Learn English with fluent pronunciation of the top English vocabulary wordsits real spoken English

Today you’re getting video 3 in the 100 Most Common Words in English list.

We’re going over the real pronunciation, not the full pronunciation,

but the one that actually gets used in spoken English.

If you didn’t see video one,

click here to watch it now.

It is important to understand what we’re doing here studying reductions.

We start this video with ‘this’.

This is number 21 in the most common words in English.

It’s not usually going to be pronounced THIS.

It’s usually going to be pronounced a lot more quickly than that, unstressed.

This.

This.

“This is what I’m talking about.”

This, this, this.

Sometimes it’s more stressed,

“Not that one, this one.”

It depends on how it’s being used.

But much of the time,

this word will be unstressed, said very quickly: this.

22: But.

This word is usually going to be unstressed.

In those cases I would probably write it phonetically with a schwa.

“I wanted to stop in, but I was already running late.”

But, but, but, but, but I, but I.

The T here links into the next word with a Flap T

if the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong.

If the next word begins with a consonant, then it’s a Stop T.

“We wanted to stop by, but we were already running late.”

But , but, but we, but we.

There, it’s a stop T. Said very quickly.

Unless someone is exaggerating on purpose:

BUT!

You won’t hear this word with a True T.

23: His.

Oh, this one is fun.

This one does have a reduction.

It’s really common to drop the H in this word.

What’s his name?

What’s his? What’s his?

HIS becomes ‘iz’.

Said very quickly, reduced.

This is much more natural than making it sound stressed, fully pronounced:

What’s his name?

What’s his name?

Hmm, that doesn’t sound right.

“What’s his name?” sounds much better.

I have a video on dropping the H reductions,

so click here or in the description to see more examples.

24: By.

This word doesn’t reduce,

none of the sounds change or are dropped,

but it’s usually unstressed and said very quickly:

We’ll be right by the door.

By the, by the, by the– unstressed, not too clear.

But we need this contrast of stressed and unstressed to sound natural when speaking English.

25: From.

This is often said very quickly,

and I would write the vowel phonetically as the schwa: from, from.

When the schwa is followed by the M,

it gets absorbed by the schwa, so what I’m saying is,

you can say the word so quickly that you’re not even trying to make a vowel: frm, frm, frm.

I’ll be back from work at three.

From, from work. Very fast.

If I said this sentence with each word being clear, no reductions,

what would it sound like?

I’ll be back from work at three.

I’ll be back from work at three.

Pretty robotic, not natural.

Even though reductions might seem wrong, they might seem lazy,

they’re right, because they’re part of a bigger picture.

Rhythmic contrast in English.

26: They.

Let’s just start out with a sample sentence.

They already left.

They already left.

Unstressed. Said very quickly. They, they, they.

Sounds don’t really change, it doesn’t reduce, but it’s unstressed.

They, they.

Man, we’re on number 26 of the most common words in English

and so far, every single one either reduces or is often unstressed.

When will we get to our first real content word?

We’ll see.

27: We.

It’s just like the pronoun ‘they’.

Not usually stressed in a sentence.

We, we.

We already left.

We, we, we. Said quickly.

We already left.

Not a reduction, we don’t change or drop a sound,

but unstressed.

We. We already left.

28: Say.

Oh my gosh, this is a content word.

This is a verb and it is usually stressed in a sentence.

It took us 28 words to get here.

If this doesn’t show you the importance of using reductions

and speaking with a rhythmic contrast,

making some words unstressed and less clear,

I don’t know what will.

The first 27 of the most common words in English are that way.

Say.

Let’s put it in a sentence.

What did he say?

He said he’s running late.

Say, said.

Stressed, longer, clearer.

Up-down shape of intonation: say.

S consonant, AY diphthong.

We need jaw drop for that.

Say.

There’s something interesting about ‘say’, ‘said’, and ‘says’.

The diphthong changes.

Check out a video I made on that change

by clicking here or in the description below.

29: Her.

Okay, we’re back to a word that reduces.

It’s very common to pronounce this word with no H.

It becomes ‘er’.

What’s her name?

Er, er, er.

When we drop the beginning H,

we take the word and attach it to the end of the word before.

What’s her. What’s her name?

There are several words where we drop the H,

I have a video on that.

Click here or in the description below to see more examples.

30: She.

Unstressed.

You could probably even reduce it by dropping the vowel, and just making a quick ‘sh’ sound.

Let me try that in a sentence.

We don’t think she knows.

We don’t think she knows.

I’d say that works.

So you can put a quick ‘ee’: I don’t think she knows.

Or you can drop the vowel: I don’t think she knows.

And it sounds pretty much the same.

She knows. She knows.

So there.

Our 30 most common words in English are done, and there’s only one word,

‘say’, that is reliably stressed.

Amazing.

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

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

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

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

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

今天,您将在 100 个最常用的英语单词列表中看到视频 3。

我们要讨论的是真正的发音,而不是完整的发音,

而是实际用于英语口语的发音。

如果您没有看到视频,

请单击此处立即观看。

重要的是要了解我们在这里所做的研究减少。

我们以“this”开始这个视频。

这是英语中最常见单词中的第 21 位。

通常不会发音为 THIS。

它通常会比那更快地发音,没有压力。

这。

这。

“这就是我要说的。”

这这这这

有时压力更大,

“不是那个,这个。”

这取决于它的使用方式。

但很多时候,

这个词会不重读,很快说:this。

22:但是

这个词通常不重读。

在那些情况下,我可能会用 schwa 拼音写出来。

“我想停下来,但我已经迟到了。”

但是,但是,但是,但是,但是我,但是我。

如果下一个单词以元音或双元音开头,则此处的 T 用 Flap T 链接到下一个单词。

如果下一个单词以辅音开头,那么它就是一个 Stop T。

“我们想停下来,但我们已经迟到了。”

但是,但是,但是我们,但是我们。

在那里,它是一个停止T。说得很快。

除非有人故意夸大:

但是!

你不会用 True T. 23 听到这个词

:他的。

哦,这个很有趣。

这个确实有减法。

在这个词中去掉 H 真的很常见。

他的名字是什么?

什么是他的? 他的是什么?

他变成了“iz”。

说的很快,减少了。

这比让它听起来有压力、完全发音要自然得多:

他叫什么名字?

他的名字是什么?

嗯,听起来不太对劲。

“他的名字是什么?” 听起来好多了。

我有一个关于放弃 H 减少的视频,

因此请单击此处或在说明中查看更多示例。

24:由

这个词没有减少,

没有一个声音改变或被丢弃,

但它通常不重读并且很快说:

我们就在门口。

by the, by the, by the– 不重读,不太清楚。

但是我们需要这种重读和非重读的对比在说英语时听起来很自然。

25:从

这通常说得很快

,我会把元音写成 schwa:from,from。

当 schwa 后面跟着 M 时,

它会被 schwa 吸收,所以我的意思是,

你可以如此快速地说出这个词,以至于你甚至不会尝试发出元音:frm,frm,frm。

我三点下班回来。

从,从工作。 非常快。

如果我说这句话,每个单词都清楚,没有减少,

听起来会怎样?

我三点下班回来。

我三点下班回来。

相当机器人,不自然。

尽管减少可能看起来是错误的,但它们可能看起来很懒惰,

但它们是对的,因为它们是更大图景的一部分。

英语中的韵律对比。

26:他们

让我们从一个例句开始。

他们已经离开了。

他们已经离开了。

无压力。 非常快的说道。 他们,他们,他们。

声音并没有真正改变,它没有减少,但它没有压力。

他们,他们。

伙计,我们在英语中最常见的单词中排名第 26 位

,到目前为止,每个单词都减少或经常不重读。

我们什么时候才能找到第一个真正的内容词?

走着瞧。

27:我们

就像代词“他们”一样。

通常不会在句子中强调。

我们,我们。

我们已经离开了。

我们,我们,我们。 连忙说道。

我们已经离开了。

不是减少,我们不会改变或降低声音,

但不会重读。

我们。 我们已经离开了。

28:说

哦,我的天哪,这是一个内容词。

这是一个动词,通常在句子中强调。

我们花了 28 个字才到这里。

如果这不能向您展示使用简化

和有节奏的对比说话的重要性,

使一些词不重读且不太清晰,

我不知道会怎样。

英语中最常见的前 27 个单词就是这样。

说。

让我们把它放在一个句子中。

他说什么?

他说他迟到了。

说;说(过去式。

强调,更长,更清晰。

上下声调:说。

S辅音,AY双元音。

为此,我们需要下巴。

说。

“说”、“说”和“说”有些有趣。

双元音变了。

通过单击此处或在下面的说明中查看我对该更改所做的视频。

29:她

好的,我们回到一个减少的词。

这个词不带 H 的发音很常见。

它变成了“er”。

她叫什么名字?

呃,呃,呃。

当我们去掉开头的 H 时,

我们取这个词并将它附加到之前的词的末尾。

她叫什么。 她叫什么名字?

有几个词我们去掉了 H,

我有一个视频。

单击此处或在下面的描述中查看更多示例。

30:她

无压力。

你甚至可以通过去掉元音来减少它,只是快速发出“sh”的声音。

让我用一句话来试试。

我们认为她不知道。

我们认为她不知道。

我会说这行得通。

因此,您可以快速输入“ee”:我认为她不知道。

或者你可以去掉元音:我想她不知道。

听起来几乎一样。

她知道。 她知道。

所以在那里。

我们已经完成了 30 个最常用的英语单词,并且只有一个单词

“say”是可靠的重读单词。

惊人。

让我们继续阅读英语中最常用的 100 个单词的列表来研究发音

,我不是指完整的或官方的发音,

我指的是这个词在美式英语中的句子中的实际使用方式。

寻找本系列的下一部分,即将推出。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。