English Phrases with THE Shortcuts for the TH Sounds

A lot of non-native speakers have problems
with the TH sound.

In this American English pronunciation video,

we’re going to study the word THE in several phrases

to show you the tricks and shortcuts that Americans
use to easily link the TH to other sounds.

We are going to study several examples of
function word phrases with ‘the’.

I’ve already made a video that goes over the pronunciation of ‘the’.

To see that video with real-life examples, follow the link at the end of this video.

Here we’re going to focus on linking the word THE to other words.

We’ll study up-close, slow motion video of the mouth
saying various two-word phrases with THE.

At the, in the, is the, with the…

for the, and on the.

All of these common combinations are made up of two function words,

so they’ll be very fast and not too clear.

If you pronounce these words very clearly
and fully, it will not sound natural.

She’s AT THE store. This is not how we speak.

She’s at the store. At the, at the…

It’s important to capture the character of American
English by saying function word phrases this way.

Linking the TH can be hard when you’re trying to do it
quickly, so let’s learn some short cuts to make it easier.

Let’s start by studying AT THE.

The vowel in AT can be AA, but you’ll
usually hear it as the schwa,

uh, uht the, at the, uht the. In the slow motion video,
you’ll see AA, with more jaw drop.

How do we quickly make the T followed by TH?

At the, at the, at the.

You probably don’t hear a T, do you?

That’s because it’s a Stop T here, followed by another consonant.

So just stop the air in your throat, at … the.
What does the tongue do? Let’s watch.

Jaw drops for the AA vowel. As the jaw comes up, the
tongue tip is still down, behind the bottom front teeth.

It comes through the teeth.

It never went to the roof of the mouth, the position of T.

When I bring my tongue through my teeth - AT

I’m in position for the TH, but I stop the air.

So I’m ready to go for the TH as I’m making the Stop T.

At the. Uht…the.

Same thing when the vowel in AT is the schwa: Uht…the. Uht…the.

This is easier than making a T. You don’t have to bring the tongue up into position for the T

and then through the teeth. Just bring it
through the teeth and stop the air.

This is how Americans do it. At the, uht the.

Let’s keep watching.

Now the tongue tip comes back into the mouth

and goes down behind the bottom front teeth,
where it needs to be for either the EE vowel

or the schwa in ‘the’. Let’s watch the phrase again.

Jaw drops for the vowel, tongue tip comes
through the teeth, then back down for the vowel.

Note that it’s just the tip of the tongue that comes through the teeth, not more.

Try that with me. At the. At the. At–the. At the.

Or, with the schwa, uht the, uht the, uht the.

I’m at the store. At the. I’m at thuh store. At the, at the.

Next, the phrase ‘in the’. Let’s take a look.

In an unstressed syllable, the jaw barely drops for the IH vowel.

Now the tongue tip comes through the teeth.

But wait. Isn’t the tongue supposed to go to the roof of the mouth for the N? Nn-Nn.

Yes, that is usually how the N is pronounced.

But I can make the sound with the tip of my tongue
through the teeth, nn-nn, while the part that’s

just a little further back is at the roof
of the mouth. Nn, nn. Innnthe.

Now the TH, and the tongue tip goes
back in the mouth and down for the vowel.

Let’s watch the phrase again.

Tongue comes through the teeth for the N T H.

This is simpler than making the full N position and then the TH position.

This is how Americans do it. So now you have two short cuts.

The Stop T can be made with the tongue tip in position for the TH, and so can the N.

Let’s watch AT THE and IN THE again.

Notice the movements of the mouth are small and simple.

Next, the phrase ‘is the’. A lot of people have a
hard time linking the S or Z sound with the TH.

The jaw drops just a bit for the IH vowel

and the tongue tip touches the back of the bottom front teeth.

Next you’ll see the tongue tip move, it will point up.

The tongue tip can either point up or down to make the S and Z sounds.

I do both, depending on the word and the sounds around it.

The teeth come together for the Z sound.

Is…is…

Now the tongue tip does something interesting.

It doesn’t come through the teeth for the TH!

When the voiced TH begins a function word, like
in the, these, this, we can do a shortcut.

Rather than a tip coming through the teeth,
TH– it presses behind closed teeth.

Th…th…

Important: it is not at the roof of the mouth.

That would make a D sound and that is not correct.
Let’s look at the correct position.

Jaw drops for the vowel. Tongue tip up and teeth close for the Z.

Tongue tip comes back down and touches the back of the closed teeth.

THIS is the correct position. Tongue tip is not at the roof of the mouth.

And tongue tip down for the vowel in THE. Let’s watch again.

Amazing. This is a much easier way to make the voiced TH quickly in a function word.

This happens a lot. In the first two examples,

you can make the sound before with the tongue
in position for the TH, the Stop T, and the N.

But you can’t make the S or Z sound with the tongue tip through the teeth.

So we take a different shortcut. We alter the TH
by not bringing the tongue tip through the teeth.

Is the… Is the … It still sounds like
a TH to native speakers. It still sounds right.

The next phrase is ‘with the’.

Wow. Two TH’s. What do we do here? Let’s take a look.

The lips round for the W. When the lips part, the inside of the mouth looks dark.

That’s because the tongue was lifted in the back for the W sound.

As the tongue comes forward, the tip heads right for the position between the teeth.

There’s the TH. Then the tongue tip goes back inside the mouth

and down behind the bottom front teeth for the vowel.

What do we do with the two TH’s?

‘With’ is usually pronounced with an unvoiced TH, Thh…
and THE with a voiced TH, dduh…

Here’s what to do: combine them. Just make one TH. Make it unvoiced, and connect the two words with it.

With the. A voiced TH would also be okay, with the,
but it’s much less common and it’s more complicated.

So stick with the unvoiced TH.

With the…with the…with the…

So here the shortcut is, don’t make a voiced TH.

Combine it with the ending unvoiced TH of ‘with’. Let’s watch again.

It looks pretty simple, doesn’t it?

Now let’s study ‘for the’. ‘For’ reduces to ‘fer’
in a sentence: for you, for me, for the first time.

To pronounce it this way, the bottom lip comes up
to touch the bottom of the top front teeth.

Fff. Let air pass through. The tongue can be
pulled back for the R, it won’t affect the F sound.

For the R sound, the middle of the tongue shifts back and up and little.

Urr….ferr….

So the tip of the tongue isn’t touching anything.

Forrrrr-the.

So the tongue tip is pulled back, and we simply bring it forward through the teeth.

Let’s take a look.

Wow. This is in slow motion, and yet the tongue
tip was through the teeth for just a brief moment.

Let’s watch again.

For the, for the. Can you practice that quick
movement without making sounds,

just bringing the tongue quickly in and out.

This is the movement you want. The tongue tip
only needs to be there for an instant

to make the right sound. Since the sound before, R and the sound after,

the vowel, are both voiced, your vocal cords are
already doing what they need to do.

All you have to do is that quick tongue movement.
If it feels awkward, don’t worry.

The movement is quite easy to practice,
and practice will make it feel more natural to you.

Th th, th, for the, for the, for the.

Let’s look one more time.

Now the phrase ‘on the’. Do you remember the trick from ‘in the’?

You can make the N with the tongue tip
through the teeth: NN. Let’s take a look.

Jaw drops for the vowel. The tongue tip is pointed down.

Then the tongue tip comes up and out of the teeth. A quick, simple movement.

Let’s watch again.

So linking the TH isn’t as complicated as you might think.

The movements of the tongue are small,
and there are shortcuts you can take

to make transitions between consonant sounds easier.

Let’s look at the phrases one more time.

Notice the simplicity of the mouth movements.

I hope this video makes you more confident with the TH sound.

These little phrases with ‘the’ are very common.

Can you come up with similar phrases for ‘these’ and ‘this’?

Practice them. Practice these little phrases over and over.

The more you do this, the more natural these tongue movements will be for you.

Then try putting these two word phrases into larger sentences.

Focus on making these words simply and quickly. You can do it!

Speaking this way will make you sound more natural
and American. This is not sloppy English.

You want to make function words like these
very short in all of your speech,

even in a business setting or with colleagues.

Here is the video I mentioned earlier: How to pronounce ‘the’ with real life examples.

Also, here’s a video on ‘to the’, with more up close and slow motion speech.

And here’s another video on linking TH with other examples.

You can click here for these videos, or, in the description below.

Are there some common phrases you need help with?
Let me know in the comments.

If you’re new to Rachel’s English, welcome.
I have over 500 videos to help you speak better

American English on my YouTube channel.
Click here to visit my channel and subscribe.

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

许多非母语
人士在 TH 声音方面存在问题。

在这个美式英语发音视频中,

我们将研究几个短语中的单词 THE,

向您展示美国人
用来轻松将 TH 与其他声音联系起来的技巧和捷径。

我们将研究几个
带有“the”的功能词短语的例子。

我已经制作了一个视频,介绍了“the”的发音。

要查看带有真实示例的视频,请点击此视频末尾的链接。

在这里,我们将专注于将单词 THE 与其他单词联系起来。

我们将研究
用 THE 说出各种两词短语的近距离慢动作视频。

at the, in the, is the, with the…

for the, and on the。

所有这些常见的组合都是由两个虚词组成的,

所以它们会很快而且不太清楚。

如果你把这些词发音得非常清楚
和完整,听起来就不自然。

她在商店。 这不是我们说话的方式。

她在店里。 at the, at the…

通过这样说功能词短语来捕捉美式英语的特征很重要。

当您尝试快速完成时,链接 TH 可能会很困难
,所以让我们学习一些捷径以使其更容易。

让我们从在 THE 学习开始。

AT 中的元音可以是 AA,但您
通常会听到 schwa、

uh、uht the、at the、uht the。 在慢动作视频中,
你会看到 AA,下巴更厉害。

我们如何快速让 T 跟在 TH 之后?

在,在,在。

你可能听不到 T,是吗?

那是因为它在这里是一个停止 T,然后是另一个辅音。

所以只要停止你喉咙里的空气,在……那里。
舌头有什么作用? 让我们来看吧。

AA 元音的下巴。 当下巴抬起时,
舌尖仍然向下,位于下门牙的后面。

它来自牙齿。

它从未到达上颚,也就是 T 的位置。

当我将舌头伸进牙齿时 - AT

我处于 TH 的位置,但我停止了空气。

所以我已经准备好去 TH,因为我正在做 Stop T。

在。 呃……那个。

当 AT 中的元音是 schwa 时也是如此:Uht…the。 呃……那个。

这比制作 T 更容易。您不必将舌头抬高到 T 的位置

,然后穿过牙齿。 只需将其
从牙齿中取出并停止空气。

这就是美国人的做法。 在,呃。

让我们继续关注。

现在舌尖回到嘴里

并下降到底部门牙后面
,它需要用于 EE 元音

或“the”中的 schwa。 让我们再看一遍这句话。

元音时下巴下垂,舌尖
穿过牙齿,然后返回元音。

请注意,它只是通过牙齿的舌尖,而不是更多。

跟我一起试试。 在。 在。 在——那个。 在。

或者,用 schwa,呃,呃,呃。

我在店里。 在。 我在 thuh 商店。 在,在。

接下来是“在”这个短语。 让我们来看看。

在一个不重读的音节中,IH 元音的下巴几乎没有下降。

现在舌尖穿过牙齿。

可是等等。 不是说N的舌头不应该到上颚吗? Nn-Nn。

是的,这通常是 N 的发音方式。

但是我可以用舌尖
通过牙齿发出声音,nn-nn,而稍微靠后的部分

是在
嘴巴的顶部。 嗯,嗯。 客栈。

现在是 TH,舌尖
回到嘴里,然后是元音。

让我们再看一遍这句话。

N T H 的舌头穿过牙齿。

这比做完整的 N 位置然后是 TH 位置更简单。

这就是美国人的做法。 所以现在你有两个捷径。

止 T 可以在舌尖处于 TH 位置的情况下进行,N 也可以。

让我们再看一下 AT THE 和 IN THE。

注意嘴巴的动作小而简单。

接下来,短语“是”。 很多人
很难将 S 或 Z 声音与 TH 联系起来。

发出 IH 元音时,下巴稍微下垂

,舌尖接触下门牙的后部。

接下来你会看到舌尖移动,它会朝上。

舌尖可以向上或向下以发出 S 和 Z 音。

我两者都做,这取决于单词和它周围的声音。

牙齿齐齐发出 Z 音。

是…是…

现在舌尖做了一些有趣的事情。

它不是通过牙齿来的!

当浊音 TH 开始一个虚词时,
例如 the, these, this, 我们可以做一个捷径。 TH

不是通过牙齿的尖端,
而是压在闭合的牙齿后面。

Th…th…

重要:它不在嘴的顶部。

那会发出 D 音,这是不正确的。
让我们看看正确的位置。

元音的下巴。 舌尖向上,牙齿闭合为 Z。

舌尖向下并接触闭合牙齿的后部。

这是正确的位置。 舌尖不在嘴的顶部。

THE中元音的舌尖向下。 让我们再看一遍。

惊人。 这是在虚词中快速生成浊音 TH 的一种更简单的方法。

这种情况经常发生。 在前两个例子中,

你可以用舌头
在 TH、Stop T 和 N 的位置发出之前的声音。

但你不能用舌尖穿过牙齿发出 S 或 Z 声音。

所以我们采取了不同的捷径。 我们
通过不让舌尖穿过牙齿来改变 TH。

是…是…
对于母语人士来说,这听起来仍然像是一个TH。 听起来还是对的。

下一个短语是“与”。

哇。 两个 TH。 我们在这里做什么? 让我们来看看。

嘴唇为 W 圆。当嘴唇分开时,嘴的内部看起来很黑。

那是因为在发出 W 音时,舌头向后抬起。

当舌头向前伸出时,尖端会指向牙齿之间的位置。

有TH。 然后舌尖回到嘴里,

并在下门牙的后面向下发出元音。

我们如何处理这两个 TH?

“With”通常与清音 TH、Thh 一起发音,
而 THE 与浊音 TH、dduh 一起发音……

下面是要做的:将它们组合起来。 只做一个 TH。 使它清音,并将这两个词连接起来。

与。 带有 the 的浊音 TH 也可以,
但它不太常见,而且更复杂。

所以坚持使用清音 TH。

With the…with the…with the…

所以这里的捷径是,不要发出浊音 TH。

将它与“with”的结尾清音 TH 结合起来。 让我们再看一遍。

看起来很简单,不是吗?

现在让我们学习“为”。 一个句子中的“for”简化为“fer
”:为你,为我,第一次。

以这种方式发音时,下唇
会碰到上前牙的底部。

噗。 让空气通过。 R音可以
向后拉,不会影响F音。

对于 R 音,舌头的中部向后和向上移动并且很小。

呃….ferr….

所以舌尖没有碰到任何东西。

Forrrrr-。

所以舌尖被拉回,我们简单地把它从牙齿中拉出来。

让我们来看看。

哇。 这是慢动作,但
舌尖穿过牙齿只是短暂的片刻。

让我们再看一遍。

为,为。 你能在
不发出声音的情况下练习那种快速的动作吗,

只用舌头快速进出。

这就是你想要的运动。 舌尖
只需停留片刻

即可发出正确的声音。 由于之前的声音 R 和之后的声音

元音都是浊音,因此您的声带
已经在做它们需要做的事情。

你所要做的就是快速的舌头运动。
如果感觉尴尬,请不要担心。

这个动作很容易练习
,练习会让你感觉更自然。

Th th,th,对于,对于,对于。

让我们再看一次。

现在是“在”这个短语。 你还记得“in the”的诀窍吗?

你可以用舌尖
穿过牙齿做N:NN。 让我们来看看。

元音的下巴。 舌尖朝下。

然后舌尖向上伸出牙齿。 一个快速、简单的动作。

让我们再看一遍。

所以链接 TH 并不像你想象的那么复杂。

舌头的动作很小
,你可以采取一些捷径

来使辅音之间的转换更容易。

让我们再看一遍这些短语。

注意嘴部动作的简单性。

我希望这个视频能让你对 TH 声音更有信心。

这些带有“the”的小短语很常见。

你能想出类似的短语来表达“这些”和“这个”吗?

练习它们。 一遍又一遍地练习这些小短语。

你做的越多,这些舌头运动对你来说就越自然。

然后尝试将这两个词组放入更大的句子中。

专注于简单快速地制作这些单词。 你能行的!

这样说话会让你听起来更自然
和美国。 这不是马虎的英语。

您希望
在您的所有演讲中都使此类功能词非常简短,

即使是在商业环境中或与同事交谈时也是如此。

这是我之前提到的视频:如何用现实生活中的例子发音“the”。

此外,这里有一个关于“to the”的视频,其中包含更多近距离和慢动作演讲。

这是另一个关于将 TH 与其他示例联系起来的视频。

您可以单击此处观看这些视频,或者在下面的描述中。

是否有一些您需要帮助的常用短语?
在评论中告诉我。

如果您不熟悉 Rachel 的英语,欢迎您。
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美式英语。
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