The MOST DIFFICULT ENGLISH WORDS made EASY

Today we’re studying words that are difficult in English because of the sound combinations.

Don’t worry, they’re not just difficult for
non-native speakers.

They can be difficult for native speakers too.

So, and I also struggle with, and there’s no synonym for this one: rural.

Rural. I get questions about that.

R-U-R-A-L. It’s very difficult. Rural.

Now, I’m noticing a pattern. With ‘regularly’ and ‘rural’, I think you’re having issues with R’s and L’s maybe.

I have always struggled with the R.

And I don’t know why. Can you help me?

I can.

Rural?

Yeah, that’s a tough word.

We’re going to go over it, break it down, make it easier to pronounce, along with several other difficult words.

And yes we’ll study the mouth movements of these tricky sound combinations

with up close, slow motion shots.

Craig Melvin is a broadcaster for NBC and he said rural is a tricky word, he also said regularly.

R’s and Ls’s.

These are sounds you’re going to be
seeing a lot of in this video.

In fact, each word in this video has both sounds.

Regularly

Regularly

Part of what we can do to make this word
easier is focus on stress.

The first syllable is stressed.

Re-.

For the first R, you need a lot of lip rounding.

Re-.

Let’s see that up close.

Regularly

Can you believe how much the lips round
for a beginning R?

The tip of the tongue is pulled back and up a little bit inside the mouth, rrr.

Re–

Then the jaw drops and we have the EH vowel in the stressed syllable.

Quite a bit of jaw drop.

The tongue tip is down and the middle
part of the tongue lifts up.

This is a lot more jaw drop than we’ll get in the rest of the word with the unstressed syllables.

Here we see the tongue move a little bit.

This is at the back of the tongue as the back lifts.

Reg–

The back of the tongue goes up to touch for the G: ggg—

It’s touches the soft palate.

Reg, reg.

Regularly.

Now we have three unstressed syllables.

Reg–ularly.

Regularly.

You’ll see that the lips don’t round nearly
as much for this second R

because it doesn’t begin a stressed syllable.

The lip position is more relaxed.

Simplifying your mouth movements and mouth positions

in unstressed syllables will help you
sound more natural when speaking,

it will help you focus on stress, and I think it will make these difficult words easier to say.

Let’s look at the mouth for the rest of this word.

Regu–

Y sound, schwa as the mouth moves
into position for the L.

This is a light L because it comes before the vowel or diphthong in the syllables.

The Y sound is made with the back of the
tongue on the roof of the mouth.

Yy— yy–

It’s up there for the G, it slides forward as
it comes down.

Regu-, regu-. Regularly.

Regul–

The light L can be made two different
ways, with the tongue here,

pressing up on the bottom of the top front teeth, or inside the mouth, pressing up on the roof of the mouth.

Next we have the schwa-R.

The R absorbs the schwa, so you don’t need to try to make a separate sound.

It’s just R: Reg-u-lar–rrrr–

Right from L to R.

You’ll be able to see the tip of the tongue
pull back and up for the R.

So here’s the R.

See how the lip position is different from
the beginning R?

Much more relaxed.

Let’s compare the two.

Beginning R, much more rounded.

R ending a syllable, much more relaxed.

The tongue tip still pulls back and up though.

Regularly.

Now we move into another Light L, and again the tongue is pushing up against the bottom of the top front teeth.

Then the tongue tip will go back into the mouth, behind the front bottom teeth, for the EE vowel: Ly–

The front part of the tongue is arching towards the roof of the mouth.

Let’s watch that word a few times slowly.

Regularly.

Regularly.

Regularly.

When you’re practicing a longer word like this, it does help to break it up

and practice it just the stressed syllables
and just the unstressed syllables.

Reg-ularly. Reg-ularly.

It also helps to practice it slowed down.

Regularly. Regularly.

That’s something we do a lot of in my online school Rachel’s English Academy.

If you can’t get it at regular pace, slow it down,

work out the movements, make that comfortable before trying it again quickly.

This feels like a lot of work, but you’re not going to have to do this for every word,

just those words or phrases that are
especially tricky for you.

So now you’ll hear it, you’ll see it three times, then a fourth time with no sound,

you say it that fourth time, in slow motion.

Regularly.

Regularly.

Regularly.

Now let’s tackle Rural.

Rural.

Beginning R, that’s going to be a really
tight circle of the lips

with the tip of the tongue pulled back and up.

Rr– Rural. Rr–

Yes indeed, a tight circle for the lips.

Wait.

Before we go further with that, I have to
show you a clip from 30 Rock,

the pronunciation of the word ‘rural’ was actually a joke for their entire episode.

Oh, this isn’t for TGS. It’s for my movie. The rural juror has a limited release next week.

Oh, congratulations! I didn’t know they had a release date for the rur– for that movie.

Rural juror.

Basically that phrase is almost entirely an R sound.

Let’s get back to the word.

The first syllable is stressed, it starts with the R sound.

now the next sound is tricky because it’s
followed by an R in the same syllable.

The vowel is the vowel in book, cook, push, uh.

UH.

But the R that follows it does change it.

You’ll hear a couple of different
pronunciations of this word,

but the most common is to make this an R vowel,

Rur-al.

Rural.

Let’s look at it.

from the tight circle for the beginning R,
the lips relax a bit for the R vowel.

Lips are still flared though.

The tongue has relaxed position just a bit.

The tongue isn’t quite as close to the roof of the mouth.

Now there is a little re-emphasis of the R

as the tongue does go back up a little closer to the roof of the mouth again.

Rrruuu— rruu—

I totally get why this word is so frustrating to practice.

Working on it will help you improve your R sound.

Because you can’t do this word without an American R.

Ruuur– so I start with an R, then I let the tongue lower just a bit, and then I bring it back up again.

Rrruuu– rural– rural.

Then we have the second, unstressed syllable.

You’ll see the lips relax.

You can’t see the tongue, but the tip is coming back down behind the bottom front teeth.

What? This is an L.

In ‘regularly’, we saw that tongue tip came here, ll.

But that was a light L. This is a dark L.

It comes after the vowel in the syllable.

The Dark L is made with the back of the
tongue and the tongue tip down relaxed.

Watch.

Rural.

You will not see a tongue position like what we saw on ‘regularly’ with the Light L.

No tongue tip visible.

So you go straight from the R to the dark sound.

Rruuurraal. Uhl.

L is a syllabic consonant.

It absorbs the schwa.
You don’t need to try to make that sound.

Rural. Uhl.

Just make that dark sound, tongue tip down, and the dark sound made with the back of the tongue.

Uhl. uhl. The tongue presses down in the back just a little bit to make the dark sound. Rural.

Let’s watch it three times slowly,

then we’ll play it again silently, it’s your turn to practice it out loud that fourth time.

Rural.

Rural.

Rural.

Rural.

A tough word.

But again, if you practice it slowly, intentionally, it will get much easier.

Who knows, maybe it will end up being your favorite words.

Before we move on to the next word, let me give a shout-out to Cambly who sponsored this video.

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Before you know it, your kids will be correcting your pronunciation.

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And thank you, Cambly, for sponsoring this video.

The next word also came to mind from a video in the Interview a Broadcaster series that I did.

This is Chris Jansing, a senior national
correspondent for NBC news.

She pointed out a word with R and L that gets mispronounced a lot.

I do have some pet peeves. Like nuclear, which we know is nuclear.

Nuclear.

If you’re not confident saying this word it makes sense,

because you’re hearing it mispronounced all the time.

Many people say: nu-cu-ler, but it should be: nuc-le-ar.

Nuclear. The L goes with the K. Not, nu-cu-lar.

Nuc-le-ar.

By the way, this word has two different meanings.

The one you probably know

is relating to the nucleus of an atom, the release of energy associated with that,

and then things like nuclear waste, nuclear weapons.

But we also use it in reference to a family.

It refers to parents and children.

So, this is my nuclear family, and this picture was taken back in April.

When I was a kid, my nuclear family was different, it was me, my parents, and my brother.

Nuclear.

L goes with the K sound,
first syllable stress, let’s look at it.

Nuclear.

Nu– nu–

N consonant, OO vowel.

Lips move into a circle for that stressed vowel, nu.

Then the back of the tongue touches the soft palate in the back, that’s making the K. Kkl–

The tongue tip immediately comes
through the teeth for the L. Nucl-.

It’s a light L because it comes before the
vowel in the syllable.

Then the tongue tip goes down, touching the backs of the bottom teeth for the EE.

Nucle-

–ar.

Next, you’ll see the lips come into a
relaxed flare for the R,

and you’ll see the tongue tip pull back and up a bit for the ending R.

Nuclear.

Focus on the stress, I think it will help.

Now you’ll see it and hear it three times slowly.

Then a fourth time silently, repeat it back
out loud that fourth time.

Nuclear.

Nuclear.

Nuclear.

Squirrel.

How much do you hate this word?

Let’s study it.

It’s a two-syllable word with stress on the first syllable.

Squirrel.

Squirrel.

Let’s take a look.

Squirrel.

First we have an S.

The teeth are together.

Why are the lips rounding?

They don’t need to round for the S.

That’s because they’re already getting ready for the W.

You can’t see the K, that’s done with the
back of the tongue

and it happens very quickly before the lips come into a tight circle for the W.

Squ.

Now we have the hard part.

An R vowel-consonant.

The thing I always have to tell my students with this vowel

is that it doesn’t sound different than R.

Rrr—

the sound for the vowel and R are
together, just one sound.

Squ-irr–el.

So don’t try to make a vowel and then an R, it’s just the R sound.

Squirrel

So the lips flare and the tip of the tongue pulls back and up.

Let’s see.

Squir–

Tongue tip lifted and pulled back, squirr-.

It doesn’t pull back much.

I’ve definitely had students make a sound like squirr–.

This is from pulling the tongue tip too far back.

Rrrr.

The correct sound is more forward.

Squir– rrr–

The tongue tip does pull back, but not a lot.

Watch the sound you get.

Match it to rrrrrrrrrrr and not rrrrrrrrrrr.

And to finish off the word, we have a dark L.

You won’t see the tongue tip come out of the teeth or go to the roof of the mouth because it’s a dark L.

Squirrel.

We just want the dark sound.

the tongue tip comes back down from the R,

And it touches lightly the backs of the bottom front teeth,

it’s the back part of the tongue that makes that dark sound, pressing down the back a little bit,

uhl, uhl, squirrel.

Let’s watch.

Squirrel.

Squirrel.

Here’s the dark sound.

Let’s watch and listen three more times, then you repeat once while we’re watching.

Squirrel.

Squirrel.

Squirrel.

Regularly, rural, nuclear, squirrel.

We covered some truly crazy words in this video.

What do you think of this slow motion, up close footage?

Does it help?

It would be way better if my cheeks were
transparent, wouldn’t it?

Sorry about that.

I’ve dreamed about that for years.

Please let me know in the comments
below if you like this kind of video and

what words you’d like to see next.

And the best way for me to know that you
liked it is to share it –

the more views it gets, the more I know, do that again.

Now don’t forget to take advantage of the
offer from Cambly

and get a free 1-on-1 lessons, or explore Cambly kids.

Links in the video description below.

I’m going to go ahead and let YouTube
suggest the next best video for you.

that’s right here on the screen, click it to continue learning.

And please don’t forget to subscribe if
you haven’t already.

It’s easy, it’s free.

I make new videos every Tuesday.

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

今天我们正在学习由于声音组合而在英语中难以理解的单词。

别担心,它们不仅对
非母语人士来说很困难。

对于母语人士来说,它们也可能很困难。

所以,我也很挣扎,这个没有同义词:农村。

乡村的。 我对此有疑问。

乡村的。 这非常困难。 乡村的。

现在,我注意到了一种模式。 对于“定期”和“农村”,我认为你可能对 R 和 L 有问题。

我一直在与 R 作斗争。

我不知道为什么。 你能帮助我吗?

我能。

乡村的?

是的,这是一个艰难的词。

我们将复习它,将其分解,使其更容易发音,以及其他几个困难的单词。

是的,我们将通过近距离慢动作镜头研究这些棘手的声音组合的嘴部动作

克雷格梅尔文是 NBC 的广播员,他说农村是一个棘手的词,他也经常说。

R 和 L 的。

这些是您将
在本视频中经常看到的声音。

事实上,这个视频中的每个单词都有两种发音。

定期

定期 让这个词更容易我们可以做的一部分
是关注压力。

第一个音节重读。

回覆-。

对于第一个 R,你需要大量的嘴唇圆润。

回覆-。

让我们近距离看看。

经常

你能相信
一个开始R的嘴唇有多圆吗?

舌尖在嘴里向后和向上拉一点,rrr。

再——

然后下巴掉下来,我们在重读音节中有 EH 元音。

差点下巴了。

舌尖向下,
舌中部向上。

这比我们在单词的其余部分中没有重读的音节要大得多。

在这里,我们看到舌头移动了一点。

当背部抬起时,这是在舌头的后部。

Reg–舌后部向上触到G:ggg

—触到软腭。

注册,注册。

经常。

现在我们有了三个非重读音节。

经常。

经常。

你会看到第二个 R 的嘴唇没有那么圆

因为它没有以重读音节开头。

嘴唇位置更放松。 在非重读音节中

简化你的嘴巴动作和嘴巴位置

会帮助你
在说话时听起来更自然,

它会帮助你专注于重音,我认为这会让这些难词更容易说出来。

让我们看看这个词的其余部分的嘴。

Regu——

Y 音,当嘴巴移动
到 L 的位置时 schwa。

这是一个轻 L,因为它在音节中位于元音或双元音之前。

Y音是用
舌后部在上颚上发出的。

Yy—

yy– G 在上面,
下降时向前滑动。

调节-,调节-。 经常。

Regul——灯L可以用两种不同的
方式制作,舌头在这里,

压在上前牙的底部,或者在嘴里,压在上颚。

接下来我们有 schwa-R。

R 吸收 schwa,因此您无需尝试发出单独的声音。

只是 R:Reg-u-lar–

rrrr– 从 L 到 R。

你会看到舌尖
向后拉到 R。

所以这里是 R。

看看嘴唇的位置如何
与开头的R不同吗?

轻松了许多。

让我们比较一下两者。

开始 R,更圆润。

R 以一个音节结尾,轻松多了。

尽管如此,舌尖仍然向后拉。

经常。

现在我们进入另一个 Light L,舌头再次向上推顶前牙的底部。

然后舌尖会回到嘴里,在前下牙的后面,对于 EE 元音:

Ly——舌头的前部朝上颚拱起。

让我们慢慢地看这个词几次。

经常。

经常。

经常。

当你练习这样一个较长的单词时,将它分解

并只练习重读
音节和非重读音节确实有帮助。

经常。 经常。

这也有助于练习放慢速度。

经常。 经常。

这是我们在我的在线学校 Rachel 的英语学院做的很多事情。

如果你不能以正常的速度完成它,放慢速度,

锻炼动作,在快速再次尝试之前让它舒服。

这感觉像是很多工作,但你不必对每个单词都这样做,

只需要
对你来说特别棘手的单词或短语。

所以现在你会听到它,你会看到它三次,然后第四次没有声音,

你说第四次,慢动作。

经常。

经常。

经常。

现在让我们解决农村问题。

乡村的。

从R开始,这将是一个非常
紧的嘴唇圈

,舌尖向后和向上拉。

Rr–农村。 Rr–

是的,确实是嘴唇的一个紧密的圆圈。

等待。

在我们进一步讨论之前,我必须
给你看一段来自 30 Rock 的片段,

“农村”这个词的发音实际上是他们整个剧集的一个笑话。

哦,这不适合 TGS。 是为了我的电影。 农村陪审员下周有一个有限的释放。

哦,恭喜! 我不知道他们有 rur - 那部电影的发行日期。

农村陪审员。

基本上,那个短语几乎完全是一个 R 音。

让我们回到这个词。

第一个音节是重音,它以 R 音开头。

现在下一个声音很棘手,因为它
后面是同一个音节中的 R。

元音是book, cook, push, uh中的元音。

呃。

但是它后面的 R 确实改变了它。

你会听到这个词有几种不同的
发音,

但最常见的是把它变成一个 R 元音,

Rur-al。

乡村的。

让我们看看它。

从紧圈开始R
,嘴唇放松一点R元音。

嘴唇仍然张开。

舌头稍微放松了一点。

舌头不太靠近上颚。

现在有一点重新强调了 R,

因为舌头确实又回到了更靠近上颚的位置。

Rrruuu— rruu—

我完全明白为什么这个词练习起来如此令人沮丧。

努力工作将帮助您改善您的 R 声音。

因为如果没有美国的 R. Ruuur,你就无法说出这个词——

所以我从 R 开始,然后我让舌头稍微放低一点,然后我又把它拉回来。

Rrruuu——农村——农村。

然后我们有第二个,非重读音节。

你会看到嘴唇放松。

你看不到舌头,但舌尖正在回到下门牙后面。

什么? 这是一个 L。

在“定期”中,我们看到舌尖来到这里,ll。

但那是一个浅色 L。这是一个深色 L。

它出现在音节中的元音之后。

Dark L 是在
舌后部和舌尖向下放松的情况下制成的。

手表。

乡村的。

您不会看到像我们在 Light L 上“定期”看到的舌头位置。看

不到舌尖。

所以你直接从 R 到黑暗的声音。

鲁鲁拉尔。 呃。

L是一个音节辅音。

它吸收施瓦。
你不需要试着发出那种声音。

乡村的。 呃。

只要发出那个黑暗的声音,舌尖向下,然后用舌头的后部发出黑暗的声音。

呃。 呃。 舌头在后面向下压一点,以发出黑暗的声音。 乡村的。

我们慢慢看三遍,

然后再默弹一遍,第四遍就轮到你大声练习了。

乡村的。

乡村的。

乡村的。

乡村的。

一个艰难的词。

但同样,如果你慢慢地、有意识地练习,它会变得容易得多。

谁知道呢,也许它最终会成为你最喜欢的词。

在我们继续下一个词之前,让我向赞助此视频的 Cambly 大声疾呼。

我知道你们很多人是老师,我
知道你们很多人是父母。

Cambly 有一个很好的方法来帮助您的孩子学习英语,

并且听起来很自然,因为他们正在
向母语教师学习。

Cambly 为 4-15 岁的儿童开设课程。

他们将以完全灵活的时间表与经验丰富的一对一老师会面

,最适合您家庭的需求。

该应用程序使课程具有互动性和趣味性。

因为他们与老师一起现场工作,所以每节课都是为您的孩子量身定制的。

在不知不觉中,您的孩子会纠正您的发音。

因此,今天安排试课

并享受课程包 10% 的折扣,请
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此外,他们不会遗漏父母或任何成年人,这可以是你。

您还可以通过使用代码 rachel-english 获得免费的 15 分钟一对一课程

,并且使用此代码的任何课程包都可享受 10% 的折扣,

您知道吗,所有这些代码都是视频描述中的链接

孩子们。

看看这个。

感谢 Cambly 赞助这个视频。

下一个词也从我做的采访广播员系列的视频中浮现出来。

我是 NBC 新闻的高级全国记者 Chris Jansing

她指出了一个带有 R 和 L 的词,该词经常被误读。

我确实有一些烦恼。 就像核,我们知道是核。

核。

如果您没有信心说出这个词,那是有道理的,

因为您一直在听到它的发音错误。

很多人说:nu-cu-ler,其实应该是:nuc-le-ar。

核。 L 与 K 一起使用。不,nu-cu-lar。

核。

顺便说一句,这个词有两种不同的含义。

你可能知道

的与原子核有关,与原子核相关的能量释放,

然后是核废料、核武器之类的东西。

但我们也用它来指代一个家庭。

它指的是父母和孩子。

所以,这是我的核心家庭,这张照片是四月份拍的。

当我还是个孩子的时候,我的核心家庭是不同的,是我、我的父母和我的兄弟。

核。

L与K音,
第一个音节重音,让我们看看。

核。

Nu——nu——

N辅音,OO元音。

对于那个重读元音 nu,嘴唇移动成一个圆圈。

然后舌后部接触到后部的软腭,这就是 K.

Kkl–舌尖立即
穿过牙齿为 L. Nucl-。

这是一个轻 L,因为它出现
在音节中的元音之前。

然后舌尖下降,接触到下牙的后部进行 EE。

核。

接下来,您会看到 R 的嘴唇变得
放松,

并且您会看到舌尖向后拉并向上拉一点以完成结尾的

R.Nuclear。

专注于压力,我认为这会有所帮助。

现在你会慢慢地看到它并听到它三遍。

然后第四次无声地重复
,第四次大声重复。

核。

核。

核。

松鼠。

你有多讨厌这个词?

让我们研究一下。

这是一个双音节单词,第一个音节有重音。

松鼠。

松鼠。

让我们来看看。

松鼠。

首先我们有一个

S。牙齿在一起。

为什么嘴唇是圆的?

他们不需要为 S 四舍五入。

那是因为他们已经为 W 做好了准备。

你看不到 K,这是在舌头后部完成的,

而且在嘴唇进入之前很快就会发生 W.

Squ 的紧密圈子。

现在我们有困难的部分。

一个 R 元音辅音。

我总是要用这个元音告诉我的学生的

是,它听起来和 R 没有什么不同。Rrr——

元音和 R 的声音是
在一起的,只是一个声音。

松鼠。

所以不要尝试先发出元音然后发出 R,这只是 R 的声音。

松鼠

所以嘴唇张开,舌尖向后和向上拉。

让我们来看看。

Squir——

舌尖抬起又向后拉,squirr——。

它不会拉回太多。

我肯定让学生发出像 squirr 一样的声音——。

这是由于将舌尖向后拉得太远。

呸呸呸。

正确的声音更靠前。

Squir–

rrr– 舌尖确实向后拉,但不是很多。

观察你得到的声音。

将其匹配到 rrrrrrrrrrrr 而不是 rrrrrrrrrrrr。

最后,我们有一个黑色的 L。

你不会看到舌尖从牙齿中伸出或移到嘴巴的顶部,因为它是黑色的 L.

Squirrel。

我们只想要黑暗的声音。

舌尖从R回落下来

,轻轻碰到下

门牙的后部,是舌头后部发出暗沉的声音,把后部压下去一点,

呃,呃,松鼠。

让我们来看吧。

松鼠。

松鼠。

这是黑暗的声音。

让我们再看和听三遍,然后你在我们看的时候重复一遍。

松鼠。

松鼠。

松鼠。

定期,农村,核,松鼠。

我们在这段视频中介绍了一些真正疯狂的词。

您如何看待这种慢动作,近距离镜头?

它有帮助吗?

如果我的脸颊是
透明的会更好,不是吗?

对于那个很抱歉。

多年来我一直梦想着这一点。

如果您喜欢这种视频以及

接下来想看什么词,请在下面的评论中告诉我。

让我知道你喜欢它的最好方法
是分享它——

它获得的观看次数越多,我知道的越多,再做一次。

现在别忘了利用 Cambly 的
优惠

并获得免费的一对一课程,或探索 Cambly 的孩子们。

以下视频说明中的链接。

我将继续让 YouTube
为您推荐下一个最佳视频。

就在屏幕上,点击它继续学习。

如果您还没有订阅,请不要忘记订阅

这很容易,它是免费的。

我每周二制作新视频。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。