How to Pronounce What Time American English

In this American English pronunciation video,

we’re going to study the

pronunciation of the phrase

‘what time?’.

This is part of a sentence study series,

where we look at a short common phrase,

and discuss its pronunciation.

This two-syllable phrase has stress on the

second word, the content word, ‘time’.

What time? da-DA. What time?

You might notice that there’s a quick break

between the two syllables.

That’s because there’s a stop T.

What—time. But we’ll get to that in a minute.

We begin with the W consonant,

lips in a tight circle.

Then we have the UH as in BUTTER vowel,

everything in the mouth is relaxed.

The tongue is forward and relaxed. Wha, wha.

Now, we have a stop T.

So we’re going to bring the tongue up

to the roof of the mouth,

so the top, flat part is touching.

We also stop the air with our throats.

What, what. This is a stop consonant.

The next word begins with the True T,

so we’re pretty much

in the position for that already.

All we have to do is close the teeth,

what, tt,

and release the air that we’ve stopped:

time. What time.

We have the AI as in BUY diphthong in ‘time’.

Many of my students

don’t drop their jaw enough

for the first half of that diphthong.

Ti-, time.

For the second half of the diphthong,

the tongue tip stays down but the front part

stretches towards the roof of the mouth,

so the jaw will close some. Ti-, ti-.

And finally, we have the M consonant,

where the lips come together. Time.

There’s no way to make this sound in

American English without closing the lips.

Some of my Spanish-speaking students will say

something more like ‘time’, m, m,

where they end the word

in a nasaly-vowel sound rather than the M.

Time, m, m.

You have to bring your lips together for that.

Time. What time, what time, what time.

This is a question and you’ll notice that

the voice goes down in pitch at the end.

What time.

That’s because it’s not a yes/no question.

Yes/no questions tend to go up in pitch

at the end but other questions will go down.

What time?

And now let’s look at the phrase,

up, close and in slow motion.

This video is part of a series,

click here to see other videos, just like it.

That’s it, and thanks so much for using

Rachel’s English.

在这个美式英语发音视频中,

我们将学习

短语

“what time?”的发音。

这是句子学习系列的一部分

,我们在其中查看一个简短的常用短语,

并讨论其发音。

这个双音节短语强调

第二个词,即内容词“时间”。

什么时候? 达达。 什么时候?

您可能会注意到两个音节之间有一个快速中断

那是因为有一个停止T。

什么-时间。 但我们会在一分钟内解决这个问题。

我们从 W 辅音开始,

嘴唇紧紧地围成一圈。

然后我们有 UH 作为 BUTTER 元音,

嘴里的一切都放松了。

舌头向前而放松。 哇,哇。

现在,我们有一个停止 T。

所以我们要把舌头

带到嘴巴

的顶部,所以顶部平坦的部分是接触的。

我们也用喉咙堵住空气。

什么什么。 这是一个停止辅音。

下一个词以 True T 开头,

所以我们已经差不多

处于这个位置了。

我们所要做的就是咬紧牙关,

什么,tt,

然后释放我们已经停止的空气:

时间。 什么时候。

我们有人工智能,就像在“时间”中购买双元音一样。

我的许多学生

对于那个双元音的前半部分都没有足够的下巴。

钛,时间。

对于双元音的后半部分

,舌尖保持向下,但前

部向口腔顶部伸展,

因此下巴会闭合一些。 钛-,钛-。

最后,我们有 M 辅音

,嘴唇合在一起。 时间。

如果不闭上嘴唇,就无法在美式英语中发出这种声音。

我的一些说西班牙语的学生会说

更像“时间”,m,m

,他们

以鼻元音结束单词而不是 M.

Time, m, m。

为此,您必须张开双唇。

时间。 什么时候,什么时候,什么时候。

这是一个问题,你会

注意到声音在最后的音调下降。

什么时候。

那是因为这不是一个是/否的问题。

是/否问题在最后往往会上升,

但其他问题会下降。

什么时候?

现在让我们看一下这个短语,

向上、关闭和慢动作。

这个视频是一个系列的一部分,

点击这里查看其他视频,就像它一样。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用

Rachel 的英语。