Learn English! | Perfect Pronunciation of Common English Vocabulary 6/11

312,498 views ・ 2018-06-19

Rachel's English


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
What are the most common words in American English,
0
0
3300
00:03
and how exactly do you pronounce them?
1
3300
2760
00:06
Today, you’re getting the next video in the 100 most common words in English series,
2
6060
5840
00:11
this is video 6.
3
11900
1980
00:13
In this series, we’re studying the real pronunciation.
4
13880
3780
00:17
This is likely different from what you learned in English class.
5
17660
3900
00:21
You see, in American English, we have all sorts of words that are unstressed or even reduced:
6
21560
5680
00:27
that means we change the pronunciation.
7
27240
2960
00:30
The set of the 100 most common words in American English contains many, many words that reduce.
8
30200
6860
00:37
If you haven’t already seen video 1 and the other videos in this series, I suggest you start there.
9
37060
7120
00:44
These videos build one on top of the next, so click here to watch video one.
10
44180
5560
00:49
11
49740
5960
00:55
Number 51: the word WHEN.
12
55700
3120
00:58
This word definitely reduces.
13
58820
2360
01:01
Fully pronounced, it’s the W sound,
14
61180
2740
01:03
the EH as in BED vowel, and the N consonant.
15
63920
3200
01:07
When.
16
67120
1160
01:08
You may be thinking, I’ve heard this word pronounced differently.
17
68280
4180
01:12
You may have heard it pronounce hhwen.
18
72460
4340
01:16
Hhh— when.
19
76800
880
01:17
WH- words can be pronounced with a “hh”
20
77680
3660
01:21
sound before the W.
21
81340
1800
01:23
It’s not necessary, and it’s not my preference.
22
83140
3080
01:26
I think, just keep it simple, just use a clean W sound.
23
86220
5520
01:31
When.
24
91740
1360
01:33
But in a sentence, this word can be unstressed and said more quickly.
25
93100
4460
01:37
Then you could write the vowel with the schwa or the IH as in SIT vowel in IPA.
26
97560
5580
01:43
“When”
27
103140
940
01:44
becomes: when,
28
104080
1940
01:46
said very quickly.
29
106020
1840
01:47
If you don’t know what IPA, the International Phonetic Alphabet is,
30
107860
4780
01:52
I have a playlist of videos that goes over that.
31
112640
3400
01:56
Click here or in the description.
32
116040
2400
01:58
Let’s look at some example sentences.
33
118440
2680
02:01
When are you going to stop by?
34
121120
2860
02:03
When,
35
123980
1160
02:05
when are you—
36
125140
1640
02:06
I said that very quickly, unstressed.
37
126780
2800
02:09
When, when,
38
129580
1140
02:10
when are you going to stop by?
39
130720
2280
02:13
Another sentence:
40
133000
1640
02:14
It was better when we were kids.
41
134640
1900
02:16
When, when, when, when,
42
136540
2460
02:19
when we were, when we were,
43
139000
1960
02:20
Unstressed. Said very quickly.
44
140960
3020
02:23
It was better when we were kids.
45
143980
2060
02:26
You see, we don’t want every word in American English to be fully pronounced,
46
146040
4720
02:30
when.
47
150760
1640
02:32
Some of the understandability of English depends on the contrast
48
152400
4220
02:36
of stressed and unstressed syllables, clear and less clear.
49
156620
5120
02:41
Let’s look at number 52, the word ‘make’.
50
161740
2920
02:44
Now, this is a stressed word.
51
164660
2400
02:47
We have two categories of words in American English:
52
167060
3340
02:50
Content Words and Function Words.
53
170400
3100
02:53
Content words are nouns, verbs, like this verb ‘make’,
54
173500
4600
02:58
adjectives, and adverbs, and content words are what are generally stressed in a sentence.
55
178100
6740
03:04
“Make”:
56
184840
1180
03:06
M consonant, AY diphthong,
57
186020
2860
03:08
and the K sound,
58
188880
1720
03:10
is usually stressed in a sentence.
59
190600
2320
03:12
Make.
60
192920
1740
03:14
Make.
61
194660
1180
03:15
It has an up-down shape.
62
195840
2020
03:17
That’s the stressed shape of intonation.
63
197860
2480
03:20
Make.
64
200340
1200
03:21
That’s different from:
65
201540
1480
03:23
when, when, when,
66
203020
1940
03:24
which was flatter in pitch and lower.
67
204960
2680
03:27
Make,
68
207640
1140
03:28
longer,
69
208780
1040
03:29
shape of stress,
70
209820
1400
03:31
more clear.
71
211220
1920
03:33
Sentences:
72
213140
1220
03:34
I’ll make you one.
73
214360
1840
03:36
Make. Make.
74
216200
2400
03:38
It would make things easier.
75
218600
2340
03:40
Make. Make.
76
220940
3160
03:44
Number 53.
77
224100
1860
03:45
Here, we have a beautiful reduction.
78
225960
2580
03:48
It’s the word ‘can’.
79
228540
2840
03:51
If ‘can’ is a main verb, then it’s not reduced.
80
231380
3600
03:54
Who can help tomorrow?
81
234980
1880
03:56
I can.
82
236860
1520
03:58
Also, it doesn’t reduce if it’s a noun:
83
238380
2640
04:01
a can of soup.
84
241020
1640
04:02
But most of the time, ‘can’ is a helping verb, not a main verb,
85
242660
4260
04:06
and that means it reduces.
86
246920
2580
04:09
We change a sound.
87
249500
1920
04:11
Let’s go back to the example:
88
251420
2100
04:13
Who can help tomorrow?
89
253520
1720
04:15
I can.
90
255240
1640
04:16
In the question:
91
256880
1660
04:18
Who can help tomorrow?
92
258540
1700
04:20
‘Help’ is the main verb.
93
260240
2240
04:22
‘Can’ is the helping verb.
94
262480
2140
04:24
Did you hear how I pronounced it?
95
264620
2200
04:26
Who can help tomorrow?
96
266820
2100
04:28
Who can help?
97
268920
1320
04:30
It’s no longer ‘can’, but ‘kn’.
98
270240
3380
04:33
Who can—
99
273620
1400
04:35
Who can help?
100
275020
1180
04:36
Short, flat, no vowel.
101
276200
3480
04:39
We write it in IPA with the schwa.
102
279680
2520
04:42
Kn, kn, kn.
103
282200
1600
04:43
Try that.
104
283800
1400
04:45
Kn,
105
285200
1260
04:46
who can help?
106
286460
1380
04:47
I can see you.
107
287840
1860
04:49
‘See’
108
289700
800
04:50
the main verb, ‘can’ the helping verb.
109
290500
3480
04:53
Kn, kn.
110
293980
1700
04:55
I can, I can see you.
111
295680
2940
04:58
That’s quite a reduction.
112
298620
1940
05:00
Very common.
113
300560
1480
05:02
Number 54: The word ‘like’.
114
302040
2600
05:04
This word can be used lots of different ways, so it can be an adverb,
115
304640
4420
05:09
a noun, or an adjective, which would mean it’s stressed,
116
309060
4340
05:13
or it can be a preposition or conjunction,
117
313400
3320
05:16
which means it will be a function word and is unstressed.
118
316720
3880
05:20
However, even when it’s unstressed,
119
320600
2940
05:23
this word does not reduce.
120
323540
2220
05:25
Let’s look at an example where it’s stressed.
121
325760
3300
05:29
I don’t like it.
122
329060
1960
05:31
Like.
123
331020
1220
05:32
I don’t like it.
124
332240
1340
05:33
Here, it’s stressed.
125
333580
1560
05:35
Like. Like.
126
335140
2440
05:37
Up-down shape of stress.
127
337580
2640
05:40
But what about this sentence?
128
340220
1920
05:42
He acted like nothing happened.
129
342140
2000
05:44
He acted like—
130
344140
1640
05:45
like, like, lower in pitch, much faster.
131
345780
3860
05:49
He acted like nothing happened.
132
349640
2460
05:52
He acted like nothing happened.
133
352100
1940
05:54
Like.
134
354040
1380
05:55
Unstressed.
135
355420
1340
05:56
None of the sounds change so it doesn’t reduce,
136
356760
2660
05:59
but it’s pretty different from the stressed version.
137
359420
3460
06:02
Like,
138
362880
1280
06:04
like.
139
364160
1240
06:05
Like, like, like.
140
365400
3100
06:08
One more example, and this is a really common use of the word.
141
368500
4200
06:12
We use this when we’re telling a story,
142
372700
2480
06:15
something that happened to us,
143
375180
1580
06:16
and we’re talking about what someone said or someone’s reaction.
144
376760
4000
06:20
For example:
145
380760
1280
06:22
Yesterday I saw Jim walking home from school,
146
382040
3100
06:25
and I was like,
147
385140
920
06:26
“Do you need a ride?”
148
386060
1640
06:27
And he was like, “No, I’m just going to walk.”
149
387700
2860
06:30
I was like,
150
390560
1500
06:32
he was like,
151
392060
640
06:32
she was like,
152
392700
900
06:33
you were like,
153
393600
960
06:34
like, like, like, like, like.
154
394560
1720
06:36
All of these are examples of ‘like’ unstressed.
155
396280
4340
06:40
Number 55: Time.
156
400620
2500
06:43
Now this word, a noun, an adjective, a verb, is always a content word.
157
403120
5260
06:48
That means it will likely be stressed.
158
408380
2580
06:50
This is only the 6th word in this list so far that is always stressed.
159
410960
5140
06:56
We’re on number 55.
160
416100
1680
06:57
That’s crazy.
161
417780
1740
06:59
So if you thought every word you spoke needed to be clear and fully pronounced,
162
419520
5080
07:04
I hope this series is helping to change your mind.
163
424600
3780
07:08
This word is pronounced with the True T, because it’s stressed,
164
428380
3980
07:12
and it has the AI as in BUY diphthong, and don’t forget that M.
165
432360
4380
07:16
Time.
166
436740
1280
07:18
Lips have to come together.
167
438020
2000
07:20
Time.
168
440020
1260
07:21
There is no case where the lips don’t come together for the M.
169
441280
3940
07:25
Always.
170
445220
1380
07:26
Time, time.
171
446600
2540
07:29
Crisp, clear True T, teeth come together for it:
172
449140
3800
07:32
ttt— time,
173
452940
3300
07:36
up-down shape of stress.
174
456240
1980
07:38
Let’s look at a sentence.
175
458220
1560
07:39
What time is it?
176
459780
1480
07:41
Time.
177
461260
1240
07:42
A noun.
178
462500
1500
07:44
Or, you do sit ups for a minute, and I’ll time you.
179
464000
4020
07:48
Time, time.
180
468020
1640
07:49
There, it’s a verb, still stressed, same pronunciation.
181
469660
4480
07:54
Number 56: No.
182
474140
2920
07:57
Another word, the seventh word, that will generally always be stressed.
183
477060
5020
08:02
There is not a case where it would usually reduce or be unstressed.
184
482080
4960
08:07
No. No.
185
487040
3040
08:10
Up-down shape:
186
490080
1720
08:11
No.
187
491800
1100
08:12
And please don’t ever forget the lip rounding that goes into this diphthong:
188
492900
4560
08:17
oohhh.
189
497460
2100
08:19
No.
190
499560
1420
08:20
No.
191
500980
1160
08:22
I have no idea.
192
502140
1880
08:24
He voted ‘no’ on the sugar tax.
193
504020
2840
08:26
No, no.
194
506860
2260
08:29
That was a simple one, wasn’t it?
195
509120
2500
08:31
What about 57?
196
511620
1840
08:33
57 is interesting.
197
513460
1680
08:35
The word ‘just’.
198
515140
1720
08:36
It’s either an adjective or an adverb,
199
516860
2560
08:39
and those are both content words, so it will generally be stressed.
200
519420
4060
08:43
And for the most part, we don’t reduce stressed words.
201
523480
3380
08:46
They’re important.
202
526860
1320
08:48
We only reduce and say quickly the words that are a little less important, the function words.
203
528180
5820
08:54
BUT.
204
534000
1600
08:55
This word is interesting because it has a T,
205
535600
3140
08:58
and T has its own set of funny rules.
206
538740
3260
09:02
If you’ve seen many of my videos, you know them.
207
542000
2680
09:04
I talk about the T pronunciations a lot.
208
544680
3440
09:08
If the T comes between two consonants,
209
548120
2520
09:10
we often drop that T.
210
550640
2120
09:12
Well, that’s a reduction.
211
552760
1440
09:14
Let me show you what I mean.
212
554200
2000
09:16
When the word ‘just’ is followed by a word that starts with a consonant,
213
556200
4940
09:21
there is a good chance that a native speaker will drop the T,
214
561140
3960
09:25
and just say: jus.
215
565100
2820
09:27
Jus’ instead of ‘just’.
216
567920
4400
09:32
I just thought, why not?
217
572320
2060
09:34
Just, just, just thought.
218
574380
2780
09:37
Just thought—
219
577160
1540
09:38
just—
220
578700
820
09:39
The ST ending is followed by TH,
221
579520
2880
09:42
the T comes between two consonants,
222
582400
2800
09:45
we drop it:
223
585200
1080
09:46
jus’ thought, just’ thought.
224
586280
2660
09:48
I just missed the bus.
225
588940
2080
09:51
I just missed—
226
591020
2960
09:53
just missed the bus—
227
593980
1780
09:55
S-T-M, drop the T.
228
595760
2900
09:58
Jus’ missed, jus’ missed, I just missed the bus.
229
598660
5740
10:04
Now, if ‘just’ is followed by a word that begins with a vowel or diphthong, don’t drop the T.
230
604400
6180
10:10
Just make it a light, True T.
231
610580
2980
10:13
For example,
232
613560
1200
10:14
it’s just Alex.
233
614760
1940
10:16
Just Alex— just, tt, tt, just Alex.
234
616700
5460
10:22
It’s just Alex.
235
622160
2380
10:24
Number 58, another word that reduces.
236
624540
3680
10:28
This one is a function word: him.
237
628220
3180
10:31
And just like number 9, “have”,
238
631400
3040
10:34
number 16, “he”,
239
634440
2620
10:37
number 23, “his”,
240
637060
2420
10:39
number 29, “her”,
241
639480
2720
10:42
we often drop the H and link this to the word before.
242
642200
3800
10:46
For example, I gave him another one.
243
646000
2940
10:48
Gave ‘im, gave ‘im, gave ‘im.
244
648940
3340
10:52
A very common reduction.
245
652280
2380
10:54
We do this with these function words that begin with an H.
246
654660
4080
10:58
Simply schwa-M.
247
658740
2420
11:01
Gave ‘im.
248
661160
1320
11:02
Gave ‘im.
249
662480
1340
11:03
Another example:
250
663820
1520
11:05
We want him to succeed.
251
665340
1820
11:07
Want him, want him.
252
667160
2680
11:09
Wait, what’s happening to the T in ‘want’?
253
669840
4100
11:13
I’m dropping the H,
254
673940
1840
11:15
so it doesn’t come between two consonants.
255
675780
2900
11:18
Well, we’ll find out soon,
256
678680
1880
11:20
because that’s number 93 on the list of the 100 most common words in English.
257
680560
6400
11:26
59: Know.
258
686960
2820
11:29
You’re thinking, wait, we already did that.
259
689780
2300
11:32
That was number 56.
260
692080
2360
11:34
Yes, but, different word.
261
694440
2520
11:36
‘No’ and ‘know’ are homophones.
262
696960
3160
11:40
That’s right. That means they sound exactly the same,
263
700120
3520
11:43
even though they are two different words and they’re spelled differently.
264
703640
3620
11:47
Know.
265
707260
1320
11:48
Know.
266
708580
1160
11:49
A verb. Usually stressed in a sentence.
267
709740
3360
11:53
N consonant, OH diphthong:
268
713100
2660
11:55
know.
269
715760
1480
11:57
However, with really common phrases, we often make some reductions,
270
717240
4580
12:01
like how ‘going to’ becomes ‘gonna’.
271
721820
3620
12:05
And with the really common phrase “I don’t know”,
272
725440
4300
12:09
we make a reduction.
273
729740
1680
12:11
I dunno, I dunno, I dunno.
274
731420
3900
12:15
And, this can sound like the last sound is not OH:
275
735320
4580
12:19
I dunno, I dunno, I dunno, I dunno, o, o, o, o, o, o.
276
739900
5900
12:25
It’s more like a quick ‘uh’ there.
277
745800
2320
12:28
Certainly not: know, oh, oh, with a full and stressed OH diphthong.
278
748120
7940
12:36
I don’t know.
279
756060
1780
12:37
Number 60,
280
757840
1260
12:39
the last word for this video, the word “take”.
281
759100
3820
12:42
Usually a verb, sometimes a noun, it’s a content word.
282
762920
4260
12:47
And generally, it’s going to be stressed in a sentence.
283
767180
3040
12:50
Just like ‘time’,
284
770220
1720
12:51
it’s a one-syllable stressed word that begins with a True T,
285
771940
4780
12:56
tt, AY, then the AY diphthong, and the K sound.
286
776720
4820
13:01
Take.
287
781540
1180
13:02
Sentences:
288
782720
1300
13:04
Can you take me there?
289
784020
1420
13:05
Take, take, take.
290
785440
2440
13:07
Or, I need to take it back.
291
787880
2540
13:10
Take.
292
790420
740
13:11
Take.
293
791160
1620
13:12
Take.
294
792780
840
13:13
Longer, up-down shape, more time, a stressed syllable.
295
793620
5900
13:19
Okay,
296
799520
1020
13:20
so, we’ve gotten through our first 60 words in the 100 most common words in English list.
297
800540
6880
13:27
So far, there were only seven where I could say,
298
807420
3220
13:30
never do we reduce any part of this word in any case.
299
810640
3940
13:34
Wow!
300
814580
1020
13:35
I expect as we keep going that we’ll get more content words, but let’s see!
301
815600
5420
13:41
Let’s keep going down this list of the 100 most common words in English,
302
821020
4680
13:45
studying the pronunciation, and I don’t mean the full official pronunciation,
303
825700
5380
13:51
I mean how the word is actually used in a sentence in American English.
304
831080
4300
13:55
Look for the next installment in this series, coming soon.
305
835380
4180
13:59
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
306
839560
5360
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7