PERFECT PRONUNCIATION 5 Powerful Tips for the TH Sound Learn English Fluently Rachels English

The TH sound is one of the trickiest for my students to master,

and in this video you’re going to get 5 powerful “aha tips” to turn on the light bulb so you can master this sound.

After the tips we’ll do some comparisons and you’ll see me trying to teach my toddler this sound.

I’m going over the tips I use when I’m working with a student.

As you’re actually practicing the TH and getting it, this will  be what you’ll want to watch.

These tips will help you finally get this
really tough sound.

You may have already seen my how-to video on the TH, a great video with illustrations and up-close,

slow motion views of the mouth.

I’ll link to that at the end of the video if
you want to see it again.

Tip 1:  TH is not a stop consonant.

Voiced, unvoiced, it’s the same:  it’s a free flow of air.

I’ve worked with many students who put pressure into their sound, which stops the air.

Then it sounds like this:  th, th, th.

A release.

We don’t want a stop and release, we want a gentle, free flow of air.

Th, th, th.

Try that with me now.

Th, th.

So, no stop, no pressure.

Tip 2, and this will help with the light free flow of air:

It’s just the very tip of the tongue that
comes through the teeth.

I’ve seen lots of students really working on the TH, and they bring too much of their tongue out.

That makes it harder to have a lighter sound.

Here is an excerpt from a live class where
I’m talking about this.

I think it’s possible that more of your
tongue is coming out than it needs to.

Think, it’s not this, it’s instead this, right, it’s very subtle. Let me get my camera here,

I’m gonna bring the camera to my
mouth rather than vice versa.

So, some people will do the T-H like this.

That’s way too much tongue, it should be this.

That’s not very much coming through, is it?

The, the, the, that’s not, thank you, the, the.

We never want anything like that, it’s so much the tip, the tip, the, the, the, the.

Tip 3:  One idea that I’ve seen help students is change how you think of it:

don’t think of it as the tongue tip coming
through the teeth.

Think of it as the very top of the tongue pressing up on the bottom of the top front teeth.

So this part, pressing lightly up here, th, th, th.

That helps the bottom of the jaw be less tight up against the teeth and allows for that free flow of air.

So the tongue does come through the teeth, but just changing your idea about the point of contact

can really help.

Th, th, just a light press up on the bottom
of the top front teeth.

Watch a student making an adjustment:

And also another thing is and I know you’re doing it extra hard because we’re working on it

but we shouldn’t be pressing too much air into it.

There’s not that much air in a T-H.

Let me hear you just do that.

Right, and even that might be a little too much air.

So, you can think of taking some pressure
out it’s a little bit easier.

And another thing can help with the T-H.

Rather than thinking about the tongue
coming between the teeth,

think about the tongue-tip lightly touching the top teeth, the bottoms of them.

So, you think of this being your point of contact rather than both. Just think about the top.

Right, right, that sounds a little bit
better. It sounds a little bit lighter to me.

It sounds like there’s little bit less pressure maybe.

And for some people that can just be simplifying.

Okay, I’m not thinking of it coming through the teeth

but I’m just thinking of it lifting and it just,
like, peaks out as it lifts

and touches the bottom of the top front teeth.

And that just little adjustment can sometimes really make the difference it it being more relaxed.

Tip 4:  There is a voiced and an unvoiced
version of this sound.

Position is the same (sort of!  See tip 5!).

This is true of a lot of sound pairs in
English, P and B, S and Z,

but we tend to think of those as two separate sounds.

For both TH sounds, we call them the TH, but there are still two of them.

So, TH, unvoiced when you just let air through, th– or th– th– TH when you make a vocal sound, it’s voiced,

th– th– So the TH in ‘thin’ is a different sound than the TH in ‘this’.

Th– ‘thin’ it’s unvoiced, and th– ‘this’ th– it’s voiced.

Tip 5:  there is a shortcut you can do for the voiced TH when it begins an unstressed word.

This happens a lot,

because the most common word in English, THE, begins with the voiced TH and is unstressed.

For these cases, you don’t actually need to bring the tongue tip through the teeth.

You can press it behind the teeth.

Watch me talk about it in a lesson:

And if it’s a word like the, or that, or this, that’s unstressed then it’s even,

it often doesn’t even come through. It would be this, the, the and you can see, it’s pressing there

you can see it through the teeth.

But it’s not actually coming through.

We do that with the word, the, all the time.

It really helps seeing it up close like that, doesn’t it?

That last one is a tip that really makes a big difference:  you don’t actually need to bring the tongue tip

through the teeth because in those unstressed words, we want to make them so short,

we just don’t want to take the time to bring the tip all the way through.

Practice the word ‘the’ with me,

and make sure your tongue is touching behind the teeth, not coming all the way through.

The, the, the, the, the, the, the, the.

Notice how quickly I’m making that:  the, the.

The best, the only, the kitchen, the subway, the video, the other.

the, the, the, the, the.

Now let’s do some comparisons.

If you don’t have this sound in your own language,

there is a good chance you’re substituting a different sound for it.

For the voiced TH, the most common mistake is to make a D sound instead.

So ‘brother’ sounds like ‘bruder’, and ‘the’ sounds like ‘de’.

Now, these might sound the same to you, but they sound different to native speakers.

So if you know the difference in tongue position, you should still be able to make the sound correctly.

The tongue tip is making light contact, you don’t stop the air of course for the TH.

For the D, tongue tip is at the roof of the mouth.

And you do stop the air.

Da- da-.

And you know the shortcut for words like ‘the’ from tip 5: the tongue tip presses against the backs of teeth,

but that’s still not lifted, it’s still not at the roof of the mouth, because that would be a D.

A common mistake is to make the F instead of the unvoiced TH.

Th– instead of th–.

My son Stoney does this. He’s three,

and it’s the only sound he can’t get yet.

He substitutes other sounds. For example, he’ll say ‘hing’ instead of ‘thing’,

and he’ll say ‘marfa’ instead of ‘Martha’.

He’ll say ‘free’ instead of ‘three’.

When you’re mistakenly substituting the F for TH, it’s something you can see.

Your bottom lip is doing the work, that’s the F.

Ff– ff– free.

You know that’s wrong for the unvoiced TH, the tongue tip has to come through the teeth.

Th– th– three.

Watch me try to have Stoney do this.

Stoney and I are trying to learn the TH sound, and we’re using the name Martha,

and Stoney keeps making an F sound and
saying Marfa, let me see.

Marfa.

Right, that’s an F.

Now watch me, honey.

See my tongue?

Can you try? Leave it out.

 Leave it out.
Marfa!

You want to look on there?

Marfa.

So you’re going Marf–, you’re using your
lip, but you want to use your tongue.

Try your tongue.

Put your tongue through your teeth.

No, almost.

Okay, bring your tongue tip through your teeth.

Can you do that?

Marfa.

No, it’s not Marfa. Watch this, Stoney, do it
with your tongue.

Sticker, mommy.

Did you see your sticker on the video?

Yeah.

One more time.

Okay, we’re gonna keep working on that because you’re making an F instead of a TH.

I never did get him to bring the tongue tip
through the teeth.

Every time he tried, it was just the bottom
lip that did the work.

And finally S and Z.  It’s really common to substitute these two sounds for the TH.

S for the unvoiced TH, and Z for the voiced TH.

So ‘think’ sounds like ‘sink’:  What do you ‘sink’?

And ‘the’ sounds like ‘zee’:  ‘Zee only’.

Here I’m working with a student who has a hard time making two definite and different sounds, S and TH.

I talk about how to work on creating two distinct, clear, accurate sounds.

It does take time, you’re changing muscle memory and habit, but it’s worth it.

After you put in that work and that time, you have what you wanted.

Okay, so, let me hear you say, think.

Think.

Good. Let me hear you say, sink.

Sink.

Okay, now I’m saying it with an S, sink.

Sink.

Okay, that sounds like a T-H to me.

So, let’s get back to the S sound being
really focused right here.

Yes, sink.

Sink.

Right.

Okay, so, that’s the S.

Now, let’s switch back to the TH, tongue lightly touching the bottom of the top front teeth, think.

Think.

Right. And now, back to an S, teeth together, really focused sound, sink.

Sink.

Right.

Good, okay, when this class goes into the Academy,

which it usually takes one to two weeks,
come back and watch this part.

We’re moving really slowly, really intentionally,

thinking about the sound first, thinking about the position and then saying it.

And now they’re becoming more clear. TH is becoming much more TH, S becoming much more S.

And so, I think you’re gonna have to work that slowly here for a while.

And what I would do, is I would do some where you’re doing a minimal pair like this, think, sink,

and really think about the position before you make it. But then I would also take some days

where you just go work on S.

And that entire time, you’re thinking about
a very narrow, focused S sound.

And then days where you’re just working on TH.

And there you’re thinking about light, no
pressure in the sound

and the bottom of the top front teeth being your contact.

So, I think that you know, you’ve said you’ve done a lot of work but to me the two sounds weren’t distinct.

And so, you may have been really solidifying something that was not clear.

And so, now we need to stop practicing over and over, and just practice on the clarity

which is very slow like you’ve seen.

Stopping, thinking of a position, making it.

But then it was really cleaning up the sounds and they were really starting to sound more accurate, more clear.

So, spend your time being very intentional.

And then you can say, okay, now I’m taking the S, I’m feeling more confident in the S.

And you can do more of the listen and repeat, where you’re being less intentional

and you’re just going on what you hear.

But I think for now, because it’s a strong habit, of sort of a TH-S mix.

Because that’s a habit, it’s important to really stop, think before you make the sound.

And that’s very tedious but that phase won’t last too long if you really do it.

If you really dedicate your time to that, it
will start to become a habit,

the sounds will start to be more clear for you.

Now you heard me talking about
practicing in the Academy.

That’s my online school where I’ve developed all kinds of materials to help my students train,

change their muscle memory, develop the right sounds, rhythm, and intonation of American English.

That’s also where I teach these live
classes once a month.

It is the best way to improve your listening comprehension and pronunciation of American English.

I’ll put a link here and also in the video description, so that you can join if you’d like.

I have students from all over the world,
come join me in the Academy.

I hope this video has helped!  Now go
work on the TH sounds.

And please use the Comments to tell me about why this video was helpful.

Which of these Tips do you think is the
most important and why?

What specific teaching will you be putting into action?

And here’s the lesson I told you about at
the beginning of this video,

the how-to video on these sounds.

Be sure to check it out if you haven’t seen it before.

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

TH 声音是我的学生最难掌握的声音之一

,在本视频中,您将获得 5 个强大的“啊哈技巧”来打开灯泡,这样您就可以掌握这种声音。

在提示之后,我们将进行一些比较,你会看到我试图教我的孩子这个声音。

我将回顾与学生一起工作时使用的技巧。

当您实际练习 TH 并获得它时,这将是您想要观看的内容。

这些技巧将帮助您最终获得这种
非常硬朗的声音。

您可能已经在 TH 上看过我的操作视频,这是一个很棒的视频,带有插图和嘴巴的近距离

慢动作视图。

如果你想再看一遍,我会在视频末尾链接到
它。

提示 1:TH 不是塞音。

有声,无声,都是一样的:它是自由流动的空气。

我曾与许多学生一起工作,他们对声音施加压力,从而使空气停止。

然后听起来像这样:th,th,th。

一个释放。

我们不想要停止和释放,我们想要温和、自由的空气流动。

日,日,日。

现在和我一起试试。

钍,钍。

所以,没有停止,没有压力。

提示 2,这将有助于空气的轻微自由流动:


只是通过牙齿的舌尖。

我已经看到很多学生真的在 TH 上努力,他们把太多的舌头吐出来了。

这使得获得更轻的声音变得更加困难。

这是我正在谈论的现场课程的摘录

我认为你的
舌头可能比需要的更多。

想想,不是这个,而是这个,对,它非常微妙。 让我把相机

拿来,我会把相机带到
嘴边,反之亦然。

所以,有些人会像这样做 T-H。

话太多了,应该是这个。

这不是很顺利,是吗?

那个,那个,那个,那不是,谢谢,那个,那个。

我们从不想要那样的东西,它就是小费,小费,那个,那个,那个,那个。

提示 3:我看到的一个对学生有帮助的想法是改变你对它的看法:

不要把它想象成舌尖
穿过牙齿。

把它想象成舌头的最顶部压在上前牙的底部。

所以这部分,轻轻地压在这里,th,th,th。

这有助于下颌底部不那么紧贴牙齿,并允许空气自由流动。

所以舌头确实是从牙齿里出来的,但是仅仅改变你对接触点的想法

真的很有帮助。

Th,th,只需轻轻按压
上门牙的底部。

观看学生进行调整:

还有一件事是,我知道您正在加倍努力,因为我们正在努力,

但我们不应该给它施加太多的空气。

T-H 里没有那么多空气。

让我听到你这样做。

是的,即使这样也可能有点过多的空气。

因此,您可以考虑减轻一些压力
,这样会更容易一些。

另一件事可以帮助 T-H。

与其想舌头
在牙齿之间,不如

想想舌尖轻轻接触上牙齿,它们的底部。

因此,您认为这是您的联系点,而不是两者兼而有之。 只考虑顶部。

对,对,听起来
好一点。 对我来说听起来有点轻。

听起来压力可能会小一些。

对于某些人来说,这只是在简化。

好吧,我没想到它会从牙齿中出来,

但我只是想它会抬起来,
就像它抬起

并接触到上前牙的底部一样,它会达到顶峰。

只是一点点调整有时就可以真正发挥作用,因为它更放松。

提示 4:此声音有浊音和清音
版本。

位置是一样的(有点!见技巧 5!)。

英语中的很多声音对都是如此
,P 和 B,S 和 Z,

但我们倾向于将它们视为两个独立的声音。

对于这两个 TH 声音,我们称它们为 TH,但仍然有两个。

所以,TH,当你让空气通过时

是清音的 比“this”中的 TH。

th-‘thin’ 它是清音的,而 th–‘this’ th– 它是有声的。

提示 5:当浊音 TH 开始一个不重读的单词时,您可以为它做一个捷径。

这种情况经常发生,

因为英语中最常见的单词 THE 以浊音 TH 开头并且没有重读。

对于这些情况,您实际上不需要将舌尖穿过牙齿。

你可以把它按在牙齿后面。

看我在课上谈论它

:如果它是这样的词,或者那个,或者这个,那是没有重读的,那么它是偶数,

它通常甚至不会出现。 就是这个,那个,那个,你可以看到,它压在那里,

你可以透过牙齿看到它。

但它实际上并没有通过。

我们一直用“the”这个词来做到这一点。

像这样近距离观察它真的很有帮助,不是吗?

最后一个是真正有很大不同的提示:您实际上不需要将舌尖

穿过牙齿,因为在那些没有重读的单词中,我们想让它们变得如此短,

我们只是不想采取 是时候把小费一路带过来了。

和我一起练习“the”这个词,

并确保你的舌头接触到牙齿后面,而不是一直穿过。

那个、那个、那个、那个、那个、那个、那个、那个。

请注意我做的速度有多快:那个,那个。

最好的,唯一的,厨房,地铁,视频,其他。

那个,那个,那个,那个,那个。

现在让我们做一些比较。

如果您自己的语言中没有这种声音,

则很有可能您正在用不同的声音代替它。

对于浊音 TH,最常见的错误是发 D 音。

所以“brother”听起来像“bruder”,而“the”听起来像“de”。

现在,这些对您来说可能听起来一样,但对于母语人士来说听起来却不同。

因此,如果您知道舌头位置的差异,您仍然应该能够正确地发出声音。

舌尖轻轻接触,你当然不会因为 TH 而停止空气。

对于 D,舌尖位于口腔顶部。

你确实停止了空气。

哒-哒-。

而且你知道技巧 5 中“the”之类的单词的快捷方式:舌尖压在牙齿后部,

但仍然没有抬起,它仍然没有在上颚,因为那将是

D。常见的 错误是使用 F 而不是清音 TH。

th– 而不是 th–。

我儿子斯托尼就是这样做的。 他三岁

,这是他唯一听不到的声音。

他用其他声音代替。 例如,他会说“hing”而不是“thing”

,他会说“marfa”而不是“Martha”。

他会说“免费”而不是“三”。

当您错误地将 F 替换为 TH 时,这是您可以看到的。

你的下唇在做这项工作,那是 F.

Ff– ff– free。

你知道清音 TH 是错误的,舌尖必须穿过牙齿。

th——th——三个。

看着我试着让斯通尼这样做。

Stoney 和我正在努力学习 TH 音,我们使用的名字是 Martha

,Stoney 一直发出 F 音并
说 Marfa,让我看看。

玛法。

对,那是一个 F。

现在注意我,亲爱的。

看到我的舌头了吗?

你能试一下吗? 别管它。

别管它。
玛法!

你想在那里看吗?

玛法。

所以你要去Marf——你用你的
嘴唇,但你想用你的舌头。

试试你的舌头。

把你的舌头穿过你的牙齿。

不,几乎。

好吧,把你的舌尖穿过你的牙齿。

你能做到吗?

玛法。

不,这不是玛法。 看这个,斯托尼,
用你的舌头做。

贴纸,妈妈。

你在视频上看到你的贴纸了吗?

是的。

再一次。

好的,我们将继续努力,因为您正在制作 F 而不是 TH。

我从来没有让他把舌尖
穿过牙齿。

每次他尝试时,只有
下唇在起作用。

最后是 S 和 Z。用这两个声音代替 TH 真的很常见。

S 表示清音 TH,Z 表示浊音 TH。

所以“think”听起来像“sink”:你在“sink”什么?

“the”听起来像“zee”:“Zee only”。

在这里,我正在和一个学生一起工作,他很难发出两种明确而不同的声音,S 和 TH。

我谈论如何创造两种截然不同、清晰、准确的声音。

这确实需要时间,你正在改变肌肉记忆和习惯,但这是值得的。

在你投入那项工作和那段时间之后,你就拥有了你想要的东西。

好的,所以,让我听你说,想想。

思考。

好的。 让我听你说,下沉。

下沉。

好的,现在我说的是 S,sink。

下沉。

好吧,这对我来说听起来像是 T-H。

所以,让我们回到
这里真正聚焦的 S 声音。

对,沉。

下沉。

对。

好的,那是 S。

现在,让我们切换回 TH,舌头轻轻接触上门牙的底部,想想。

思考。

对。 现在,回到 S,牙齿并拢,真正集中的声音,下沉。

下沉。

对。

好的,好的,当这门课进入学院时

,通常需要一到两周的时间,
回来看看这部分。

我们的动作非常缓慢,非常有意,

首先考虑声音,考虑位置,然后说出来。

现在他们变得更加清晰了。 TH 变得越来越 TH,S 越来越

S。所以,我认为你将不得不在这里慢慢地工作一段时间。

而我会做的是,我会做一些你正在做这样一个最小的配对的地方,思考,沉没,

并在你做之前真正考虑一下这个位置。 但是我也会花一些时间来

研究

S。在整个过程中,你都在考虑
一个非常狭窄、集中的 S 声音。

然后是你在 TH 上工作的日子。

在那里,您正在考虑光线,
声音中没有压力,

并且上前牙的底部是您的接触点。

所以,我想你知道,你说过你做了很多工作,但对我来说这两种声音并不明显。

所以,你可能真的在巩固一些不清楚的东西。

所以,现在我们需要停止一遍又一遍地练习,只练习清晰

,就像你看到的那样非常缓慢。

停下来,想一个位置,做它。

但后来它真的清理了声音,它们真的开始听起来更准确、更清晰。

所以,把你的时间花在非常有目的上。

然后你可以说,好吧,现在我在用 S,我对 S 更有信心了

关于你所听到的。

但我现在认为,因为这是一种强烈的习惯,有点像 TH-S 混合。

因为这是一种习惯,所以真正停下来很重要,在你发出声音之前要三思而后行。

这非常乏味,但如果你真的这样做,这个阶段不会持续太久。

如果你真的把时间花在这上面,它
就会开始成为一种习惯,你

的声音会开始变得更清晰。

现在你听到我说
在学院里练习。

那是我的在线学校,在那里我开发了各种材料来帮助我的学生训练、

改变他们的肌肉记忆、发展正确的美式英语声音、节奏和语调。

这也是我每月教授一次这些现场
课程的地方。

这是提高您的听力理解和美式英语发音的最佳方式。

我将在此处以及视频说明中放置一个链接,以便您可以根据需要加入。

我有来自世界各地的学生,
来加入我的学院吧。

我希望这个视频有帮助! 现在
开始研究 TH 声音。

请使用评论告诉我为什么这个视频很有帮助。

您认为这些提示中哪一个
最重要,为什么?

你将采取什么具体的教导?

这是我在视频开头告诉你的课程

,关于这些声音的操作视频。

如果您以前没有看过它,请务必检查一下。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。