Homophone Phrases -- American English Pronunciation

35,744 views ・ 2013-06-06

Rachel's English


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

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In this American English pronunciation video, we're going to talk about homophone phrases.
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Today I'm going to talk about how reductions can make homophone phrases. A homophone
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is a pair or set of words that have different meanings and often different spellings, but
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sound the same, like flour / flower.
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For example, three sentence fragments: got a / got to / I've got to. They'll all sound
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the same when we reduce them in a sentence. I got a new car, I got a new car, got a, got a,
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I got a new car. Or, I got to test drive it, I got to test drive it, got to, got to,
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I got to test drive it. Or, I have got to go. I've got to go, got to, got to. I've got
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to go. When students realize this, there is sometimes a bit of panic: how will people
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know which one I'm saying. I want to put you at ease: you never need to worry about
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that. The context will always make it clear.
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Another example: 'had her' and 'hatter' -- I'm sure you know the Mad Hatter is a character
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in Alice in Wonderland. One thing I try to stress with my students: when we're doing
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a reduction, like dropping the H in the word 'her', we don't want it to sound like a separate
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word. We want it to sound like an extra syllable, part of a bigger word. So 'had
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her', had'er, had'er, two words, should sound just like 'hatter', 'hatter', one word.
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Had her, hatter.
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I had her bring it to me at work. The Mad Hatter is a fun character.
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Think about this any time you're working with the reduction of her, or dropping the H on
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any other H reduction. It should sound like an extra syllable tacked on to the end of
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the word before.
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Let's look at some more examples of these homophone phrases:
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let her / led her / letter -- I let her leave work early, let her, let her. I led
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her the wrong way, led her, led her. I didn't get the letter, letter, letter.
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but her / butter -- I invited her, but her mother said no, but her, but her. When I
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bake, I usually use butter instead of margarine, butter, butter.
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gave him / gave them -- Now here we're dealing with two words that sound the same
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when they reduce. Both HIM and THEM reduce to the schwa-M sound. So 'gave him' sounds
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just like 'gave them'. I gave him a new shirt, gave him, gave him. I gave them my old TV,
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gave them, gave them. Again, you don't need to worry that they sound the same. Based
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on context, people will know what you're talking about.
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So there it is, just another interesting part of American English pronunciation.
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That's it, and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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