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

1,459,981 views ・ 2018-03-13

Rachel's English


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

00:00
In this video series, you will learn how to pronounce the 100 most common words in American
0
470
6460
00:06
English.
1
6930
5320
00:12
I got this idea when I saw a couple of other videos on this topic, and I was horrified
2
12250
5410
00:17
at what I saw.
3
17660
1699
00:19
In those videos, people were teaching the full pronunciation of these words, like: THAT,
4
19360
6760
00:26
HAVE, TO.
5
26120
3580
00:29
So many of the 100 most common words are function words and they reduce.
6
29710
4990
00:34
It is completely unnatural to fully pronounce each word in American English.
7
34700
5320
00:40
Let me show you what I mean.
8
40020
3790
00:43
This sentence is four words, and each one of these words is in the 100 most common words
9
43810
5990
00:49
list.
10
49800
1550
00:51
This is for work.
11
51350
5950
00:57
That’s the full pronunciation of each of those words.
12
57300
3570
01:00
And if that’s all you learn about the pronunciation, then this is how you would pronounce that
13
60870
5370
01:06
sentence: This is for work.
14
66240
3840
01:10
This is for work.
15
70080
1970
01:12
Well, I don’t want any of my students thinking that that is the correct way to pronounce
16
72050
5060
01:17
that sentence.
17
77110
1000
01:18
It’s not.
18
78110
1000
01:19
It’s not natural.
19
79110
1880
01:20
This is for work.
20
80990
2180
01:23
This is for work.
21
83170
1860
01:25
Is and for are not fully pronounced.
22
85030
4700
01:29
Rhythm in American English is extremely important for capturing the character of the language:
23
89730
5920
01:35
for understanding Americans when they speak, and for sounding natural and being easily
24
95650
4960
01:40
understood when you speak.
25
100610
2580
01:43
Some syllables are long, and some are very very short.
26
103190
3650
01:46
This contrast is the rhythm of American English.
27
106840
3930
01:50
In order to make those short syllables really short, some words in American English, some
28
110770
5941
01:56
of the most common words, reduce.
29
116711
3478
02:00
This means a sound changes or is dropped.
30
120189
3681
02:03
And everybody studying English should know these.
31
123870
3780
02:07
Let’s take our sentence again and talk about the real pronunciation of it.
32
127650
5400
02:13
This is for work.
33
133050
1450
02:14
Two words are longer.
34
134500
2640
02:17
This.
35
137140
1460
02:18
Work.
36
138600
1460
02:20
And two words are shorter.
37
140060
2300
02:22
Is, for.
38
142360
2970
02:25
This is for work.
39
145330
1930
02:27
This is for work.
40
147260
4260
02:31
So it's not iz but is.
41
151520
4290
02:35
And it's not for but fer.
42
155810
5000
02:40
This is for work.
43
160810
1630
02:42
Rhythmic contrast.
44
162440
2830
02:45
So as we go through the 100 most common words in American English here, we’re going to
45
165270
5510
02:50
talk about rhythm and reductions at the same time, to make sure that you’re learning
46
170780
4700
02:55
the correct pronunciation, not the full pronunciation, which is rarely used in most function words.
47
175480
7720
03:03
Okay, let’s start at the beginning.
48
183200
2560
03:05
The number one most common word in American English is THE.
49
185760
5940
03:11
In a sentence it will become the, the.
50
191720
4240
03:15
Very fast with a schwa.
51
195960
2440
03:18
This is when the next word begins with a consonant.
52
198410
2579
03:20
For example, “the most”, the, the most.
53
200989
6171
03:27
It's usually pronounced with the EE vowel, the, the, the.
54
207160
4640
03:31
If the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong, for example, “the other”, the, the, the.
55
211800
7130
03:38
The most important thing about the pronunciation of this word is that it should be said very
56
218930
5669
03:44
quickly.
57
224599
1041
03:45
The cat.
58
225640
1270
03:46
It should never be THE CAT, THE CAT.
59
226910
4270
03:51
Always ‘the cat’.
60
231180
1570
03:52
The, the, the very fast.
61
232750
3610
03:56
The next word is ‘be’, and I assume this means the verb TO BE, conjugated.
62
236360
5610
04:01
I am, you are, he is, she is, it is, we are, they are.
63
241970
7530
04:09
The important thing to know about these pronunciations is that they will almost always be said in
64
249500
5380
04:14
a contraction, ‘I am’ becomes I’m, I'm, I'm.
65
254880
6040
04:20
Said very quickly, I’m.
66
260920
2480
04:23
Sometimes you’ll even hear as just.
67
263400
1720
04:25
the M sound: M’sorry.
68
265120
2480
04:27
M’sorry, mm, mm, mm.
69
267600
3240
04:30
This is a natural pronunciation.
70
270840
3070
04:33
YOU ARE, you’re, reduces to ‘you’re’.
71
273910
5310
04:39
Super fast.
72
279220
1480
04:40
basically no vowel.
73
280700
1510
04:42
You're, you're.
74
282210
2070
04:44
You’re gonna be okay.
75
284280
1460
04:45
You’re, you're.
76
285740
2160
04:47
Very fast.
77
287900
1620
04:49
HE IS becomes ‘he’s’.He's.
78
289520
4860
04:54
SHE IS is she’s.
79
294380
2760
04:57
She's.
80
297140
1500
04:58
IT IS, it’s, it’s, it’s.
81
298640
4980
05:03
Sometimes we reduce this even further we change a sound, we dropped the vowel.
82
303620
5600
05:09
We say just ‘ts’.
83
309220
1770
05:10
Ts, ts. ‘ts cool! ‘ts awesome!
84
310990
6149
05:17
Ts.
85
317139
1021
05:18
Have you ever heard that?
86
318160
1750
05:19
‘Ts cool.
87
319910
1580
05:21
‘Ts raining.
88
321490
1590
05:23
It's a common reduction.
89
323080
2280
05:25
WE ARE, we’re, becomes ‘we’re’.
90
325360
3950
05:29
We’re running late.
91
329310
2270
05:31
‘we’re’, ‘we’re’.
92
331580
1500
05:33
Very fast.
93
333080
1630
05:34
THEY ARE, they’re becomes ‘they’re’.
94
334710
5570
05:40
Very fast, the vowel changes, they’re.
95
340280
3440
05:43
They’re okay.
96
343720
1680
05:45
They’re, they’re.
97
345400
2020
05:47
Word number three: to.
98
347420
2500
05:49
Almost never pronounced this way, to.
99
349920
3780
05:53
We use a reduction: the vowel changes to the schwa.
100
353710
3690
05:57
To, to, said very quickly.
101
357400
3530
06:00
And sometimes, the true T at the beginning changes to more of a D sound, or a Flap T.
102
360930
5990
06:06
“Let’s go to the beach.”
103
366920
2510
06:09
Go to the.
104
369430
1049
06:10
Go to.
105
370479
1011
06:11
Go to.
106
371490
1260
06:12
How is ‘to’ being pronounce there? to to, go to.
107
372750
5370
06:18
A flap of the tongue, and the schwa.
108
378120
2580
06:20
Said very quickly.
109
380700
1330
06:22
Go to.
110
382030
1229
06:23
Go to the beach.
111
383259
1000
06:24
It’s nothing like TO, is it?
112
384260
4000
06:28
OF.
113
388260
1220
06:29
Again, we don’t fully pronounce this word.
114
389480
2200
06:31
It’s not OF, it’s of.
115
391690
4940
06:36
Schwa, very light V, said very quickly.
116
396630
3990
06:40
And actually, you’ll often hear this word without the ‘v’.
117
400620
2900
06:43
Then it’s just the schwa, and we pronounce it this way in phrases ‘kind
118
403520
4430
06:47
of’ and ‘sort of’.
119
407950
2990
06:50
kinda, sorta.
120
410949
2161
06:53
For example, I’m kinda tired.
121
413110
2279
06:55
Kinda.
122
415389
1000
06:56
Kinda, uh, uh, uh.
123
416389
2431
06:58
Schwa, very fast.
124
418820
2860
07:01
Kinda.
125
421700
1180
07:02
Ok, we’re only four words in, but let’s review.
126
422900
3760
07:06
I’m going to put up a sentence.
127
426660
2500
07:09
Look at it, find the reduction, and then say the sentence with the reduction.
128
429160
5650
07:14
Say the reduction very quickly.
129
434810
2020
07:16
Here's one sentence:
130
436830
2660
07:19
I am remember becomes I'm.
131
439490
4320
07:23
How quickly did you make that first word?
132
443810
2130
07:25
I'm running late. I'm running late.Try it as just the M sound.
133
445980
5280
07:31
Mmm, mmm.
134
451260
1200
07:32
M'running, M'running.
135
452460
3040
07:35
M’running late.
136
455500
2260
07:37
Sorry guys, I’m running late.
137
457760
2480
07:40
So natural.
138
460240
1550
07:41
When you learn the reductions in American English, and you start to really use them
139
461790
3969
07:45
in your speech, you gain a native feeling.
140
465759
3401
07:49
Also, understanding Americans becomes easier because you can start to identify the reductions.
141
469160
7060
07:56
One more for you to try out loud now: I want you to try reducing the word ‘to’.
142
476220
6520
08:02
Look at it, think about it, now try it out loud.
143
482740
5780
08:08
“I know how to do it.”
144
488520
1860
08:10
How to, how to, how to.
145
490380
2120
08:12
I’m making that the Flap T and the schwa.
146
492500
2540
08:15
Are you?
147
495050
1000
08:16
Try it again.
148
496050
1630
08:17
How to, I know how to do it.
149
497680
4620
08:22
Alright, we’ll keep going with number 5: AND.
150
502300
4980
08:27
And.
151
507280
620
08:27
Another word that we rarely fully pronounce.
152
507900
2359
08:30
There are a couple of different ways to reduce this.
153
510259
2970
08:33
We’ll start with the full pronunciation, and we’ll reduce from there.
154
513229
3550
08:36
AA vowel followed by N consonant: the tongue is lifted in the back for AA, Aaaa.
155
516779
8060
08:44
Then relaxes before the N. Aa-uh, aa-uh, aa-uh.
156
524840
6520
08:51
So it’s not a pure AA sound.
157
531440
4780
08:56
Aa-uh, aa-uh.
158
536260
2280
08:58
And, and, and, and, and.
159
538540
4149
09:02
First reduction is just dropping the D. “An’, An’and I think it will be okay.”
160
542689
8051
09:10
An, An' I, An’ I.
161
550740
2159
09:12
No D, just the N into the next word.
162
552900
3440
09:16
An' I think it will be okay.
163
556340
2289
09:18
Another reduction, more common, is to just say the N sound, “N’.
164
558629
4851
09:23
N' I think it will be okay.”
165
563480
1640
09:25
N’, N', just straight from the N into the next word.
166
565120
4920
09:30
N' I, N' I think it will be okay.
167
570040
3969
09:34
Cookies and cream, salt and pepper, black and white, up and down, left and right.
168
574009
6351
09:40
All of these, I’m just making a quick N sound, linking the two other words.
169
580360
5099
09:45
Up and down.
170
585459
1961
09:47
Number 6.
171
587420
1000
09:48
Okay, we’re actually going to do 6 and 32 together, because they’re related.
172
588420
4899
09:53
They're the articles A and AN.
173
593319
2880
09:56
Now, we don’t say A and AN.
174
596199
3060
09:59
We say ‘a’ and ‘an’.
175
599259
3520
10:02
Schwa.
176
602779
1180
10:03
Very fast, very little movement for the mouth.
177
603959
3000
10:06
A, a, a coffee.
178
606959
2831
10:09
A, a or An, an example.
179
609790
5030
10:14
An, an.
180
614820
2439
10:17
A, an.
181
617259
2250
10:19
Number 7.
182
619509
1300
10:20
IN.
183
620809
1000
10:21
We don’t drop or change a sound here.
184
621809
2351
10:24
We don’t reduce.
185
624160
1350
10:25
But it is still unstressed.
186
625510
2249
10:27
This mean it should be really short, less clear.
187
627759
3480
10:31
Instead of saying ‘IN’, we would say ‘in’.
188
631240
5480
10:36
“He’s in love.”
189
636720
1240
10:37
In, in.
190
637980
1420
10:39
“She’s in a hurry”.
191
639400
1340
10:40
In, in, in.
192
640749
1690
10:42
So be careful.
193
642439
1000
10:43
It’s not IN.
194
643439
1520
10:44
That sounds stressed.
195
644960
2000
10:46
It’s ‘in’.
196
646960
3080
10:50
Number 8: THAT.
197
650040
2580
10:52
You know what I realize?
198
652620
1000
10:53
I already have a video for a lot of these reductions.
199
653620
3059
10:56
I have a video on the pronunciation of THAT and how we really pronounce it in a sentence.
200
656679
6361
11:03
So I’ll give a brief description here, but I’ll also link to that and other related
201
663040
4979
11:08
reduction videos in the video description.
202
668020
3800
11:11
THAT is a word that can be used lots of different ways in American English.
203
671820
4320
11:16
And in some cases, in many cases, we reduce the vowel from AA to the schwa
204
676140
6860
11:23
so THAT becomes ‘that’.
205
683000
4500
11:27
Now the ending T: the pronunciation of that sound depends on the beginning of the next
206
687500
5749
11:33
word.
207
693249
1171
11:34
If the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong, it’s a Flap T: That I, d d, d that I.
208
694420
7940
11:42
If the next word begins with a consonant, then it’s a Stop T. That she.
209
702360
5400
11:47
That, that That she.
210
707760
3600
11:51
I know, it’s a little confusing.
211
711360
1649
11:53
Check out my video on the word THAT for a longer explanation and more examples.
212
713009
5481
11:58
But just note that we often don't pronounce this word, that.
213
718490
4469
12:02
We often reduce it so it has the schwa that.
214
722960
5140
12:08
Number 9: the verb HAVE.
215
728100
3700
12:11
Just like the verb ‘be’, this will often be used as a contraction in spoken English,
216
731800
5620
12:17
which is already a reduction.
217
737430
2139
12:19
We’re already changing sounds for that: I HAVE becomes I’ve, I’ve I’ve I’ve
218
739569
7331
12:26
I’ve.
219
746980
900
12:27
“I’ve been wanting to see that.”
220
747880
1879
12:29
I’ve I’ve.
221
749759
1480
12:31
YOU HAVE becomes ‘you’ve.’
222
751239
2630
12:33
HE HAS becomes ‘he’s’.
223
753869
2810
12:36
He's he's.
224
756679
1000
12:37
You’ve you’ve.
225
757680
1660
12:39
He’s been waiting.
226
759340
1320
12:40
He's.
227
760660
1239
12:41
Here’s something interesting: the pronunciation of the HAS contraction.
228
761899
4951
12:46
With ‘he’ and ‘she’, it’s pronounced as a Z. Hiz.
229
766850
5310
12:52
Hiz been, hiz been.
230
772160
1500
12:53
But with Shes shiz shiz.
231
773660
2060
12:55
But with it, its, it’s been raining, then it’s an S sound.
232
775720
5299
13:01
It's.
233
781019
1091
13:02
He’s, Z it’s, Ss S. WE HAVE becomes ‘we’ve’, we’ve’ we’ve’ and THEY HAVE becomes
234
782110
11909
13:14
‘they’ve’ which sounds like deiv when it's unstressed.
235
794019
6491
13:20
Number 10: the pronoun I.
236
800510
2730
13:23
Usually said very quickly, it’s not “I” but “I”.
237
803240
5720
13:28
I think so.
238
808970
1000
13:29
I, I, I. I think, I.
239
809970
3929
13:33
If you’re speaking really quickly, you can maybe get away with something more like ‘aa’
240
813899
5180
13:39
than ‘I’.
241
819079
2440
13:41
I think so.
242
821519
1000
13:42
Aa aa aa.
243
822519
1000
13:43
I think so.
244
823519
1591
13:45
When it’s said so quickly, you can’t really tell if I’m doing the full diphthong I or
245
825110
5070
13:50
not.
246
830280
1480
13:51
Wow.
247
831840
500
13:52
Okay, we just did the ten most common words in English, and none of them are fully pronounced.
248
832340
6960
13:59
They’re all words that are unstressed or reduced.
249
839300
4479
14:03
Interesting.
250
843780
1600
14:05
Keep your eyes out, that’s an idiom that means to look for something.
251
845380
4420
14:09
We'd expect to it will be coming in the future.
252
849800
2460
14:12
So keep your eyes out for future videos in this series where we'll go over the rest
253
852280
6130
14:18
of the words in this list.
254
858410
2030
14:20
Here's playlist, and as I create the new videos, I will add them there.
255
860440
5100
14:25
When will we find our first stressed word in the 100 most common words of American English?
256
865540
7700
14:33
We'll have to find out.
257
873240
1900
14:35
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
258
875140
4540
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