SILENT LETTERS with RULES English Speaking Pronunciation Vocabulary American English

Sshh.

I’m the D in ‘Wednesday’.

I’m the B in DEBT. I’m busy being silent.

Today we’re going over silent letters in English and some of the rules for them, and the many exceptions

that these rules have.

Stick with us, you’re going to learn a lot about correct English pronunciation.

What’s up with all these silent letters?

Let’s just go through the alphabet.

We’ll start with A.

A is silent in the suffix –ally.

And it’s tricky, because it looks like it should be a syllable, but it’s not.

Logically.

Not Lo-gic-a-ly. Just logically.

Typically. Logically. Typically. Radically.

Every time you see –ally at the end of a word, is the A silent? No, sorry, that would be too simple.

Vocally, is not vok-li. It is three syllables.

Legally is not le-gli.

It’s three syllables.

So how to do you know by looking? Well, you don’t.

This is what truly makes American English hard.

But many other words with –ally at the ending have a silent A.

B.

Now there are some clearer rules here, thankfully.

We don’t pronounce B after M.

Climb, dumb, bomb, comb, thumb.

All of these end in the M sound.

If I did pronounce the B, it would sound like this: climb.

Climb.

But that’s not right, it’s climb.

Oh great! Every time you see M followed
by B, the B in silent.

No. That’s not actually true.

As you get into longer words, you’ll have to be a little more aware.

For example, amber.

The M is at the end of the first syllable, and the B is at the beginning of the second syllable.

We do pronounce both the M and the B.

Amber. Amber. Say that with me. Amber.

Amber is like a stone, but I don’t think it actually is a stone, it’s used a lot in jewelry.

It’s also a word to describe this color.

It’s also a name for women.

Amber.

We also have ambivalent.

Ambassador. Akimbo. Arms akimbo is when your arms are like this, bent. Akimbo.

These are all examples of B NOT silent after M because it’s in a different syllable.

Ambivalent, ambassador, akimbo.

There’s another case where the B is silent, when it comes before a T.

Debt, subtle, doubt.

No B sound in any of these words.

Debt, subtle, doubt.

What about this rule? Always?

Is a B before T always silent? No. In longer words, you’ll find lots of exceptions.

For example a compound word, where the first word ends in B and the next word begins with T, like ‘bobtail’.

Bob, bob, bobtail. It’s not ba-tail, bobtail.
We do say that B.

Also with prefixes that end in B, like O-B and S-U-B.

Obtain.

B is not silent. Subtotal. B is not silent.

The Letter C. It’s silent in the state name Connecticut. This middle C is silent, we don’t say it at all.

Connecticut. It can be silent after S, like in ‘muscle’, ‘scissors’, ‘scent, ’ ‘fascinating’, or ‘scene’.

But it’s not always silent like in ‘scatter’ or ‘script’.

And sometimes it goes in a different direction and becomes an SH after S, like in ‘conscience’ or ‘luscious’.

You know, let’s stop and think about this for a second.

Every “rule” we’ve studied, there’s an exception.
So why study the rule?

What we’re doing here is going over fairly common words with a silent letter.

American English pronunciation is not
generally rule-oriented,

so you do have to learn the pronunciation
of words individually.

But it is useful to be exposed to these general rules and these common words that have a silent letter.

So you can start learning them.

I had a student once who lived in the US and he worked at a seafood restaurant.

And he didn’t know that L in ‘salmon’ w as silent.

How would he if he had never learned that or been taught that before?

So what we’re doing here is exposing you
to these silent letters,

and also making sure you’re aware that these rules are not absolute rules that can be applied in every situation.

Ok, let’s get to D. We have Wednesday.

There’s no rule here about why this D is
silent, it just is in this word.

It’s also silent in ‘handsome’.

In the word ‘sandwich’, if you looked that up in the dictionary, you WOULD see the D sound.

But it’s actually never pronounced that way. So Wednesday, Handsome: the dictionary says no D.

But ‘Sandwich’, the dictionary does say D but it hasn’t caught up with the actual habits of how we speak.

It’s not uncommon to drop the D after N. so that’s what’s happening in Sandwich.

Also, words with the silent D, grandma and grandpa.

Now, with Sandwich, I talked about habit.

In the dictionary, it says there is a D sound but that’s not our habit anymore.

The thing about the D between two consonants is it’s really common in our habit to drop that D.

To make it silent, even if that’s not what
the dictionary says.

This happens in words like sandpaper, soundproof, landmark, windmill.

We drop the D because it’s between 2 other consonants.

I’ve seen other teachers say the D is silent in a word like ‘edge’, ‘bridge’ or ‘knowledge’.

Here’s the thing. In the word ‘edge’ the consonant sound is the J sound which is written in IPA like this:

D, dd, plus ZH, zh, zh. So the J sound
actually has a D in it.

So I don’t think I would say the D is silent in these words. The D is part of the J sound.

Ok, let’s move on.

The letter E.

I’m going to go over a rule for this one, the ending E.

But first, take a look at this word.

Au-di-ble.

There’s no vowel sound at the end of that word.

Where’s the E sound?

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Okay, now, let’s get back to that rule. Silent ending E.

This “rule” is taught quite a bit so you’re
probably already familiar with it.

Quite a bit. The word ‘quite’.

I’m not saying a sound for the letter E on the end of the word, am I? Quite. Quite.

The word ends with the T sound.

Quite.

But if I take away the E in that spelling, I
have a different word.

Quit.

So the ending E can affect the vowel before the final consonant. It makes it “longer”.

Quit, IH vowel, versus Quite, AI, AI diph thong, two sounds.

Quite a bit.

Now with ‘bit’, if I added an E at the end there, the word would be ‘bite’.

Again, T is the final sound. The extra E doesn’t add an extra sound at the end,

but it does change the vowel to a “longer” vowel sound.

Bite, bit.

This happens with a lot of words: hop, hope.

Dim, dime. Rob, robe. Rat, rate. Breath, breathe.

But note the word ‘café’, we do pronounce that ending E, even if it isn’t written without the accent.

Café.

Also, a note about ED endings.

Regular verbs are written this way to
show the past tense,

and now there are clear pronunciation rules for these.

If the unconjugated verb ends in T or D, then we do make a sound for the letter E in the ED ending,

and we have an extra syllable.

Like, land, landed.

But if the last letter of the unconjugated verb is any other letter,

then we don’t make a sound for the letter E in the ED ending, and we just add a D or T sound.

For example, hum, hummed. Not hum-ed. Or ‘pack’, packed. Not pack-ed.

I do have a video that goes over these rules for ED endings in a little bit more depth

with a few more examples so click here if you’re interested or see the link in the video description.

The letter F.

Ok this letter is almost never silent, but actually,

the Merriam-Webster dictionary does give the primary pronunciation of ‘fifth’ with a silent F in the middle.

Fifth. That’s how I say it, just the first F sound, IH vowel, and the TH at the end.

“Fifth”.

The letter G.

This is silent when a word begins with ‘GN’.

Gnome, gnat. Gnaw.

Also GN at the end of a word:
design, sign, reign, foreign, assign, campaign.

Also, ‘GNE’, like ‘champagne’, cologne.

You know, I did some looking, and I didn’t see any exceptions to these rules.

Wouldn’t that be neat if we found a rule
with no exceptions?

Also the combination GH after a vowel or
diphthong, silent G.

Daughter, bright, though. Thigh, weigh, dough, eight.

But there are some exceptions to this rule:
cough, rough, tough.

There, GH does make a sound, it’s the F sound.

The letter H.

There are some common words that begin with a silent H, like hour, honor, honest, herb.

But most words that begin with an H do have an H sound, like home, hope, happy.

Words that begin with WH.

These words have two different pronunciations, but the most common one is definitely with a silent H.

Just a clean W sound: what, where, why, whistle.

Sometimes the CH combination makes a K sound,

which makes it feel like the H is silent, like in ‘choir’ or ‘chaos’ or ‘echo’.

When GH is at the beginning of a word, H is silent like in ‘ghost’ or ‘ghetto’.

H is silent after R like in rhyme, rhythm, and rhubarb.

But this rule doesn’t work in compound words where the sounds are in two separate syllables, like ‘overheard’

or ‘bearhug’, or in the word ‘perhaps’.

There, both sounds are pronounced.

Perhaps.

Perhaps this is a good time to take a minute, take a break and let all this silence set in.

The link to the second part of this two-
part series is right here.

But if you’re seeing this video in it’s first week, that video isn’t ready yet,

it’s coming out on Tuesday of next week,
so be here to see it.

If that’s the case, I cannot recommend highly enough getting to know the International Phonetic Alphabet.

Lots of dictionaries use it and it’s your key to understanding the pronunciation of any word.

To knowing if any letters are silent.

I have put together a playlist where I go over the IPA symbols for each sound in American English

so you can really start to get comfortable with them.

Please do subscribe if you haven’t already and make sure notifications are enabled,

then come join me here every Tuesday

for we have a new video studying something interesting about American English pronunciation.

I love teaching you English, thank you so much for being here and see you next week.

嘘。

我是“星期三”中的 D。

我是债务中的 B。 我忙着保持沉默。

今天我们将讨论英语中的无声字母及其一些规则,以及

这些规则的许多例外情况。

坚持我们,您将学到很多关于正确英语发音的知识。

所有这些无声的信件是怎么回事?

让我们看一下字母表。

我们将从

A 开始。A 在后缀 -ally 中是无声的。

这很棘手,因为它看起来应该是一个音节,但事实并非如此。

逻辑上。

不是逻辑逻辑。 只是逻辑上。

通常。 逻辑上。 通常。 根本。

每次看到-ally 出现在一个词的末尾,A 是沉默的吗? 不,对不起,那太简单了。

声乐,不是vok-li。 是三个音节。

在法律上不是 le-gli。

是三个音节。

那么如何通过观察知道呢? 好吧,你没有。

这才是真正让美式英语变得困难的原因。

但许多其他以 -ally 结尾的词都有一个沉默的 A.

B.

现在这里有一些更明确的规则,谢天谢地。

我们在 M.

Climb、dumb、bomb、comb、thumb 之后不发音 B。

所有这些都以 M 音结束。

如果我确实发音 B,它听起来像这样:攀登。

爬。

但这是不对的,它是爬升。

哦,太好了! 每次看到M后面
跟着B,B就沉默了。

不,这实际上不是真的。

当你进入更长的单词时,你必须更加注意。

例如,琥珀。

M在第一个音节的末尾,B在第二个音节的开头。

我们确实发音 M 和 B.

Amber。 琥珀色。 跟我说吧。 琥珀色。

琥珀就像一块石头,但我不认为它实际上是一块石头,它在珠宝中被大量使用。

这也是形容这种颜色的词。

这也是一个女人的名字。

琥珀色。

我们也有矛盾。

大使。 叉腰。 双臂叉腰是当你的手臂这样弯曲时。 叉腰。

这些都是 B 在 M 之后不沉默的例子,因为它在不同的音节中。

矛盾的,大使,叉腰。

还有另一种情况,当 B 出现在 T 债务之前时,B 是沉默的

,微妙的,怀疑。

这些词中的任何一个都没有B音。

债务,微妙,怀疑。

这个规则呢? 总是?

T之前的B总是沉默的吗? 不,长话短说,你会发现很多例外。

例如一个复合词,其中第一个词以 B 结尾,下一个词以 T 开头,例如“bobtail”。

鲍勃,鲍勃,短尾。 这不是巴尾,短尾。
我们确实说 B。

还有以 B 结尾的前缀,例如 O-B 和 S-U-B。

获得。

B没有沉默。 小计。 B没有沉默。

字母 C。它在康涅狄格州的州名中保持沉默。 这个中间C是无声的,我们根本不说。

康涅狄格州。 它可以在 S 之后无声,例如在“肌肉”、“剪刀”、“气味”、“迷人”或“场景”中。

但它并不总是像“分散”或“脚本”那样保持沉默。

有时它会朝着不同的方向发展,在 S 之后变成 SH,比如在“良心”或“甜美”中。

你知道,让我们停下来想一想。

我们研究过的每一条“规则”都有一个例外。
那么为什么要研究规则呢?

我们在这里所做的是用一个无声的字母来复习相当常见的单词。

美式英语发音一般不以
规则为导向,

因此您必须单独学习
单词的发音。

但是,了解这些一般规则和这些带有无声字母的常用词很有用。

所以你可以开始学习它们。

我曾经有一个学生住在美国,他在一家海鲜餐厅工作。

而且他不知道“鲑鱼”中的L是沉默的。

如果他以前从未学过或被教导过,他会怎么做?

因此,我们在这里所做的就是让您
接触这些无声的信件,

并确保您意识到这些规则不是可以在任何情况下都适用的绝对规则。

好的,让我们去 D。我们有星期三。

这里没有关于为什么这个 D
保持沉默的规则,它只是在这个词中。

在“帅”中也是沉默的。

在“三明治”这个词中,如果你在字典里查一下,你会看到 D 音。

但它实际上从来没有那样发音。 所以星期三,帅哥:字典说没有 D。

但是“三明治”,字典确实说 D,但它没有跟上我们说话的实际习惯。

在 N 之后删除 D 并不少见。所以这就是 Sandwich 发生的事情。

还有,用沉默的D,奶奶和爷爷的话。

现在,和三明治一起,我谈到了习惯。

在字典里,它说有一个 D 音,但这已经不是我们的习惯了。

关于两个辅音之间的 D 的问题是,我们习惯将 D 去掉是很常见的。

为了让它保持沉默,即使字典上不是
这样说的。

这发生在诸如砂纸、隔音、地标、风车之类的词中。

我们去掉 D,因为它在另外两个辅音之间。

我见过其他老师说 D 在诸如“边缘”、“桥梁”或“知识”之类的词中是沉默的。

事情就是这样。 在“edge”这个词中,辅音是 J 音,用 IPA 写成这样:

D,dd,加上 ZH,zh,zh。 所以 J 音
实际上有一个 D。

所以我不认为我会说 D 在这些话中保持沉默。 D是J音的一部分。

好的,让我们继续。

字母 E。

我要复习一下这个规则,结尾 E。

但首先,看看这个词。

听得见。

这个词的结尾没有元音。

E音在哪里?

现在是谈论我们
的视频赞助商 Audible 的好时机。

你知道我喜欢 Audible 吗?

有成千上万的有声读物由母语人士录制,说出您听到的每一个单词。

所以它们将被正确
发音,无声字母等等。

锻炼英语技能的好方法。

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试用 Audible 30 天后,您可以免费获得第一本有声读物,以及 2 个免费的 Audible Originals。

访问 audible.com/RachelsEnglish 或将 rachelsenglish 发送至 500 500。

我提到的 Audible Originals 是 Audible 独有的标题。

你不能在其他任何地方听他们的。

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甚至还有一些来自优秀课程类别的有声原件。

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Audible 是学习英语的绝佳资源

每个人都有一本有声读物。

感谢 Audible 赞助此视频

并支持 Rachel 英语社区的语言学习者。

好的,现在,让我们回到那个规则。 无声结尾 E.

这个“规则”被教了很多,所以你
可能已经很熟悉了。

相当多。 “相当”二字。

我不会说单词末尾的字母 E 的声音,是吗? 相当。 相当。

单词以 T 音结尾。

相当。

但如果我去掉那个拼写中的 E,我就会
有一个不同的词。

退出。

所以结尾 E 可以影响最后辅音之前的元音。 它使它“更长”。

Quit,IH 元音,与 Quite,AI,AI 双元音,两个声音。

相当多。

现在有了“bit”,如果我在末尾添加一个 E,这个词就是“bite”。

同样,T 是最后的声音。 额外的 E 不会在末尾添加额外的声音,

但它确实将元音变为“更长”的元音。

咬,咬。

这发生在很多词上:跳跃,希望。

一毛钱,一毛钱。 罗布,长袍。 老鼠,率。 呼吸,呼吸。

但是请注意“café”这个词,我们确实会发那个结尾 E,即使它不是没有重音的。

咖啡店。

另外,关于 ED 结尾的说明。

规则动词是这样写的,以
显示过去时

,现在有明确的发音规则。

如果未变位动词以 T 或 D 结尾,那么我们确实会为 ED 结尾中的字母 E 发声,

并且我们有一个额外的音节。

就像,着陆,着陆。

但是如果非共轭动词的最后一个字母是任何其他字母,

那么我们不为 ED 结尾的字母 E 发音,我们只是添加 D 或 T 音。

例如,哼,哼。 不是嗡嗡声。 或“打包”,打包。 不打包。

我确实有一个视频,其中包含更多示例,更深入地介绍了 ED 结尾的这些规则,

因此,如果您有兴趣,请单击此处或查看视频说明中的链接。

字母 F。

好吧,这个字母几乎从不沉默,但实际上

,韦氏词典确实给出了“第五”的主要发音,中间有一个沉默的 F。

第五。 我就是这么说的,只有第一个 F 音、IH 元音和结尾的 TH。

“第五”。

字母 G。

当单词以“GN”开头时,这是无声的。

侏儒,蚊子。 啃。

还有 GN 在一个词的末尾:
设计,标志,统治,外国,分配,运动。

此外,“GNE”,如“香槟”,古龙水。

你知道,我看了一些,我没有看到这些规则有任何例外。

如果我们找到一个没有例外的规则,那不是很好
吗?

还有一个元音或双元音后的组合 GH
,沉默的 G.

Daughter,虽然明亮。 大腿,称重,面团,八。

但这条规则有一些例外:
咳嗽、粗暴、强硬。

在那里,GH 确实发出声音,是 F 音。

字母 H。

有一些常见的词以无声的 H 开头,如小时、荣誉、诚实、草本。

但大多数以 H 开头的单词确实有 H 音,例如 home、hope、happy。

以WH开头的词。

这些词有两种不同的读法,但最常见的肯定是无声的 H。

只是一个干净的 W 音:what、where、why、whistle。

有时 CH 组合会发出 K 音,

这让人感觉 H 是无声的,就像在“合唱”或“混沌”或“回声”中一样。

当 GH 位于单词的开头时,H 就像在“ghost”或“ghetto”中一样不发音。

H 在 R 之后是无声的,就像在押韵、节奏和大黄中一样。

但这条规则不适用于发音在两个独立音节中的复合词,比如“overheard”

或“bearhug”,或者“perhaps”这个词。

在那里,两个声音都发音。

也许。

也许现在是花点时间休息一下,让这一切安静下来的好时机。

这个由两部分组成的系列的第二部分的链接就在
这里。

但如果你在第一周看到这个视频,那个视频还没有准备好,

它会在下周二发布,
所以来这里看看吧。

如果是这样的话,我不能高度推荐去了解国际音标。

许多字典都使用它,它是您理解任何单词发音的关键。

要知道是否有任何字母是沉默的。

我整理了一个播放列表,我在其中查看了美式英语中每种声音的 IPA 符号,

这样你就可以真正开始熟悉它们了。

如果您还没有订阅,请确保启用通知,

然后每周二来这里加入我,

因为我们有一个新的视频,学习一些关于美式英语发音的有趣内容。

我喜欢教你英语,非常感谢你来到这里,下周见。