The SCHWA Sound English Pronunciation Lesson

Well hey there! I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

This lesson is all about the schwa.

Now it’s just one of the many English sounds

but it’s one of the most important ones

that you need to understand and use.

Particularly if you want to sound more natural

when you’re speaking English. So stay tuned!

There are forty-four sounds in English.

Some say forty-five.

So you might be wondering why is this sound

in particular, the schwa, so important?

Well firstly it’s the most common sound

in the English language by far.

It occurs the most frequently.

And that’s why it’s got its own special name, the schwa.

Another thing that’s weird is that there is no

schwa sound in the name schwa

so it’s not really helpful for remembering it.

But it’s also one of the trickiest sounds to understand

because any vowel letter

or combination of vowel letters

could actually be pronounced as a schwa.

Because English is not a phonetic language right?

You can’t see this sound written in English.

I mean we all know that English spelling is

rarely a good guide to improve your pronunciation, right?

But the schwa occurs so much in spoken English

and it looks completely different every time.

All of these words

include the schwa sound in them when they’re spoken

and learning to use this sound correctly

is really important. It’s going to help you

to sound more natural, relaxed and more fluent

when you speak English,

more like a native English speaker.

So if you’re trying to reduce your accent

and to improve your pronunciation, then this sound

is a great place to start.

So what does it sound like?

The schwa sound is a lazy sound.

It’s actually my favourite sound of all the English sounds

it’s my Friday afternoon sound.

You know when you’re winding down after a long week

and you’re probably already thinking about the weekend

and you can’t really be bothered doing much else?

So that’s how the schwa sounds.

But how is it written?

What letters should you look for?

Well that’s quite tricky because all of the vowel letters

can be pronounced as a schwa in spoken English.

All of these words have the schwa sound

but they’re represented by a different vowel letter

each time.

For such a lazy sound, it sure does

show up in a lot of different places.

And since the schwa sound can be represented by

any of the vowel letters,

sometimes by consonant letters

and sometimes by no letter at all!

Being able to recognise the international phonetic

symbol for this sound will help you to see

when it occurs.

And that schwa symbol is this one.

Now the schwa sound is always unstressed.

It’s the only vowel sound that is never stressed

so you need to just relax, just be like the schwa.

Relax and take it easy, it’s Friday afternoon.

So to make this sound, first you need to relax everything

This is a really relaxed sound okay? Check your lips,

your jaw, your neck, everything needs to be relaxed.

Drop the jaw slightly and open your mouth.

But keep everything relaxed.

Remember, this is the lazy sound.

Keeping that in mind, let’s try it together.

It’s very, very relaxed.

Make sure that you’re doing this with me

so if you need to find a place that’s quiet on your own,

go for it.

It’s a guttural sound so you should feel it coming from

a little deeper. And with all unstressed vowel sounds,

the sound is really fast

and it’s also low in pitch, it’s quite flat.

You should feel it here and it should be flat.

So why is the schwa sound so common in English?

Let’s start from the basics. English has rhythm.

It’s made up of stressed and unstressed sounds

and words.

The stress plays an important part in understanding

natural spoken English.

Without stress, you’d sound like an English robot

and it would be better if you were not a robot.

When words or syllables are unstressed in English,

the sound is reduced and the vowel letter is often

reduced to a schwa sound.

In English, words with more than one syllable

have one main stress

and other syllables are often unstressed

and they often reduce to the schwa sound.

Can you hear the schwa sound in the

unstressed syllable there?

Let’s look at another example together.

Now some of those syllables were longer than others

weren’t they?

And that’s because the important words in the sentence

were stressed.

The less important words are unstressed and this helps

the brain to focus on the important ones, right?

The words that you need to understand to

to make sense of it.

But it’s difficult to know when to use this sound

and if you’re not really into the IPA script,

then you need to rely on your ears to identify it.

Imitating a native speaker, copying their pronunciation

is a really great way to practise the schwa sound

correctly.

And actually, I’ve got an imitation lesson

that you can try right here.

In it, I’ll train you to imitate me while I’m speaking.

So the lazy schwa sound, it’s not too difficult

on its own, but recognising it in other English words is.

To help us practise today, you’ll need to take out

a pen and some paper because I’m about to tell you

some of the many different places that you can

find the schwa sound.

Now you can often find the schwa sound in unstressed

structure words.

So structure words are grammatical words

in English sentences.

They make the sentence grammatically correct

but they don’t really have much meaning.

Words like articles

and

or

Prepositions.

Conjunctions.

There’s lots and lots of different words that are

structure words in English sentences.

Really common ones.

When these words are stressed, you’ll hear a stronger

vowel sound.

But when these words are unstressed and spoken

naturally in a sentence,

they often reduce right down to the schwa sound.

Now there are tons of schwas hiding in those

unstressed structure words.

But also a couple of schwas in the

unstressed syllables as well.

Okay, so what’s next?

We’ll look at this list of words.

What do all of these words have in common?

Can you tell?

Apart from the fact that they all start with the letter A,

what else?

The first syllable is unstressed.

Now these words all start with the schwa sound.

This test is a little harder.

What about this group of words?

What do they have in common?

Make sure you’re listening carefully.

Now the schwa sound is

somewhere in the middle of all of these words.

How about

Now there’s no letter in there

that shows there should be a vowel sound

but we can hear it.

So if the schwa sound comes at the start of a word,

the middle of a word, well there must be

some words that end in a schwa, right?

Like

for example

but also

This is where it gets interesting!

Firstly, look at all of the different endings here.

They all make the same schwa sound

at the end of the word.

But the second reason why this is interesting is because

this right here is where American accents differ from

most Australian and British accents quite significantly.

Most of you already know that I’m Australian

and because of this, I use the schwa sound quite a bit

more than my American friends.

In Australian English pronunciation, usually the -ER

at the end of a word will be unstressed.

The sound is not pronounced at the end.

So in my accent, these words all end in a schwa sound

and there are many, many, many, many words

that are just like this. These are just a few.

They end in -ER but they also have these other endings.

So to pronounce them like me, you really need to

focus on relaxing that sound at the end,

that last syllable.

Okay here’s a challenge.

Where are all of the schwas there?

You got it! Those are schwa sounds as well.

The schwa sound creates reduced forms

when English is spoken naturally

so ‘going to’ becomes ‘gonna’

‘want to’ becomes ‘wanna’

‘got to’ becomes ‘gonna’

‘should have’ becomes ‘shoulda’

So there are so many more examples for this. In fact,

I’m going to save them for another lesson

because I could go on forever

but yes the schwa sound is everywhere in English.

It’s the sound that you need to know,

that you need to get comfortable with using.

So at the very least, you should be able to recognise

this symbol so that you can use unstressed syllables

and it will help you to pronounce words correctly

when you see them in the dictionary like these ones.

They all have the schwa sound in there

and you can see it.

Now time for the bonus section!

I’m glad you waited all the way until this point

in the lesson,

I promised you that if you stuck around

until the end of the lesson,

you’d get some extra pronunciation practice with me.

Are you ready?

Let’s go!

Hi, Emma!

Hey!

Hey great lesson today with the schwa sound!

Thanks! Did you like it?

Yeah it was awesome.

Do you think you could give us a few more examples

to practise with?

Like maybe, what if you say a sentence

and we’ll try and guess where the schwa sounds are.

Okay.

Are you feeling better today?

Am I feeling better today?

Hang on, is that one of the questions?

Yeah, are you feeling better today?

Yeah, actually can you put the words on the screen

so we can see them?

Okay. Here.

How many schwa sounds

can you hear in that sentence?

Say it with me, out loud.

There’s quite a few.

Okay.

Got it!

Ready for another one?

Yeah.

Do you want a piece of banana cake?

Yes.

Good because that’s what I’m making.

How many schwa sounds are there?

Nice one!

Okay are you ready for another?

Yep.

This knife… where’s the knife that I’m looking for?

Where are the schwas?

Say it with me.

Alright, one more.

Okay I’ve got a tricky one for you!

Thanks!

There’s quite a few schwas there.

Okay, is that enough?

Yeah that’s enough, thanks.

That was great!

Okay good because I’ve got to get

this cake into the oven.

I’ll leave that one there for you.

If you enjoyed that bonus practice session,

then let me know.

I’m trying something new here at mmmEnglish

and I’d love to hear your feedback.

Let me know in the comments

or hit the subscribe button right there.

If you want to keep practising with me, then check out

these two lessons right here.

I’ll see you in the next one!

啊你好啊! 我是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

这节课都是关于 schwa 的。

现在它只是众多英语发音

之一,但它

是您需要理解和使用的最重要的发音之一。

特别是如果您想

在说英语时听起来更自然。 所以敬请期待!

英语有四十四个音。

有人说四十五。

所以你可能想知道为什么这个

声音特别是 schwa 如此重要?

首先,它是

迄今为止英语中最常见的声音。

它发生得最频繁。

这就是为什么它有自己的特殊名称,施瓦。

另一件奇怪的事情是

schwa 这个名字中没有 schwa 音,

所以它对记住它并没有帮助。

但这也是最难理解的声音之一,

因为任何元音字母

或元音字母组合

实际上都可以发音为 schwa。

因为英语不是语音语言对吗?

你看不到这个用英语写的声音。

我的意思是我们都知道英语拼写

很少能很好地提高你的发音,对吧?

但是 schwa 在英语口语中经常出现,

而且每次看起来都完全不同。

所有这些词

在说它们时都包含 schwa 声音

,学习正确使用这种声音

非常重要。 当您说英语时,它将帮助

您听起来更自然、轻松和流利

更像是一个以英语为母语的人。

因此,如果您想减少口音

并改善发音,那么这个声音

是一个很好的起点。

那么它听起来像什么?

schwa 声音是一种懒惰的声音。

它实际上是所有英语声音中我最喜欢的声音,

它是我周五下午的声音。

你知道什么时候你在漫长的一周后结束了

,你可能已经在考虑周末了

,你真的不会为做很多其他事情而烦恼吗?

所以这就是schwa的声音。

但它是怎么写的?

您应该查找哪些字母?

嗯,这很棘手,因为所有元音字母

在口语中都可以发音为 schwa。

所有这些词都有 schwa 声音,

但它们每次都由不同的元音字母表示

对于这样一个懒惰的声音,它确实

出现在很多不同的地方。

而且由于 schwa 声音可以由

任何元音字母表示,

有时由辅音字母表示

,有时根本没有字母!

能够识别

此声音的国际音标将帮助您了解

它何时出现。

那个施瓦符号就是这个。

现在 schwa 声音总是不重读。

这是唯一一个从不强调的元音,

所以你需要放松,就像 schwa 一样。

放轻松,放轻松,现在是星期五下午。

所以要发出这种声音,首先你需要放松一切

这是一个非常放松的声音好吗? 检查你的嘴唇

、下巴、脖子,一切都需要放松。

稍微放下下巴,张开嘴。

但让一切放松。

请记住,这是懒惰的声音。

记住这一点,让我们一起尝试。

很放松,很放松。

确保你和我一起做这件事,

所以如果你需要自己找一个安静的地方,

那就去吧。

这是一种喉音,所以你应该感觉到它来自

更深的地方。 对于所有无重读的元音

,声音真的很快

,而且音调也很低,很平。

你应该在这里感觉到它,它应该是平坦的。

那么为什么 schwa 音在英语中如此普遍呢?

让我们从基础开始。 英语有节奏。

它由重读和非重读的声音

和单词组成。

重音在理解

自然的英语口语中起着重要作用。

没有压力,你听起来就像一个英国机器人

,如果你不是机器人会更好。

当英语中的单词或音节不重读时

,声音会减少,元音字母通常会

减少为 schwa 声音。

在英语中,具有多个音节的单词

只有一个主重音,

而其他音节通常不重读

,它们通常会还原为 schwa 音。

你能听到

那里非重读音节中的 schwa 音吗?

我们一起来看另一个例子。

现在,其中一些音节比其他音节长

,不是吗?

那是因为句子中的重要词

被强调了。

不太重要的词没有重读,这

有助于大脑专注于重要的词,对吗?

你需要理解的词

才能理解它。

但是很难知道什么时候使用这个声音

,如果你不是真的喜欢 IPA 脚本,

那么你需要依靠你的耳朵来识别它。

模仿母语人士,复制他们的发音

是正确练习 schwa 声音的好方法

实际上,我有一个模仿课

,你可以在这里尝试。

在里面,我会训练你在我说话的时候模仿我。

所以懒惰的 schwa 声音,它本身并不

太难,但用其他英语单词识别它就是。

为了帮助我们今天练习,你需要拿出

一支笔和一些纸,因为我要告诉

你在许多不同的地方你可以

找到施瓦音。

现在你经常可以在非重读结构词中找到 schwa 音

所以结构词是英语句子中的语法词

他们使句子在语法上正确,

但实际上并没有太大意义。

像冠词

介词这样的词。

连词。 英语句子中

有很多不同的词是

结构词。

真的很常见。

当这些词被重读时,你会听到更强的

元音。

但是,当这些词在句子中不重读并自然地说出来时

它们通常会降低到 schwa 声音。

现在有大量的 schwas 隐藏在那些不重读的

结构词中。

但在

非重读音节中也有几个 schwas。

好的,那么接下来呢?

我们将看看这个单词列表。

所有这些词有什么共同点?

你能告诉?

除了它们都以字母 A 开头,

还有什么?

第一个音节不重读。

现在这些词都以 schwa 音开头。

这个测试有点难。

这组词呢?

他们有什么共同点?

确保你在仔细听。

现在 schwa 的声音

在所有这些词的中间。

怎么样

现在那里没有

显示应该有元音

但我们可以听到的字母。

因此,如果 schwa 声音出现在单词的开头,

单词的中间,那么肯定有

一些单词以 schwa 结尾,对吧?

例如,

但也是

这就是它变得有趣的地方!

首先,看看这里所有不同的结局。

它们在词尾都发出相同的 schwa 音

但是,这很有趣的第二个原因是,

这就是美国口音与

大多数澳大利亚和英国口音有很大不同的地方。

你们中的大多数人已经知道我是澳大利亚人

,因此,我使用 schwa 的声音

比我的美国朋友多得多。

在澳大利亚英语的发音中,通常单词末尾的 -ER 是不重读

的。

结尾的声音不发音。

所以在我的口音中,这些词都以schwa音结尾

,有很多很多很多很多的

词都是这样的。 这些才一点点。

它们以 -ER 结尾,但也有这些其他结尾。

所以要像我一样发音,你真的需要

专注于放松结尾的声音

,最后一个音节。

好的,这是一个挑战。

那里的所有 schwas 都在哪里?

你说对了! 这些也是 schwa 的声音。

当自然地说英语时,schwa 声音会创建简化形式

因此“going to”变成“gonna”

“want to”变成“wanna”

“got to”变成“gonna”

“should have”变成“should”

所以还有很多 这方面的例子。 事实上,

我打算把它们留到另一节课上,

因为我可以永远继续下去,

但是是的,英语中到处都是 schwa 声音。

这是您需要知道的声音

,您需要熟悉使用它。

所以至少,你应该能够识别

这个符号,这样你就可以使用非重读音节

当你在字典中看到这些单词时,它会帮助你正确发音。

他们都有 schwa 声音

,你可以看到它。

现在是奖金部分的时间!

我很高兴你一直等到

课程的这一点,

我向你保证,如果你坚持

到课程结束,

你会和我一起进行一些额外的发音练习。

你准备好了吗?

我们走吧!

嗨,艾玛!

嘿!

嘿,今天的 schwa 声音很棒!

谢谢! 你喜欢它吗?

是的,太棒了。

你认为你可以给我们更多的例子

来练习吗?

就像也许,如果你说一个句子

,我们会尝试猜测 schwa 的声音在哪里。

好的。

你今天感觉好些了吗?

我今天感觉好些了吗?

等等,这是问题之一吗?

是啊,你今天感觉好些了吗?

是的,实际上你能把这些词放在屏幕上

让我们看到吗?

好的。 这里。

在那句话中你能听到多少个 schwa 音?

大声跟我说。

有不少。

好的。

知道了!

准备好再来一个了吗?

是的。

你想要一块香蕉蛋糕吗?

是的。

很好,因为这就是我正在做的。

有多少种 schwa 音?

好东西!

好的,你准备好再来一次了吗?

是的。

这把刀……我要找的刀呢?

施瓦斯在哪里?

跟我说吧。

好吧,再来一张。

好的,我有一个棘手的问题给你!

谢谢!

那里有很多schwas。

好的,够了吗?

是的,够了,谢谢。

那很棒!

好的,因为我必须把

这个蛋糕放进烤箱。

我会把那个留给你的。

如果您喜欢那次奖金练习,请

告诉我。

我正在 mmmEnglish 尝试一些新的东西

,我很想听听您的反馈。

在评论中让我知道

或点击那里的订阅按钮。

如果您想继续和我一起练习,请

在此处查看这两节课。

我们下期再见!