English Words – The Top 10 – Pronunciation Guide – Learn English (American English)

1,475,949 views ・ 2018-03-13

Rachel's English


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

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In this video series, you will learn how to pronounce the 100 most common words in American
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English.
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I got this idea when I saw a couple of other videos on this topic, and I was horrified
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at what I saw.
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In those videos, people were teaching the full pronunciation of these words, like: THAT,
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HAVE, TO.
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So many of the 100 most common words are function words and they reduce.
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It is completely unnatural to fully pronounce each word in American English.
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Let me show you what I mean.
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This sentence is four words, and each one of these words is in the 100 most common words
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list.
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This is for work.
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That’s the full pronunciation of each of those words.
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And if that’s all you learn about the pronunciation, then this is how you would pronounce that
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sentence: This is for work.
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This is for work.
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Well, I don’t want any of my students thinking that that is the correct way to pronounce
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that sentence.
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It’s not.
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It’s not natural.
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This is for work.
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This is for work.
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Is and for are not fully pronounced.
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Rhythm in American English is extremely important for capturing the character of the language:
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for understanding Americans when they speak, and for sounding natural and being easily
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understood when you speak.
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Some syllables are long, and some are very very short.
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This contrast is the rhythm of American English.
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In order to make those short syllables really short, some words in American English, some
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of the most common words, reduce.
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This means a sound changes or is dropped.
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And everybody studying English should know these.
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Let’s take our sentence again and talk about the real pronunciation of it.
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This is for work.
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Two words are longer.
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This.
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Work.
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And two words are shorter.
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Is, for.
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This is for work.
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This is for work.
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So it's not iz but is.
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And it's not for but fer.
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This is for work.
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Rhythmic contrast.
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So as we go through the 100 most common words in American English here, we’re going to
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talk about rhythm and reductions at the same time, to make sure that you’re learning
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the correct pronunciation, not the full pronunciation, which is rarely used in most function words.
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Okay, let’s start at the beginning.
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The number one most common word in American English is THE.
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In a sentence it will become the, the.
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Very fast with a schwa.
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This is when the next word begins with a consonant.
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For example, “the most”, the, the most.
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It's usually pronounced with the EE vowel, the, the, the.
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If the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong, for example, “the other”, the, the, the.
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The most important thing about the pronunciation of this word is that it should be said very
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quickly.
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The cat.
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It should never be THE CAT, THE CAT.
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Always ‘the cat’.
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The, the, the very fast.
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The next word is ‘be’, and I assume this means the verb TO BE, conjugated.
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I am, you are, he is, she is, it is, we are, they are.
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The important thing to know about these pronunciations is that they will almost always be said in
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a contraction, ‘I am’ becomes I’m, I'm, I'm.
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Said very quickly, I’m.
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Sometimes you’ll even hear as just.
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the M sound: M’sorry.
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M’sorry, mm, mm, mm.
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This is a natural pronunciation.
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YOU ARE, you’re, reduces to ‘you’re’.
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Super fast.
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basically no vowel.
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You're, you're.
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You’re gonna be okay.
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You’re, you're.
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Very fast.
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HE IS becomes ‘he’s’.He's.
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SHE IS is she’s.
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She's.
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IT IS, it’s, it’s, it’s.
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Sometimes we reduce this even further we change a sound, we dropped the vowel.
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We say just ‘ts’.
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Ts, ts. ‘ts cool! ‘ts awesome!
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Ts.
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Have you ever heard that?
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‘Ts cool.
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‘Ts raining.
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It's a common reduction.
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WE ARE, we’re, becomes ‘we’re’.
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We’re running late.
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‘we’re’, ‘we’re’.
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Very fast.
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THEY ARE, they’re becomes ‘they’re’.
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Very fast, the vowel changes, they’re.
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They’re okay.
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They’re, they’re.
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Word number three: to.
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Almost never pronounced this way, to.
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We use a reduction: the vowel changes to the schwa.
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To, to, said very quickly.
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And sometimes, the true T at the beginning changes to more of a D sound, or a Flap T.
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“Let’s go to the beach.”
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Go to the.
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Go to.
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06:11
Go to.
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How is ‘to’ being pronounce there? to to, go to.
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A flap of the tongue, and the schwa.
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Said very quickly.
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Go to.
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Go to the beach.
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It’s nothing like TO, is it?
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OF.
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Again, we don’t fully pronounce this word.
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It’s not OF, it’s of.
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Schwa, very light V, said very quickly.
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And actually, you’ll often hear this word without the ‘v’.
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Then it’s just the schwa, and we pronounce it this way in phrases ‘kind
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of’ and ‘sort of’.
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kinda, sorta.
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For example, I’m kinda tired.
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Kinda.
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Kinda, uh, uh, uh.
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Schwa, very fast.
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Kinda.
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Ok, we’re only four words in, but let’s review.
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I’m going to put up a sentence.
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Look at it, find the reduction, and then say the sentence with the reduction.
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Say the reduction very quickly.
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Here's one sentence:
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I am remember becomes I'm.
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How quickly did you make that first word?
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I'm running late. I'm running late.Try it as just the M sound.
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Mmm, mmm.
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M'running, M'running.
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M’running late.
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Sorry guys, I’m running late.
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So natural.
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When you learn the reductions in American English, and you start to really use them
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in your speech, you gain a native feeling.
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Also, understanding Americans becomes easier because you can start to identify the reductions.
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One more for you to try out loud now: I want you to try reducing the word ‘to’.
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Look at it, think about it, now try it out loud.
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“I know how to do it.”
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How to, how to, how to.
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I’m making that the Flap T and the schwa.
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Are you?
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Try it again.
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How to, I know how to do it.
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Alright, we’ll keep going with number 5: AND.
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And.
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Another word that we rarely fully pronounce.
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There are a couple of different ways to reduce this.
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We’ll start with the full pronunciation, and we’ll reduce from there.
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AA vowel followed by N consonant: the tongue is lifted in the back for AA, Aaaa.
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Then relaxes before the N. Aa-uh, aa-uh, aa-uh.
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So it’s not a pure AA sound.
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Aa-uh, aa-uh.
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And, and, and, and, and.
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First reduction is just dropping the D. “An’, An’and I think it will be okay.”
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An, An' I, An’ I.
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No D, just the N into the next word.
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An' I think it will be okay.
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Another reduction, more common, is to just say the N sound, “N’.
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N' I think it will be okay.”
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N’, N', just straight from the N into the next word.
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N' I, N' I think it will be okay.
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Cookies and cream, salt and pepper, black and white, up and down, left and right.
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All of these, I’m just making a quick N sound, linking the two other words.
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Up and down.
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Number 6.
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Okay, we’re actually going to do 6 and 32 together, because they’re related.
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They're the articles A and AN.
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Now, we don’t say A and AN.
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We say ‘a’ and ‘an’.
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Schwa.
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Very fast, very little movement for the mouth.
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A, a, a coffee.
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A, a or An, an example.
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An, an.
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A, an.
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Number 7.
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IN.
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We don’t drop or change a sound here.
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We don’t reduce.
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But it is still unstressed.
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This mean it should be really short, less clear.
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Instead of saying ‘IN’, we would say ‘in’.
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“He’s in love.”
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In, in.
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“She’s in a hurry”.
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In, in, in.
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So be careful.
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It’s not IN.
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That sounds stressed.
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It’s ‘in’.
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Number 8: THAT.
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You know what I realize?
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I already have a video for a lot of these reductions.
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I have a video on the pronunciation of THAT and how we really pronounce it in a sentence.
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So I’ll give a brief description here, but I’ll also link to that and other related
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reduction videos in the video description.
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THAT is a word that can be used lots of different ways in American English.
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And in some cases, in many cases, we reduce the vowel from AA to the schwa
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so THAT becomes ‘that’.
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Now the ending T: the pronunciation of that sound depends on the beginning of the next
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word.
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If the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong, it’s a Flap T: That I, d d, d that I.
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If the next word begins with a consonant, then it’s a Stop T. That she.
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That, that That she.
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I know, it’s a little confusing.
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Check out my video on the word THAT for a longer explanation and more examples.
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But just note that we often don't pronounce this word, that.
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We often reduce it so it has the schwa that.
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Number 9: the verb HAVE.
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Just like the verb ‘be’, this will often be used as a contraction in spoken English,
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which is already a reduction.
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We’re already changing sounds for that: I HAVE becomes I’ve, I’ve I’ve I’ve
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I’ve.
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“I’ve been wanting to see that.”
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I’ve I’ve.
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YOU HAVE becomes ‘you’ve.’
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HE HAS becomes ‘he’s’.
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He's he's.
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You’ve you’ve.
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He’s been waiting.
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He's.
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Here’s something interesting: the pronunciation of the HAS contraction.
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With ‘he’ and ‘she’, it’s pronounced as a Z. Hiz.
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Hiz been, hiz been.
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But with Shes shiz shiz.
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But with it, its, it’s been raining, then it’s an S sound.
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It's.
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He’s, Z it’s, Ss S. WE HAVE becomes ‘we’ve’, we’ve’ we’ve’ and THEY HAVE becomes
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‘they’ve’ which sounds like deiv when it's unstressed.
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Number 10: the pronoun I.
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Usually said very quickly, it’s not “I” but “I”.
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I think so.
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I, I, I. I think, I.
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If you’re speaking really quickly, you can maybe get away with something more like ‘aa’
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than ‘I’.
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I think so.
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Aa aa aa.
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I think so.
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When it’s said so quickly, you can’t really tell if I’m doing the full diphthong I or
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not.
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Wow.
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Okay, we just did the ten most common words in English, and none of them are fully pronounced.
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They’re all words that are unstressed or reduced.
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Interesting.
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Keep your eyes out, that’s an idiom that means to look for something.
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We'd expect to it will be coming in the future.
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So keep your eyes out for future videos in this series where we'll go over the rest
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of the words in this list.
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Here's playlist, and as I create the new videos, I will add them there.
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When will we find our first stressed word in the 100 most common words of American English?
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We'll have to find out.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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