.

Over.

Over.

Over. Unstressed, less clear than ‘all’.

All over—

Flatter in pitch, less clear.

Number 79, the word ‘think’.

A verb, a Content word, a word that is usually stressed.

Fully pronounced.

This word is tricky to pronounce.

It’s got that unvoiced TH at the beginning.

The only way to make the sound is to bring the tongue tip through the teeth.

The air should flow, there should not be a stop. Th, th, th.

But rather, thhh.

Flowing air.

Two common mistakes would be to make an S instead.

Sink.

Or a tea instead: tink.

Try to avoid these substitutions and get
comfortable with the TH sound. Th—th—

Now an IPA, this would be written
phonetically with the IH vowel.

Ih— But when IH it is followed by NG, it changes.

It becomes more like: ee-ih-ee.

Let’s compare this with the word ‘thin’.

The first two sounds are the same.

TH, IH vowel.

In ‘thin’, it’s followed by the N sound.

And in ‘think’, it’s followed by the NG
sound, which as I said, Changes the vowel.

So let’s start with ‘thin’.

Thin, ih, ih, ih.

Thin.

And now, ‘think’: thing, thi, thing, thing, thinnggg, thin.

Ee, ih, ee, ih.

Do you hear how the vowel sound is different?

Thiiiink. Think. Think.

So even though it says IH, it’s a lot more
like EE in real life.

You may say why is this letter N the NG sound?

There’s no letter G.

That’s true.

When the letter n is followed by the letter K,

Then the pronunciation of n is usually the
NG sound: nggg—

where the back of the tongue touches the soft palate.

This is also where the K sound is made.

Nnggkkk, nnggkkk.

Think.

Think.

Other examples. Sink. Siiinnggkkk.

Bank. Bannngggkkk.

So both of these words, the N represents the NG sound.

Number 80, the last word for this video, the word ‘also’.

This is an adverb and generally it’s stress in a sentence.

I also want to get coffee.

Or, that was also a problem.

I want to make sure you know not to fully
pronounce that L.

It’s a dark L because it comes after the
vowel in the syllable.

Don’t lift your tongue tip for this L.

Make a dark sound with the back of your tongue.

Ohhlll, ohhll, ohhlll.

Lifting the tongue tip it brings a sound
forward and tends to mess people up.

It’s a dark sound.

Ohhlll, ohhll.

Back of the tongue doing the work,
tongue tip can stay down.

This word ends with an OH diphthong.
It’s an unstressed syllable.

So there won’t be as much jaw drop or lip rounding.

Still make sure your lips around a little bit to give us that feel.

Also. Alllso.

I also want to get coffee.

As we get to the end of the 100 most
common words in American English,

we’re finding more that are fully pronounced.

In this video, we had four words that are
unstressed or reduced,

and six that generally are stressed.

Before this video, we had only eleven words of the first 69 that were always reliably stressed.

Most of the words in the most common words in American English list are unstressed or reduced.

We have 20 words left.

What will we find?

We’ll find out soon.

Back at number 74 when we study the word ‘Look’,

I told you I would put a link to a video that goes over all six possible pronunciations of OO.

Here is that link.

It’s an interesting video.

Two letters. OO.

But six different ways this combination
can be pronounced

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 official pronunciation,

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

Look for the next installment in this series coming soon.

That’s it. And thanks so much for using
Rachel’s English.

今天你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 8。

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。

今天,我们从数字七十一开始
,那就是“比”这个词。

完全发音时,我们已经
像 BAT 一样发了 TH、AA,然后是 M 辅音。

比。

比。

当 AA 后面跟着 N 时,我们放松舌根并改变声音: thaaa- thaa- than。

比。

啊——啊——啊。

所以不是 aahh thaaan, thaaan,而是
‘than’, aa-uh, aa-uh, aa-uh。

舌头后部放松时有一个额外的声音,有点像 UH 元音。

哇——比。

比。

比。

但是我们不需要过多关注
这个词的完整发音,

因为它是一个减少的词。

请记住,当一个词减少时,这
称为减少

,这就是我们改变或减少声音的时候。

因此,与其在对话中说“than”,不如说
“thn”。

我们将元音改为 schwa,它
被 N 吸收,

所以你甚至不需要考虑在那里发元音。

比,比,比,从 TH 到 N。

非常快。

比。

我们将其用于比较:她
比我高,比,比,比我高。

他们比我们年长。

比,比,更早。

比,比,比,比,更高,比,比。

减少,不是一个完全发音的词。

如果您将每个单词都完全发音
,听起来会不自然,

因此您需要了解并使用这些简化。

七十二号,一个非常相似的词,“那么”。

THAN 用于比较,
THEN 用于时序、

序列和 if/then 语句。

天真的黑了,然后整晚都在暴风雨。

或者:如果我们去杂货店购物,那么我们可以做饭。

你不会总是听到它减少了,但你经常会听到。

我在这两个句子中都减少了它。

完全发音,它有 EH 元音。

嗯——然后。

但是减少了,我们将其更改为schwa。

然后,当我们减少它时,它听起来就像“比”。

那么,那么。

天真的很黑,然后整夜暴风雨。

然后,然后,然后。

然后它,然后它,然后它。

然后它猛烈地袭来。

这三个不重读的词放在一起
不是很清楚:

然后它。

然后它。

然后它。

‘and’ reduce, ‘then’ reduce, ‘it’
用 Stop T 快速说。

有些人可能会认为,这很
不清楚,这不是好的英语,

但我想强调它是。

好的英语是由

重读词和非重读词之间的对比构成的。 对于这种对比,

你必须有不重读的词

然后整个晚上都在暴风雨中。

然后整个晚上都在暴风雨中。

如果我们去杂货店购物,那么我们可以做饭。

然后我们可以做饭,然后我们可以,
然后我们可以,然后我们可以,然后我们可以然后我们可以。

你听到“罐头”减少了吗?

那是数字 53。

有趣的是,我们在这个视频中的前两个,

两个不同的词,
当它们减少时听起来完全一样。

THAN 和 THEN 都变成“thn”。

没关系。

其他一些减少也是如此。

由于句子的上下文,
没有混淆。

编号 73,“现在”这个词。

这是一个不会减少的词。

它是一个副词,副词是
四种实词之一:

副词、动词、名词和形容词。

我们通常不会减少实词,
或者使它们听起来没有重音。

一般来说,这些都是在句子中强调的。

这就是我所说的

在美式英语中如此重要的对比。

强调和不强调或减少。

长和短。

NOW 有 N 辅音和 OW 双元音。

对于双元音,我们首先放下下巴,

然后当你环绕嘴唇时让下巴抬起,哦,现在。

现在。

对于 N,保持舌头宽大,因为它抬起的声音,nnn,现在。

现在。

编号 74,“看”这个词。

“看”这个词是什么词类?

大多数时候是动词。

看着我!

它也可以是名词:她看了我一眼。

名词、动词,都是实词。

强调词;重读词。

是的,这个词会在一个句子中被强调。

字母 O-O 有六种不同的发音。

我最近制作了一个关于所有可能发音的视频

我将在该视频的末尾加上该视频的链接

,也在下面的描述中。

在这个词中,OO的发音是“uh”,就像“push”一样。

呃呃呃呃,看,看。

这不是“卢克”,哦,哦,你的嘴唇更圆。

卢克。

嘴唇更放松了:呃,看,看。

编号 75:“唯一”这个词。

这是另一个内容词。

在这个 100 字系列的开头,我们所涵盖的大部分单词都是缩减的。

现在我们在列表中,我们
得到了更多的内容词。

我可以告诉你一个我一直听到
的关于这个词的发音的错误。

人们会说“唯一”,而不是“唯一”。

呃,呃,呃,呃。

元音更像是父亲中的 AH
或法律中的 AW。

但正确的发音是双元音。

这意味着我们改变嘴的位置。

哦。

下巴下降,然后嘴唇变圆。

哦,哦,只有。

因此,请确保您的嘴没有保持静止。

哦,哦,只有。

只有,哦,哦。

必须有那个动作,下巴下垂,
然后嘴唇圆润。

紧接在 Oh 双元音之后,平而宽
的舌头伸到上颚只发 N

,然后是轻 L,IH 元音,不重读,只发。

这里另一个可能的错误是使非重读音节过于放松。

然后它听起来像:只有,ih,ih,ee,ee。

应该是ee。

舌尖向下,但前
部呈拱形,

伸向口腔顶部。

嗯。

如果距离
上颚太远,那么听起来像是 IH 而不是 EE。

仅有的。

仅有的。

你是唯一的一个。

如果它是真的。

第 76 条“来”这个词。

这是一个动词。

所以是的,这是一个内容词。

通常,我们不会
在句子中减少它或使其不重读。

这是强调词之一。

哦,来吧。

你为什么不过来吃晚饭?

它是 K 辅音,黄油
元音中的 UH 和 M 辅音。

来。

稍后过来。

Cuh, cuh, ahh

这个元音很轻松。

如果您的舌后部有任何紧张
,听起来会有所不同。

咳咳,来吧。

保持放松。

过来吧。

77

号。

不带撇号。

这就是“它是”的缩写。

这个词表示占有。

它的发音就像 IT 撇号 S,
但它具有不同的含义

并且在语法上也不同。

遥控器在哪里?

它在它通常的地方。

在这里,我使用 IT 撇号 S 作为收缩,它是,

然后也没有撇号表示拥有,遥控器的通常位置。

美国人放弃
元音并把它变成 TS 集群并不罕见。

它消失了。

它消失了。

在那里,我使用了缩略词“它是”。

TS。 TS。

它消失了。

这也可能发生在所有格的
“它”上,尽管它可能不太常见。

让我们看一个例子。

遥控器在哪里?

它通常的地方。

它通常的地方。

我只是在制作 TS 声音。

但通常,这个词不在
句首,

然后我会发元音。

它的,它的,它的,它的。

手表在它的盒子里。

它的。 它的。 它的。

连忙说道。

所以即使我没有删除
元音,它仍然没有重读。

我说得很快。

这不是一个强调词。

编号 78,“结束”一词。

这通常是介词。

那不是内容词。

所以通常这个词不会被重读。

它会没有压力。

但没有声音减少。

我们不会改变或放弃任何东西。

就像“唯一”一样,

我们从 OH 双元音开始,下巴下垂,
然后是圆唇。

哦。 哦。

超过。

快速 v schwa R,版本,版本,版本,版本。

无压力。

schwa 被 R 吸收,因此您无需尝试在第二个音节中发出元音。

只需发出快速、低沉的简单 R 音。

Ov——rrrr——结束。

超过。

因为嘴唇底部的 V 音出现在上前牙的底部轻轻振动。

超过。

我们跳过了小溪。

我们跳过了小溪。

“Jumped”和“Creek”被强调。

其余的词,包括“over”,都没有重读。

我们跳过了小溪。

我们跳过了小溪。

我们走遍了意大利。

遍。

遍。

超过。

超过。

超过。

超过。 没有重音,不如“全部”清楚。

全部——

音调平缓,不太清晰。

编号 79,“想”字。

一个动词,一个内容词,一个通常被强调的词。

完全发音。

这个词很难发音。

一开始就有清音的TH。

发出声音的唯一方法是将舌尖穿过牙齿。

空气应该流动,不应该停止。 日,日,日。

而是,呵呵。

流动的空气。

两个常见的错误是改成 S。

下沉。

或者代替茶:叮当。

尽量避免这些替换并
适应 TH 声音。 Th-th-

现在是国际音标,这将
用 IH 元音拼音。

Ih——但是当 IH 后面跟着 NG 时,它就改变了。

它变得更像:ee-ih-ee。

让我们将其与“薄”一词进行比较。

前两个音是一样的。

TH,IH 元音。

在“瘦”中,它后面是 N 音。

而在“think”中,紧随其后的是 NG
音,正如我所说,改变元音。

所以让我们从“瘦”开始。

瘦,嗯,嗯,嗯。

薄薄地。

现在,“想想”:东西,东西,东西,东西,薄。

呃,呃,呃,呃。

你听到元音的声音有什么不同吗?

三连。 思考。 思考。

所以即使它说的是 IH,它
更像是现实生活中的 EE。

你可能会说为什么这个字母 N 是 NG 音?

没有字母 G。

这是真的。

当字母n后面跟着字母K时

,n的发音通常是
NG音:nggg

—舌后触到软腭的地方。

这也是发出 K 音的地方。

嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯嗯

思考。

思考。

其他例子。 下沉。 呸呸呸呸。

银行。 Bannngggkkk。

所以这两个词,N代表NG的声音。

第 80 号,这个视频的最后一个词,“也”这个词。

这是一个副词,通常是句子中的重音。

我也想喝咖啡。

或者,这也是一个问题。

我想确保你知道不要完全
发音 L。

它是一个暗 L,因为它出现
在音节中的元音之后。

不要为这个 L 抬起你的舌尖。

用你的舌头后部发出一个黑暗的声音。

噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢!

抬起舌尖会向前发出声音
,容易把人弄得一团糟。

这是一个黑暗的声音。

噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢噢。

舌后部做功,
舌尖可以下垂。

这个词以 OH 双元音结尾。
这是一个不重读的音节。

所以不会有太多的下巴或嘴唇变圆。

仍然要确保你的嘴唇稍微绕一点给我们那种感觉。

还。 也一样。

我也想喝咖啡。

当我们接近美国英语中 100 个最
常用的单词时,

我们发现更多完全发音的单词。

在这个视频中,我们有四个不
重读或减重的单词,

还有六个通常是重读的。

在这个视频之前,我们只有前 69 个单词中的 11 个总是被可靠地强调。

美式英语列表中最常用词中的大多数词都是不重读或减重的。

我们还剩20个字。

我们会发现什么?

我们很快就会知道的。

回到第 74 位,当我们学习“看”这个词时,

我告诉过你我会放一个视频链接,该视频会介绍 OO 的所有六种可能发音。

这是那个链接。

这是一个有趣的视频。

两个字母。 哦。

但是这种组合可以有六种不同的
发音方式

让我们继续阅读英语中最常见的 100 个单词的列表来研究发音。

我不是指完整的官方发音,

我指的是这个
词在美式英语中的实际使用方式。

寻找即将推出的本系列的下一部分。

而已。 非常感谢您使用
Rachel 的英语。