TR souding like CHR, DR like JR, and STR like SDR: American English Pronunciation

111,154 views ・ 2010-07-23

Rachel's English


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

00:06
In recent month, I’ve got a couple emails from a couple people
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saying they hear a weird thing happening when they hear native speakers speak.
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They hear the TR sound sometimes sounding like the CHR sound.
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For example: try.
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Tt-ry.
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They say they might be hearing ch-ry, chry.
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Try, chry.
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Same with the DR consonant cluster.
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D-rive, drive, they might hear jj-rive, jrive.
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Drive, jrive.
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I hear this a lot myself, and I’m certain that I do myself sometimes too.
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01:01
To understand why these consonant blends or clusters sometimes sound that way,
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we need to look at some photos of the sounds.
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Here we see the T/D mouth position on the left
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and the ch/jj mouth position on the right.
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You can see they have a similar tongue position,
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with the forward part of the tongue raised,
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touching the roof of the mouth just behind the front teeth.
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In the T/D sound, the lips are relaxed, and in the ch/jj, sound,
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the lips have some tension, the come away from the face, they round somewhat.
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Here we see the R sound on the left and the ch/jj sound on the right.
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You can see the tongue position is different.
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In the R, the tongue does not raise all the way to the roof.
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It presses against the insides of the top teeth
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and the tip of the tongue is pulled back.
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But in the R sound, the lips also have a bit of tension: they are not relaxed.
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They are rounded somewhat, and therefore, come away from the face.
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Here are all three sounds.
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You could say, if you take the lip position of the R, somewhat rounded,
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and the tongue position of the T/D, where the front raises
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and touches the front of the roof of the mouth,
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then you get the tongue position, the mouth position, for the ch/jj sound.
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Therefore, if the speaker is making the T or D sound followed by the R sound,
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their lips may start to round for the R as they are making the T/D sound.
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And if the lips round early, which they may very well do,
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then the mouth position will be the same for the ch/jj,
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and that is why the T/D may sound like the ch/jj.
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And that’s why you might hear some native speakers
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making a sound that’s more like jj than dd in the DR consonant blend.
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Drive, dry, draw.
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And also, a sound that’s more like ch rather than T in the TR cluster.
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Try, trial, trip.
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I do want to note that though these may be the sounds that come out,
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they are not the sounds that a native speaker has in mind when they’re speaking.
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Let’s look at a related question.
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I recently got an email from someone asking about the STR consonant cluster.
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She says she sometimes hears the T sounding like a D.
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Let’s look at why that might be.
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The sound that comes after the T is R, and that is voiced.
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T and D take the same mouth position, but D is voiced, and T is unvoiced.
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So in other words, tt, tt, only air is coming through for the T,
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whereas dd, dd, same mouth movement,
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but this time, dd, dd, the vocal cords are making noise.
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Tt, dd.
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So, in the consonant cluster STR, what this person is hearing,
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is the native speaker is beginning the voice, uh, for the R,
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before he or she has finished the T sound.
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This would naturally happen as someone was speaking quickly through a phrase.
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String, string, I’m thinking about a T there.
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Sdring, sdring, there I’m thinking about a D.
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They really sound the same.
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So this is why you may hear a D sound in the STR consonant cluster.
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String, tt, string, sdring, dd, sdring.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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