Perfect English The most important English words 411

Today, you’re getting video 4 in the 100 most common words in English list.

We’re going over the real pronunciation,

not the full pronunciation,

not the pronunciation you might have been taught,

but the pronunciation that Americans actually use 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 number 31, and yes, it’s a great reduction.

The word OR.

You might have learned that the pronunciation of this word is ‘or’,

like it would rhyme with ‘more’ or the number ‘four’.

But ‘more’ and ‘four’ are content words.

That means they will often be stressed in a sentence, given more time.

‘Or’ is a function word.

That means it’s not stressed in the sentence.

It’s not one of the most important words,

and it’s said very quickly.

Remember, English is a stress-timed language.

That means all syllables are not equal in length.

We have long syllables and short syllables,

and speaking with that contrast is really important

in sounding natural in American English.

So ‘or’ isn’t pronounced

‘or’ in conversation,

that’s too long, it’s too clear.

We need it to be shorter.

It’s actually ‘or’,

said very quickly, low in pitch.

It can also be reduced.

Then it’s pronounced ‘or’,

the vowel reduces to the schwa.

You don’t have to try to make the schwa, it gets absorbed by the R sound.

Just make an R. Rr–

Let’s put it in a sentence:

Would you like white or brown rice?

White or brown?

Would you like white or brown rice?

White or brown?

white-rrr

rr– rr– rr– rr–

Just an R sound linking these two words.

I’m leaving Monday or Tuesday.

Monday-rr. Monday-rr. Rr– rr–

Monday or Tuesday.

Just an extra R sound between.

Great rhythmic contrast.

If you’re just jumping into the series,

you may be thinking,

how important are reductions,

how frequent are reductions?

Out of the 31 most common words in English that we’ve studied so far,

only one is always stressed.

Thirty are usually unstressed or reduced.

So there’s your answer.

Most common words: What’s 32?

The indefinite article ‘an’. An.

Unstressed, it reduces to the schwa, an– an–

we actually already covered that one

when we learned about the indefinite article ‘a’ or ‘a’

back in video one of this series.

33: Will.

If this is the only verb in the sentence –

I will.

He will.

–then it’s stressed.

But most of the time it’s not the only verb,

it’s used to indicate something in the future.

I like fishing.

That’s right now, present.

I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.

This is the future.

The word ‘will’ is usually written and spoken in a contraction.

I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.

“I will” becomes “I’ll”,

but I reduced it. I’ll– I’ll–

I’ll like fishing—

just like the word “all”,

said very quickly.

I’ll, I’ll, I’ll.

I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.

What other WILL contractions might you hear?

You’ll, we’ll pronounce this more like ‘yull’.

He’ll, in a sentence, this will sound more like ‘hill’ or ‘hull’.

He’ll be coming by at three. He’ll.

She will. She’ll.

This can be reduced: she’ll or shull.

She’ll have the report ready soon. She’ll.

“It will” becomes “it’ll”,

with a Flap T.

This is just like the word “little” without the L.

These are both tough words,

and I have a video on the word ‘little’

which might make this contraction easier to pronounce.

I’ll put a link here and in the description below.

This schwa-L ending,

the contraction of WILL,

can go at the end of any third person singular noun:

“the dog” becomes “the dog’ll”:

The dog’ll need to be walked soon.

“Tuesday” becomes “Tuesday’ll”.

Tuesday’ll be better.

“John will” becomes “John’ll”.

John’ll be here soon.

Note: in writing, these might show up as a misspelling, as not a word.

But this is how we speak.

This contraction, this reduction of will.

If it’s a pronoun, like “she’ll”,

then it’s not considered a misspelling.

But this is a case where how we speak English is different from how we write it.

It’s common to reduce, and say: John’ll.

“John’ll be here at three”

rather than “John will be there at three.”

We will, “We’ll”,

You might here this as: we’ll or wull.

Two different reductions.

We’ll be late.

We’ll be late.

“They will”, “they’ll”,

often reduce and sound like “thull”.

They’ll be hungry when they get here.

Third person plural, again,

if you write this as a contraction, it will show up as a misspelling,

but speaking this way is very common.

“The kids will” becomes “The kids’ll”.

The kids’ll be tired.

The kids’ll be tired.

A dark L at the end of the word.

Wow. There was a lot to talk about with the word “will”

because of the way it contracts and reduces with so many different words!

Number 34: My.

A possessive pronoun.

This is my boyfriend.

My shirt’s too big.

We don’t reduce it, we don’t change or drop one of the sounds,

but it is unstressed.

This is the word’s most common use.

But, it can be used another way.

It can be used as an expression or an interjection to show surprise:

Oh my!

Maybe it’s even showing a little disapproval.

My!

In these cases, it would be stressed,

it would be longer, it would have the up-down shape of stress.

Number 35 in the 100 Most common words list: one.

It’s a little word, but it has a lot of different uses.

As a noun or an adjective,

it will probably be stressed.

For example:

We’re looking for one teacher to join our team.

One.

But it can also be used as a pronoun,

and in that case you might hear it reduced.

Instead of “one”, it will be ‘un’.

I need a new phone, this one’s going to die.

This un— this un— this un—

This one’s going to die.

This one’s going to last longer, but that one’s cheaper.

That un—this un–

Did you notice the pronunciation?

This un—that un—

nn—nn—nn–

The apostrophe S is for the contraction IS.

This ‘uns’, that ‘uns’.

Now, you don’t have to pronounce this this way,

you can say “this one’s, that one’s”.

But you’ll definitely hear Americans occasionally reduce the word to ‘un’.

Number 36. The word ‘all’.

This one, I would say, is usually going to be stressed and a little longer.

It’s most commonly used as an adjective,

or a noun, or an adverb.

Did you eat all the cake?

We’ve been having all sorts of problems.

So here we are, number 36.

The 36th most common words in English,

and this is only the second word that doesn’t have a reduction,

or isn’t unstressed in some cases.

Wow.

The other one was “say” back at number 28.

What does this mean?

Many of the most common words in English

are words that are unstressed or reduced.

If you ignore these, you can never sound natural,

because they are everywhere.

And chances are, when you learned the words,

you did not learn the reductions,

and you did not learn how to make them unstressed.

So we’re trying to fix that now.

Let’s keep going, number 37. The word “would”.

I’m actually going to also work on 67 at the same time, the word “could”.

And I’ll throw in as a bonus,

a word that’s not on the list, the word “should”.

Actually, as with many of the reductions on this list,

I’ve made a video that goes over these pronunciations.

Should I just put it in here?

Would you like to see it?

Should. Would.

It is a good one, it’s useful! Let’s watch!

These words all rhyme.

The pronunciation is simpler than it looks.

The L is silent.

So they all have their beginning consonant,

the OO as in Book vowel, and the D sound.

Should.

Would.

Could.

They rhyme with ‘good’,

‘hood’, and ‘wood’.

Yes, ‘would’ and ‘wood’ are pronounced the same.

They’re homophones.

So this is the pronunciation of these words in full.

But as you know, Americans like to reduce less important words in a sentence

to make the important words stand out more

and these are three words that can be reduced.

As with many reductions,

we change the vowel to the schwa and speed up the word.

Should.

Should.

Would.

Would.

Could. Could.

You’ll hear Americans go further though and drop the D.

I noticed I did this when I was doing a Ben Franklin exercise on some of my own speech.

Should we get dinner?

Yeah!

Should we get dinner?

One of the things I noticed is I’m dropping the D sound.

Shou we— shou we–

Should. Should.

Just the SH sound and the schwa.

The lips are flared and the teeth are together. Sshhh—

the tongue tip is pointing up to the roof of the mouth but it’s not touching it.

Sshhhuuu—shhu—

Then, for the schwa, everything relaxes

and you go into the next sound: shuh– shuh– shuh we–

Should we call her?

Should we. Should we.

I should go.

Should go. Should go.

I should go.

Now, if the next sound is a vowel or a diphthong,

I wouldn’t drop the D.

It would be too unclear to go from the schwa into another vowel.

So for: Should I? Should I?

For example, I make a really quick flap of the tongue for the D.

Should I. Should I.

Should I say that?

Should I try it?

Should I call him?

If dropping the D seems like too extreme of a reduction for you, you certainly don’t have to do it.

Just keep ‘should’ unstressed,

really quick: should, should, should.

Now, let’s look at ‘could’.

The K sound is made when the back part of the tongue

comes up and touches the soft palate in the back.

K, k, k, k.

Could we try later?

Could we? Could we?

Again, just dropping the D.

K sound, schwa, next word.

Could we? Could we?

Saying it with a D when the next word begins with a vowel or a dipthong .

Could I? Could I come back later?

Could I? Could I?

So just a nice, short, could.

Finally, would.

For the W sound, the lips are in a tight circle,

and the back part of the tongue lifts.

Ww—ww—wuh–

Would we want to do that?

Would we? Would we?

Would we want to do that?

Or with a really quick D sound.

Where would I go? Would I– Would I– Would I–

So you can reduce these words by changing the vowel to the schwa.

You can reduce them further by dropping the D,

unless the next sound is a vowel or a diphthong.

Number 38.

Actually, we’re going to do 38 and 39 at the same because

they’re homophones!

What are homophones?

Words that are spelled differently and have different meanings

but that are pronounced exactly the same.

38 is ‘there’

and 39 is ‘they’re’.

If homophones seem confusing to you,

you’re not the only one.

I actually have a very long video

that goes over many homophones in American English,

you can click here to see it, or check the video description.

There, they’re.

Fully pronounced, we have “there”.

But, both of these can reduce.

The word ‘there’ can be used lots of different ways,

and a common way is the phrase “there is” or “there are”.

These phrases will often be in contraction,

“there’s” and the “there’re”.

But these contractions can reduce when we say them.

Then it becomes “thurs” and “thur”.

There’s a good reason why I can’t tell you.

There’s a good reason–

There’s, there’s, there’s.

It has the schwa rather than the EH vowel.

It’s said more quickly.

The contraction “there are” gets even less clear,

it’s really just one syllable “thur”.

R reduces, and we lose it.

It has the same sounds as the reduced “there”, so it blends in.

There’re lots of reason why I can’t tell you.

There’re lots. There’re. There’re.

There’re lots of reasons.

What about the contraction “they are”, “they’re”?

Yes, that also reduces.

It might not be pronounced “they’re”,

but instead, “thur”, with the schwa.

They’re in the kitchen.

Thur, thur.

They’re in the kitchen.

And the last word for this video, number 40, “what”.

This word can reduce.

Fully pronounced, it’s “what”,

and the T is a Flap T if the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong:

what are you going to do?

What are, what are.

Rrrr— Flap.

The T is a Stop T if the next word begins with a consonant:

What were you thinking?

What were, what were.

Stop T.

But, if the next word begins with a D,

then we can reduce the word ‘what’ by dropping the T.

Make the vowel a schwa.

So the word ‘what’ becomes a very quick “wuh, wuh”.

“What did” and “what do”

are common word combinations where we do this.

What do you think?

What do, what do, what do.

The word ‘what’ is simply ‘wuh’.

What did you say?

What did, what did, what did.

Again, the word ‘what’ is simply ‘wuh’, wuh.

So there they are, words 31-40,

we had a lot of reductions in there.

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 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,您将在英语列表中最常用的 100 个单词中获得视频 4。

我们要讨论的是真正的

发音,不是完整的发音,

也不是你可能学过

的发音,而是美国人在英语口语中实际使用的发音。

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。

我们从 31 开始这个视频,是的,这是一个很大的减少。

或这个词。

你可能已经知道这个词的发音是“或”,

就像它与“更多”或数字“四”押韵一样。

但“更多”和“四”是实词。

这意味着如果有更多的时间,它们通常会在一个句子中被强调。

‘或’是虚词。

这意味着它在句子中没有强调。

这不是最重要的词之一,

而且说得很快。

请记住,英语是一种压力适时的语言。

这意味着所有音节的长度都不相等。

我们有长音节和短音节,

用这种对比说话对于

在美式英语中听起来自然非常重要。

所以

“或”在对话中不发音“或”,

那太长了,太清楚了。

我们需要它更短。

它实际上是“或”,

很快地说,音调很低。

它也可以减少。

然后发音为“或”

,元音减少为schwa。

您不必尝试制作 schwa,它会被 R 声音吸收。

做一个R. Rr–

让我们用一句话来表达:

你要白米还是糙米?

白色还是棕色?

你要白米还是糙米?

白色还是棕色?

white-rrr

rr– rr– rr– rr–

只是连接这两个词的 R 音。

我星期一或星期二要离开。

星期一-rr。 星期一-rr。 Rr– rr–

星期一或星期二。

之间只是一个额外的R声音。

节奏鲜明的对比。

如果你刚刚进入这个系列,

你可能会想,

减少有多重要,减少的

频率有多高?

到目前为止,在我们研究过的 31 个最常见的英语单词中,

只有一个总是重读的。

三十个通常是无压力的或减少的。

所以这就是你的答案。

最常见的词:什么是 32?

不定冠词“an”。 一个。

不强调,它简化为 schwa,

一个 -

当我们在本系列的视频之一中了解到不定冠词“a”或“a”

时,我们实际上已经涵盖了那个。

33:意志

如果这是句子中唯一的动词——

我会的。

他会的。

——然后压力很大。

但大多数时候它不是唯一的动词,

它用于表示未来的某事。

我喜欢钓鱼。

就是现在,现在。

当我了解更多信息时,我会喜欢钓鱼。

这就是未来。

“will”这个词通常以缩略形式书写和说出。

当我了解更多信息时,我会喜欢钓鱼。

“我会”变成“我会”,

但我减少了它。

我会——我会——我会喜欢钓鱼——

就像“所有”这个词一样,

很快地说。

我会,我会,我会。

当我了解更多信息时,我会喜欢钓鱼。

您还会听到哪些其他的 WILL 收缩?

你会的,我们会把这个发音更像“yull”。

他会在一句话中,这听起来更像是“山”或“船体”。

他三点钟会过来。 地狱。

她会。 壳。

这可以减少:她会或不会。

她很快就会准备好报告。 壳。

“It will”变成“it’ll”,

带有 Flap T。

这就像没有 L 的“little”这个词。

这些都是很难的词

,我有一个关于“little”这个词的视频,

这可能会使这个 收缩更容易发音。

我将在此处和下面的描述中放置一个链接。

这个 schwa-L 结尾,

即 WILL 的缩写,

可以放在任何第三人称单数名词的结尾:

“the dog”变成“the dog’ll”:

The dog’ll need to be walk soon。

“星期二”变成了“星期二”。

周二会更好。

“约翰威尔”变成了“约翰威尔”。

约翰很快就会到。

注意:在写作中,这些可能会显示为拼写错误,而不是单词。

但这就是我们说话的方式。

这种收缩,这种意志的减少。

如果它是代词,例如“she’ll”,

则不被视为拼写错误。

但在这种情况下,我们说英语的方式与我们写英语的方式不同。

减少并说:John’ll 是很常见的。

“约翰三点到”

而不是“约翰三点到”。

We will, “We’ll”,

你可能在这里这样写:we’ll or wull。

两种不同的减法。

我们快迟到了。

我们快迟到了。

“他们会”,“他们会”,

通常会减少并且听起来像“thull”。

他们到了这里就会饿了。

第三人称复数,再一次,

如果你把这个写成一个缩写,它会显示为一个拼写错误,

但这样说话是很常见的。

“孩子们会”变成“孩子们会”。

孩子们会累的。

孩子们会累的。

单词末尾的黑色 L。

哇。 “意志”这个词有很多话要说,

因为它用这么多不同的词收缩和减少!

34 号:我的。

所有格代词。

这是我的男朋友。

我的衬衫太大了。

我们不会减少它,我们不会改变或删除其中一个声音,

但它是无重音的。

这是这个词最常见的用法。

但是,它可以以另一种方式使用。

它可以用作表达或感叹词来表示惊讶:

哦,我的!

也许它甚至表现出一点不赞成。

我的!

在这些情况下,它会受到压力,

它会更长,它会具有上下压力的形状。

100 个最常用词列表中的第 35 位:一。

这是一个小词,但它有很多不同的用途。

作为名词或形容词,

它可能会被强调。

例如:

我们正在寻找一位老师加入我们的团队。

一。

但它也可以用作代词

,在这种情况下,您可能会听到它的减少。

而不是“one”,而是“un”。

我需要一部新手机,这个会死的。

这个联合国——这个联合国——这个联合国——

这个人要死了。

这个会持续更长时间,但那个更便宜。

that un-this un-

你注意到发音了吗?

this un-that un-

nn-nn-

nn– 撇号 S 表示收缩 IS。

这个“不”,那个“不”。

现在,您不必这样发音,

您可以说“this one’s, that one’s”。

但你肯定会听到美国人偶尔将这个词简化为“un”。

编号 36。“所有”这个词。

我会说,这个通常会受到压力并且时间更长。

它最常用作形容词、

名词或副词。

你吃完了所有的蛋糕吗?

我们遇到了各种各样的问题。

所以我们在这里,第 36 号。

英语中第 36 个最常用的词

,这只是第二个没有减少的词,

或者在某些情况下不是不重读的词。

哇。

另一个是在第 28 位“说”。

这是什么意思?

英语中许多最常见的

词都是不重读或减少的词。

如果你忽略这些,你永远不会听起来自然,

因为它们无处不在。

很可能,当你学习这些单词时,

你并没有学会减少

,你也没有学会如何让它们不重读。

所以我们现在正试图解决这个问题。

让我们继续,第 37 号。“会”这个词。

我实际上也将同时在 67 上工作,“可以”这个词。

作为奖励,我会加入一个

不在列表中的词,即“应该”这个词。

实际上,与此列表中的许多减少一样,

我制作了一个视频来介绍这些发音。

我应该把它放在这里吗?

你想看看吗?

应该。 将。

不错,很好用! 让我们来看吧!

这些话都押韵。

发音比看起来简单。

L沉默了。

因此,它们都有自己的起始辅音,

如 Book 元音中的 OO,以及 D 音。

应该。

将。

可以。

它们与“good”、

“hood”和“wood”押韵。

是的,“would”和“wood”的发音相同。

他们是同音字。

所以这是这些单词的完整发音。

但是如你所知,美国人喜欢减少句子中不太重要的词,

以使重要的词更加突出

,这三个词是可以减少的。

与许多减少一样,

我们将元音更改为 schwa 并加快单词速度。

应该。

应该。

将。

将。

可以。 可以。

你会听到美国人走得更远,放弃了 D。

我注意到我在做本富兰克林练习时这样做了。

我们应该吃晚饭吗?

是的!

我们应该吃晚饭吗?

我注意到的一件事是我放弃了 D 音。

我们

应该——我们应该——应该。 应该。

只有SH的声音和schwa。

嘴唇张开,牙齿齐齐。 嘘——

舌尖指向上颚,但没有碰到上颚。

嘘——嘘——

然后,对于施瓦,一切都放松了

,你进入下一个声音:嘘——嘘——嘘

我们——我们应该打电话给她吗?

我们应该吗。 我们应该吗。

我应该走了。

应该去。 应该去。

我应该走了。

现在,如果下一个声音是元音或双元音,

我不会放弃 D。

从 schwa 转到另一个元音会太不清楚。

所以:我应该吗? 我是不是该?

例如,我为 D 做了一个非常快速的舌头拍打

。我应该。我应该。

我应该说吗?

我应该试试吗?

我应该打电话给他吗?

如果降低 D 对您来说似乎过于极端,您当然不必这样做。

只是保持“应该”不被强调,

非常快:应该,应该,应该。

现在,让我们看看“可以”。

当舌头的后部

抬起并触及背部的软腭时发出K音。

ķ,ķ,ķ,ķ。

我们以后可以试试吗?

我们能? 我们能?

再一次,只是放弃

D.K 声音,schwa,下一个词。

我们能? 我们能?

当下一个单词以元音或双元音开头时,用 D 说。

我可否? 我可以晚点回来吗?

我可否? 我可否?

所以只是一个不错的,简短的,可以。

最后,愿意。

对于 W 音,双唇紧闭

,舌后部抬起。

Ww-ww-

wuh- 我们想这样做吗?

我们会吗? 我们会吗?

我们愿意这样做吗?

或者带有非常快的 D 音。

我要去哪里? 我会– 我会– 我会–

所以你可以通过将元音改为 schwa 来减少这些词。

除非下一个声音是元音或双元音,否则您可以通过降低 D 来进一步减少它们。

数字 38。

实际上,我们将同时做 38 和 39,因为

它们是同音字!

什么是同音字?

拼写不同且含义不同

但发音完全相同的单词。

38 是“那里”

,39 是“他们在”。

如果同音字让您感到困惑,

那么您不是唯一一个。

我其实有一个很长的视频

,里面有很多美式英语同音字,

你可以点击这里查看,或者查看视频说明。

在那里,他们在。

完全发音,我们有“那里”。

但是,这两者都可以减少。

“there”这个词有很多不同的用法

,常见的用法是短语“there is”或“there are”。

这些短语通常会收缩,

“there’s”和“there’re”。

但是当我们说这些收缩时,它们会减少。

然后它变成“thurs”和“thur”。

我不能告诉你是有充分理由的。

有一个很好的理由——

有,有,有。

它有 schwa 而不是 EH 元音。

它说得更快。

收缩“there are”变得更加模糊,

它实际上只是一个音节“thur”。

R减少了,我们失去了它。

它与简化的“there”具有相同的声音,所以它融入其中。

我不能告诉你的原因有很多。

有很多。 有。 有。

有很多原因。

那么收缩“他们是”,“他们是”呢?

是的,这也减少了。

它可能不会发音为“他们是”

,而是用 schwa 发音为“thur”。

他们在厨房里。

周四,周四。

他们在厨房里。

这个视频的最后一个词,第 40 号,“什么”。

这个词可以减少。

完全发音,它是“what”,

如果下一个单词以元音或双元音开头,则 T 是 Flap T:

你要做什么?

是什么,是什么。

Rrrr——襟翼。

如果下一个单词以辅音开头,则 T 是停止 T:

你在想什么?

什么是,什么是。

停止 T。

但是,如果下一个单词以 D 开头,

那么我们可以通过删除 T 来减少单词“what”。

使元音成为 schwa。

所以“what”这个词很快就变成了“wuh, wuh”。

“做了什么”和“做什么”

是我们这样做的常见单词组合。

你怎么认为?

做什么,做什么,做什么。

‘what’这个词就是‘wuh’。

你说什么?

做了什么,做了什么,做了什么。

同样,“什么”这个词只是“呜”,呜。

所以他们在那里,第 31-40 字,

我们在那里有很多减少。

让我们继续阅读这个 100 个最常用的英语单词列表来研究发音

,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。