PERFECT ENGLISH 10 mustknow English words Rachels English Pronunciation 911

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

This is video 9.

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 one 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 1.

We start with number 81.

The word ‘back’.

A noun, a verb, this is a content word and
will usually be stressed in a sentence.

Please step back.

Or, it was moving back and forth.

Please step back.

Back and forth.

Stressed.

Back.

We have the b consonant, the AH vowel,
and finally, the k sound.

The back of the tongue lifts to touch the
soft palate and is released.

Kk— back.

Back.

Careful with the vowel AH.

The back of the tongue stretches up.

Ah.

And the jaw drops.

You might also lift your top lip a little bit, back, ah, back.

Back.

Number 82, the word ‘after’.

This word can be a content word or a
function word depending on how it’s being used.

So it could be stressed or unstressed.

We don’t reduce this word though, we
don’t change or drop the sound.

Let’s look at an example.

It’s raining so we can’t go to the beach.

Well, let’s go to the movies.

After all, I already took the day off.

After all.

After.

After.

It has that same AH vowel in the stressed
syllable, doesn’t it?

Ah. After.

Next, we have an F, then a really soft t sound: aft— after.

It’s a True T but not as sharp or strong as it would be at the beginning of a stressed syllable like time.

Ttt- time.

So a soft t, then a quick schwa r ending.

Flat, low in pitch, said quickly.

After.

After.

Often this word will be unstressed.

For example, in the phrase ‘after all’ I could stress ‘all’ instead of ‘after’.

Now it sounds like this:
after all, after, after, after, after, after, after, after, after,

the stressed syllable in the stressed version

is longer and has more of an up-down
shape of a stressed syllable.

After.

Unstressed.

After, after, after.

It’s flatter, less clear, a little bit more mumbled.

Let’s look at another sentence.

He left after everyone went to bed.

Left after.

Left after.

After.

After.

After.

Unstressed let’s leave after dinner.

Leave after.

After. After. After.

Unstressed.

‘Leave’ and ‘dinner’ are stressed.

Let’s leave after dinner.

Let’s leave after dinner.

After.

So the unstressed words are less clear, said more quickly, and are flatter and lower in pitch.

The contrast is the stressed words which are longer,

stressed syllables, and an up-down shape
in that pitch, in that intonation.

That contrast is what makes good English.

Number 83, use.

This is one of those words it’s pronounced differently depending on the part of speech.

As a noun, ‘use’, the final sound is an S.

As a verb ‘use’, the final sound is a Z.

Lots of words change like this
depending on part of speech.

For example, ‘house’ the noun ends in the
S sound, and ‘house’ the verb ends in Z.

Address, can have first syllable stress.

Address.

Address.

That’s the noun.

But the verb has second syllable stress.

Address.

Address.

Use.

Use.

Both nouns and verbs are content words
which means they’re stressed in a sentence.

They both begin with the JU diphthong.

Ju, ju.

Tongue tip presses the back of the bottom front teeth

and the middle part of the tongue presses
forward along the roof of the mouth.

Yy-you-yy-you.

Then, the lips round.

Juuuu— juu—

‘use’ with an s or ‘use’ with a z.

What’s the use?

A noun, or: I’ll use it later.

A verb.

Word number 83 and this is the 19th word
that is reliably stressed in a sentence.

That means we’ve covered a lot of words
that can be unstressed or even reduced.

What about number 84?

Nope this is another content word.

The word ‘two’.

This word is interesting because it’s a homophone.

That means it shares a pronunciation with
a different word.

It sounds just like t-o-o.

The number two.

I like it too.

Two.

Too.

Exact same pronunciation.

You might say this is just like t-o that’s
also pronounced ‘two’.

Not really.

Fully pronounced, sure.

But we don’t fully pronounce the word ‘to’.

That one reduces so it’s usually ‘te’, and
not truly a homophone with t-w-o.

We learned the ‘to’ reduction back in the
first video in this series.

It’s number three in the most common
words of American English list.

So the number two, t-w-o will be fully
pronounced in a sentence.

Its pronunciation is simple.

A True T and the OO vowel which has
quite a bit of lip rounding: two.

The OO vowel is tricky because you don’t want to start with your lips in a tight circle.

Two.

Two.

Let them be more relaxed to start, then come in.

Two, two, two.

The game is at two thirty.

Two.

Number 85, a question Word, the word ‘how’.

We already studied ‘What’ at 40, ‘Who’
back at 46, ‘which’ at 48, and ‘when’ at 51.

Question words are generally Stressed.

Let’s look at a few example Sentences.

How did it go?

How tall are you?

How hungry are you?

In all three of these Sentences, ‘how’ was one of the words that was stressed.

How.

How tall?

How tall are you?

How.

How hungry?

How hungry are you?

These words are longer, clearer, and have the up-down shape of stress.

How.

How did it go?

How.

How did it go?

How tall are you?

How hungry are you?

For this word, we have the H sound and
the OW as in now Diphthong.

Make sure your H isn’t too heavy.

How.

How.

Or dropped: ow, ow.

A light easy H, how, then jaw drop, and back of the tongue lifts.

How.

Then lips round.

How.

How did it go?

Number 86 the word ‘our’.

Now, this is a function word and it will reduce.

So when I’m saying the word on its own

and giving it its full clear pronunciation,

our, our, it’s not really how we would be
pronouncing that in a sentence.

But you might think full, clear, that’s good!

That’s how I want to pronounce things.

But remember, good English is made up of contrast.

More clear and less clear words.

So we have to have the less clear words for good contrast,

for good English, for the English to sound natural and understandable.

It’s ironic sometimes we have to pronounce things less clear

for English overall to be more clear and more natural.

This is a pronoun and pronouns are function words.

That is the less clear words.

Let’s look at some example sentences.

What time is our meeting?

Our, our, is our, is our.

What time is our meeting?

Our, our, our.

Now, I can say it with the other
pronunciation with the AW, R pronunciation.

What time is our meeting?

Awr, awr, awr.

What time is our meeting?

Awr, awr, awr.

Our or awr.

Really they sound almost the same, the
two reductions, because I’m saying them so quickly

and that’s really what matters.

Saying it quickly, flat, low in pitch, so that the word is less clear,

so that it doesn’t sound at all like the stressed version.

So that’s what we want, a definite unstressed feeling.

Not ‘our’ but: our, our.

It’s our son’s birthday tomorrow.

It’s our son’s— our, our, our, our.

Listen to how different that is from ‘son’s’ which is stressed.

Our son’s, our son’s.

Unstressed.

Stressed.

Number 87, the word ‘work’.

Work is a verb that’s a Content word and
that’s a word that will be stressed in a sentence.

So this one is longer, clearer, has the up-
down shape of Stress.

Now I know this is one of the hardest words out there.

All of the words with the R vowel is going
to be a tough word for most non-native speakers

because they feel like they should
make a vowel and then an R.

Well let’s learn this right now.

In American English, this symbol is always followed by R and the two symbols together make just one sound.

Rrr— Wo— rrrk.

Don’t drop the R sound and make it something like:
wok, wok, wok.

That’s not clear enough.

We want the R and we want the up-down shape.

Ww— orrrkk.

Work.

Work.

The biggest problem for people is how to make this R.

The lips round but they’re not as rounded
as they were for the W.

So they will relax out some: were, Wor. Wor.

The tongue movement is simple.

The tip is forward for the W and
then the tip pulls back and up a bit.

It’s not a huge movement and your jaw drops just a bit.

Wor.

Wor.

Wor.

Work.

If you know you’re not getting the right sound, one thing to do is to make sure you don’t drop your jaw.

Focus only on the tongue.

Work.

Work.

Work.

I have a video with some illustrations of this vowel, I’ll put a link to that video at the end of this one.

If you struggle with this word or vowel, you’ll definitely want to check it out.

Let’s look at this word in some sentences.

We’ll work it out.

Work.

Work.

She doesn’t work Mondays.

Work.

Work.

Number 88, first.

Interesting another word with this R vowel you see the letter I and you try to do a vowel but don’t.

Don’t do it.

Just the r sound.

Ff— rrr— st.

Ff— rrr— st.

Make your f, pull back the front of the tongue, don’t drop your jaw: fir, fir, and the ST cluster.

First.

First.

Make your s with your teeth together, then lift the tongue tip to touch the roof of the mouth, which stops the air,

then release everything to make the t.

Sst.

Ssst.

As you release the tongue, the teeth part and the air comes through.

Sst -

First.

First of all.

First.

First.

We have a True T in that ending cluster.

First.

If you’ve seen in many of my videos, then you know that the pronunciation of the t can change

depending on the next word.

Here, it’s an ending cluster ST.

A True T, unless it’s followed by a consonant.

Let’s look at two examples.

First, I want to try this.

First, john wants to try this.

First, I want to.

First, I want to.

There, it’s followed by the diphthong AI
and I’m making a True T.

First, ttt.

First, I want to.

And the next sentence: First, John wants to try this.

First, john.

First, john.

Here, I’m linking into a word that begins with a consonant and I’m not making a t sound.

First, John.

So when we have an ending ST cluster

followed by a word that begins with a consonant,

it is very common to drop the t sound.

So this is a content word that means we
normally stress it in a sentence but because of this t

we do sometimes make a reduction by dropping the t for a smoother connection into the next word.

Number 89, the word ‘well’.

We use this word in lots of different ways,
as an adverb, an adjective, or a noun.

They’re all content words where we’ll stress it.

Things are going well.

I wish him well.

All is well.

Well, w consonant, EH as in bed vowel, and the dark L.

Well, uhl, well.

The dark l is made with the back of the tongue pressing down and back a little bit.

Uhl, uhl.

You don’t lift your tongue tip unless maybe you’re going to link into a word that begins with a vowel or diphthong.

Well.

Well.

Well.

Up-down shape of stress.

But this can also be an interjection and then it’s often unstressed.

We use this a lot at the beginning of sentences.

Well, I want to leave by 7:00.

Well, I want to leave.

Well, I want to leave.

Well, well, well.

Well, I want to.

Well, I want to.

It’s really just the w and a quick dark sound.

Wuhl, wuhl, wuhl, wuhl.

I’ve dropped the EH vowel, turned it into a schwa,

which sort of gets lost in the dark l.

Wuhl, wuhl, wuhl.

Try that with me.

Wuhl, wuhl, wuhl.

Well, I want to.

Well, I want to.

Well, I want to.

Well, I want to leave by 7:00.

Well, that’s not what she said.

Well, well.

Well, that’s.

Well, that’s.

Well, that’s not what she said.

So this word can definitely reduce
depending on how it’s being used.

Number 90, the last word for this Video, the word ‘way’.

This is fun.

This reminds me of a video I just made for my online school,

Rachel’s English Academy,

where my dad and I are talking about
my way, your way, the best way, the wrong way.

This is a noun and it’s stressed in a sentence.

It’s fully pronounced and has the up-down
shape of stress.

Way.

W consonant, AY as in say diphthong.

Way.

We’ve had lots of words beginning with W in this video.

Haven’t we?

Work.

Well.

Way.

Lips come together into a tight circle for that W.

Www— way.

Then the ay as in say diphthong.

First, jaw drop.

Wa— way.

Then, the jaw relaxes up as the front of the tongue arches towards the roof of the mouth.

The tip stays down.

Way, way.

Get out of the Way.

We need to find a way to solve this Problem.

You’ve come a long way.

When we were going over the word ‘work’,

I told you that I’d share a link to a video
that goes over this R vowel sound.

This is for the word ‘first’ as well.

Rrr. Rrr.

Click here or in the description below to see that video that goes over that vowel

and has some illustrations so you can see what the tongue is doing inside the mouth.

Let’s keep going down this list of the 100
most common words 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 9。

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
各种各样的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。

如果您还没有看过本系列中的第一个视频和其他视频,我建议您从那里开始。

这些视频建立在下一个之上。

所以点击这里观看视频 1。

我们从数字 81 开始。

“返回”这个词。

名词,动词,这是一个实词,
通常会在句子中重读。

请退后一步。

或者,它来回移动。

请退后一步。

来回。

强调。

后退。

我们有 b 辅音,AH 元音
,最后是 k 音。

舌后抬起触及
软腭并释放。

Kk——回来。

后退。

小心使用元音 AH。

舌根向上伸展。

啊。

下巴掉下来了。

你也可以稍微抬起你的上唇,向后,啊,向后。

后退。

编号 82,“之后”一词。

这个词可以是内容词或
功能词,具体取决于它的使用方式。

所以它可以被强调或不被强调。

我们不会减少这个词,我们
不会改变或删除声音。

让我们看一个例子。

下雨了,所以我们不能去海滩。

好吧,我们去看电影吧。

毕竟,我已经请了一天假。

毕竟。

后。

后。

它在重读音节中有相同的 AH 元音
,不是吗?

啊。 后。

接下来,我们有一个 F,然后是一个非常柔和的 t 音:aft— after。

这是一个真正的 T,但不像 time 这样的重读音节开头那样尖锐或强烈。

Ttt-时间。

所以一个柔和的 t,然后是一个快速的 schwa r 结尾。

平淡,音调低,快速的说道。

后。

后。

通常这个词不会被重读。

例如,在短语“after all”中,我可以强调“all”而不是“after”。

现在听起来是这样的:
毕竟,之后,之后,之后,之后,之后,之后,之后,

重读版本中的重读音节

更长,并且更
具有重读音节的上下形状。

后。

无压力。

之后,之后,之后。

它更平坦,更不清晰,更含糊不清。

让我们看另一句话。

等大家都睡觉了,他就走了。

后离开。

后离开。

后。

后。

后。

吃完饭别紧张,我们走吧。

稍后离开。

后。 后。 后。

无压力。

“离开”和“晚餐”被强调。

晚饭后我们走吧。

晚饭后我们走吧。

后。

所以非重读的词不太清楚,说得更快,而且音调更平缓。

对比的是重读词,它们更长,

重读音节,
在那个音高,那个语调上是一个上下形状。

这种对比造就了好英语。

83 号,使用。

这是根据词性而发音不同的单词之一。

作为名词“use”,尾音是S。

作为动词“use”,尾音是Z。

很多词会
根据词性变化。

例如,名词“house”以
S 音结尾,动词“house”以 Z 结尾。

地址,可以有首音节重音。

地址。

地址。

那是名词。

但是动词有第二个音节重音。

地址。

地址。

利用。

利用。

名词和动词都是实词
,这意味着它们在句子中被强调。

它们都以 JU 双元音开头。

朱,朱。

舌尖压下门牙后部

,舌中部
沿口腔顶部向前压。

哟哟哟哟哟哟

然后,嘴唇圆了。

Juuuu- juu-

“使用”与 s 或“使用”与 z。

什么用途?

名词,或:我稍后会使用它。

一个动词。

第 83 个单词
,这是在句子中可靠重读的第 19 个单词。

这意味着我们已经涵盖了很多
可以不重读甚至减少的单词。

84号呢?

不,这是另一个内容词。

“二”字。

这个词很有趣,因为它是同音字。

这意味着它
与不同的单词共享一个发音。

听起来就像 t-o-o。

第二个。

我也喜欢这个。

二。

也。

发音完全一样。

您可能会说这就像 t-o
也发音为“two”。

并不真地。

完全发音,当然。

但是我们并没有完全发音“to”这个词。

那个减少所以它通常是“te”,而
不是真正的与 t-w-o 的同音字。

我们
在本系列的第一个视频中学习了“to”减少。

它在
美国英语列表中最常用的单词中排名第三。

所以第二个,t-w-o 将
在一个句子中完全发音。

它的发音很简单。

真 T 和 OO 元音,有
相当多的圆唇:两个。

OO 元音很棘手,因为您不想从嘴唇紧圈开始。

二。

二。

让他们开始更放松,然后进来。

二,二,二。

比赛时间是两点三十。

二。

编号 85,一个疑问词,“如何”这个词。

我们已经在 40 岁时研究了“什么”,在 46 岁时研究了“谁
”,在 48 岁时研究了“哪个”,在 51 岁时研究了“何时”。

疑问词通常是重读的。

让我们看几个示例句子。

进展如何?

你有多高?

你有多饿?

在所有这三个句子中,“如何”是强调的词之一。

如何。

多高?

你有多高?

如何。

饿到什么程度?

你有多饿?

这些词更长,更清晰,并且具有上下重音的形状。

如何。

进展如何?

如何。

进展如何?

你有多高?

你有多饿?

对于这个词,我们有 H
音和 OW,就像现在的双元音一样。

确保你的 H 不是太重。

如何。

如何。

或掉落:噢,噢。

轻轻松松的 H,如何,然后下巴下降,舌后部抬起。

如何。

然后嘴唇圆了。

如何。

进展如何?

86 号“我们的”这个词。

现在,这是一个虚词,它会减少。

因此,当我单独说出这个词

并赋予它完整清晰的发音时,

我们的,我们的,这并不是我们
在句子中的发音方式。

但是你可能会认为完整,清楚,这很好!

这就是我想要发音的方式。

但请记住,好的英语是由对比构成的。

更清楚和不太清楚的话。

因此,我们必须使用不太清晰的单词来形成良好的对比,

以获得良好的英语,让英语听起来自然且易于理解。

具有讽刺意味的是,有时我们必须将一些不太清晰的东西发音

,才能使整体英语更清晰、更自然。

这是代词,代词是虚词。

那是不太清楚的话。

让我们看一些例句。

我们几点开会?

我们的,我们的,是我们的,是我们的。

我们几点开会?

我们的,我们的,我们的。

现在,我可以
用 AW、R 发音的其他发音来说它。

我们几点开会?

哎呀哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎。

我们几点开会?

哎呀哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎哎。

我们或 awr。

真的,它们听起来几乎一样,
两个减法,因为我说得太快了

,这真的很重要。

说得快,平,音调低,这样单词就不太清楚了,

所以听起来一点也不像重读的版本。

所以这就是我们想要的,一种明确无压力的感觉。

不是“我们的”,而是:我们的,我们的。

明天是我们儿子的生日。

这是我们儿子的——我们的,我们的,我们的,我们的。

听听这与强调的“儿子”有多么不同。

我们儿子的,我们儿子的。

无压力。

强调。

编号 87,“工作”一词。

工作是一个动词,它是一个内容词
,是一个在句子中会被强调的词。

所以这个更长,更清晰,有
压力的上下形状。

现在我知道这是最难的词之一。 对于大多数非母语人士

来说,所有带有 R 元音的单词都
将是一个艰难的词,

因为他们觉得应该先
发出元音,然后再发出 R。

好吧,让我们现在就来学习一下。

在美式英语中,这个符号后面总是跟着 R,这两个符号合起来只发出一个声音。

Rrr- Wo- rrrk。

不要放弃R的声音,让它像:
wok,wok,wok。

这还不够清楚。

我们想要 R 并且我们想要上下形状。

Ww——orrrkk。

工作。

工作。

对人们来说最大的问题是如何使这个

R。嘴唇是圆的,但
它们不像W那样圆。

所以他们会放松一些:were,Wor。 工作。

舌头的动作很简单。

W 的尖端向前,
然后尖端向后和向上拉一点。

这不是一个巨大的运动,你的下巴只是有点下垂。

工作。

工作。

工作。

工作。

如果您知道自己没有得到正确的声音,那么要做的一件事就是确保您不会掉下巴。

只关注舌头。

工作。

工作。

工作。

我有一个视频,里面有这个元音的一些插图,我会在这个视频的末尾放一个指向那个视频的链接。

如果您对这个单词或元音感到困惑,您肯定会想检查一下。

让我们在一些句子中看一下这个词。

我们会解决的。

工作。

工作。

她星期一不工作。

工作。

工作。

第 88 号,第一个。

另一个有趣的词是这个 R 元音,你看到字母 I,你试着做一个元音,但没有。

不要这样做。

只是 r 的声音。

Ff—rrr—st。

Ff—rrr—st。

做你的f,拉回舌头的前部,不要放下你的下巴:冷杉,冷杉和ST簇。

第一的。

第一的。

用你的牙齿一起做s,然后抬起舌尖接触口腔顶部,这会阻止空气,

然后释放所有东西来做t。

不锈钢。

不锈钢。

当你松开舌头时,牙齿会分开,空气就会通过。

Sst -

首先。

首先。

第一的。

第一的。

我们在那个结束集群中有一个 True T。

第一的。

如果您看过我的许多视频,那么您就会知道 t 的发音会

根据下一个单词而改变。

在这里,它是一个结束簇ST。

一个真 T,除非它后面跟着一个辅音。

让我们看两个例子。

首先,我想试试这个。

首先,约翰想试试这个。

首先,我想。

首先,我想。

在那里,紧随其后的是双元音 AI
,我正在制作 True T。

首先,ttt。

首先,我想。

下一句:首先,约翰想试试这个。

首先,约翰。

首先,约翰。

在这里,我连接到一个以辅音开头的单词,并且我没有发出 t 音。

首先,约翰。

因此,当我们有一个结尾的 ST 簇

后跟一个以辅音开头的单词时,

删除 t 音是很常见的。

所以这是一个实词,这意味着我们
通常在句子中强调它,但正因为如此,

我们有时会通过删除 t 来减少与下一个词的平滑连接。

编号 89,“好”这个词。

我们以许多不同的方式使用这个词,
作为副词、形容词或名词。

它们都是我们要强调的内容。

事情进展顺利。

我祝他好。

一切都很好。

嗯,w辅音,EH作为床元音,还有暗L。

嗯,嗯,嗯。

黑暗的 l 是用舌头的后部向下和向后一点点制成的。

呃,呃。

除非您要链接到以元音或双元音开头的单词,否则您不会抬起舌尖。

好。

好。

好。

应力的上下形状。

但这也可以是感叹词,然后通常不重读。

我们在句子的开头经常使用它。

好吧,我想在 7:00 之前离开。

嗯,我想离开。

嗯,我想离开。

好,好,好。

嗯,我想。

嗯,我想。

它实际上只是 w 和快速的黑暗声音。

呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜呜

我去掉了 EH 元音,把它变成了一个 schwa

,有点迷失在黑暗中 l。

呜呜呜呜呜

跟我一起试试。

呜呜呜呜呜

嗯,我想。

嗯,我想。

嗯,我想。

好吧,我想在 7:00 之前离开。

好吧,她不是这么说的。

好吧。

嗯,就是这样。

嗯,就是这样。

好吧,她不是这么说的。

所以这个词肯定可以减少,
这取决于它的使用方式。

第 90 号,这个视频的最后一个词,“方式”这个词。

这很好玩。

这让我想起了我刚刚为我的在线学校瑞秋英语学院制作的一个视频

,我和爸爸在视频中谈论
我的方式,你的方式,最好的方式,错误的方式。

这是一个名词,它在句子中被强调。

它是完全明显的,并且具有上下
压力的形状。

大大地。

W辅音,AY如双元音。

大大地。

在这个视频中,我们有很多以 W 开头的单词。

我们不是吗?

工作。

好。

大大地。

为了那个 W. Www- 方式,嘴唇聚在一起形成一个紧密的圆圈

然后 ay 就像双元音一样。

首先,下巴掉下来。

哇——方式。

然后,随着舌头前部向口腔顶部拱起,下巴放松。

尖端保持向下。

方式,方式。

避让。

我们需要找到解决这个问题的方法。

你已经走了很长一段路。

当我们讨论“工作”这个词时,

我告诉过你我会分享一个视频的链接,这个
视频会介绍这个 R 元音。

这也适用于“第一”这个词。

嗯。 嗯。

单击此处或在下面的描述中查看该元音的视频

并带有一些插图,以便您可以看到舌头在嘴里的动作。

让我们继续阅读
美式英语中 100 个最常用单词的列表。

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。