English Words You’re Probably Mispronouncing ❌Difficult English Pronunciation | Rachel’s English

1,823,981 views

2019-10-22 ・ Rachel's English


New videos

English Words You’re Probably Mispronouncing ❌Difficult English Pronunciation | Rachel’s English

1,823,981 views ・ 2019-10-22

Rachel's English


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

00:00
I guarantee you’re not saying these words correctly.
0
0
3420
00:03
In American English we have a set of common words.
1
3420
2860
00:06
And native speakers tend to pronounce them one way, and non-native speakers pronounce them another way.
2
6280
6720
00:13
Today I’m going to tell you what those words are and how Americans pronounce them.
3
13000
4860
00:17
4
17860
4480
00:22
I’ve been teaching English for 20 years.
5
22340
2200
00:24
Yes, I’m that old.
6
24540
2020
00:26
I see my students making mistakes like these almost every day.
7
26560
4440
00:31
We’re going to start with an example, then we’ll go over the rules, and a whole bunch more examples.
8
31000
5260
00:36
Ok, we’re going to start with this word.
9
36260
3620
00:39
You might be thinking, wait, that’s a really easy word. There’s no way I’m mispronouncing that.
10
39880
6640
00:46
You know what, let’s do a few more examples right here from the beginning.
11
46520
3800
00:50
This word, this word, and also this word.
12
50320
4480
00:54
Look at all of these words. They have something in common. The mistake students make is the same.
13
54800
7480
01:02
All of these words have more than one pronunciation.
14
62280
3180
01:05
Native speakers almost always do the short one.
15
65460
3720
01:09
And non-native speakers almost always do the long one. And that sounds less natural.
16
69180
5960
01:15
We have fam-ly, or family. In-tresing or in-ter-esting. Comf-table or com-for-table. Veg-table or veg-e-table.
17
75140
17020
01:32
By doing the shorter pronunciation yourself,
18
92160
2780
01:34
you will sound more natural speaking English and also, good news, the shorter pronunciation is easier.
19
94940
6940
01:41
So it’s not fam-i-ly, but it’s fam-ly. Just two syllables. Family, family. Do you say it as three syllables?
20
101880
12500
01:54
Fam-i-ly. Pronounce it with two. You’ll sound more natural. Let’s go hear 10 Americans saying this word.
21
114380
8580
02:02
22
122960
35600
02:38
Family. Two syllables. Fam-ly. Family. Family. Say that with me.
23
158560
8840
02:47
Family.
24
167400
1860
02:49
Now, forget the sentences. Let’s just hear the word: family.
25
169260
5060
02:54
26
174320
14600
03:08
That's a lot of family.
27
188920
1320
03:10
You listen to it that many times, and you realize, wow this is what native speakers usually do.
28
190240
6640
03:16
Family. Two syllables. Simple. Family.
29
196880
4980
03:21
What about ‘vegetable’? Do you say it ‘veg-e-ta-ble’? I hear my students do that all the time.
30
201860
8260
03:30
I’ve almost never heard a native speaker do that.
31
210120
3340
03:33
Veg-table. Not ve-ge-ta-ble.
32
213460
5860
03:39
Just three syllables with first syllable stress.
33
219320
4160
03:43
Vegetable.
34
223480
1560
03:45
Alright, let’s go over to Youglish to see and hear lots of examples.
35
225040
4460
03:49
36
229500
33100
04:22
Vegetable. Three syllables. VEG-ta-ble. Vegetable. Say that with me.
37
262600
7480
04:30
Vegetable.
38
270080
1840
04:31
Now, again, let’s hear just the word, not the whole sentence.
39
271920
3960
04:35
You’ll really feel that three-syllable rhythm.
40
275880
3680
04:39
41
279560
16080
04:55
Vegetable.
42
295640
1380
04:57
Three syllables, simple.
43
297020
3340
05:00
This word. I hear my students pronounce it ‘in-ter-est-ing’. In-ter-est-ing. Four syllables.
44
300360
8880
05:09
Now, there are a couple of ways native speakers pronounce this word in American English,
45
309240
4920
05:14
but the most common by far is: IN-chru-sting.
46
314160
5920
05:20
Interesting. So in doing this, they drop the vowel between T and R, so we now have a TR cluster.
47
320080
7260
05:27
This is often pronounced CHR, so that’s why you might hear a CH sound in this word.
48
327340
6400
05:33
“Inchresting.”
49
333740
2780
05:36
Let’s go to Youglish and listen to Americans pronouncing this word.
50
336520
4720
05:41
51
341240
27100
06:08
“Inchrseting” or “interesting” –
52
368340
3740
06:12
you might also hear a True T instead of a CH, though CH is more common.
53
372080
5160
06:17
Interesting or interesting.
54
377240
3540
06:20
Now, occasionally, you’ll hear a native speaker make this four syllables.
55
380780
4700
06:25
And in that case, there’s a good chance you’re not going to hear that T at all.
56
385480
4880
06:30
“Inneresting”. It’s common to drop a T after N, so that’s what happens here.
57
390360
5840
06:36
I noticed Rick Steves doing this as I was listening to examples.
58
396200
4360
06:40
59
400560
4900
06:45
But what I want you to take away from this, is just go with the most common pronunciation.
60
405460
5440
06:50
Change your habit. Not ‘in-ter-est-ing’ but ‘inchresting’.
61
410900
5520
06:56
Interesting.
62
416420
1520
06:57
Let’s listen to just this word many times.
63
417940
3580
07:01
64
421520
12940
07:14
Say that with me, interesting.
65
434460
3960
07:18
Interesting.
66
438420
1920
07:20
Ok, comfortable.
67
440340
2140
07:22
I hear my students say “com-for-ta-ble”, four syllables. How to do native speakers say it?
68
442480
6440
07:28
69
448920
33340
08:02
COMF-der-ble. Three syllables. First syllable stress.
70
482260
4300
08:06
COMF-der-ble.
71
486560
2480
08:09
You might hear the T as a D, COMF-der-ble. Or you might hear it as a T. COMF-ter-ble.
72
489040
8580
08:17
Both are common, D is probably more common.
73
497620
3860
08:21
Every once in a while, you’ll hear a native speaker pronounce this as four syllables, but not often.
74
501480
5640
08:27
Simplify it. Three syllables. Comfortable. Let’s listen to just the word many times.
75
507120
7520
08:34
76
514640
22800
08:57
Say that with me, comfortable, comfortable.
77
537440
4640
09:02
Ok, so how are you supposed to know in which words you can drop a syllable?
78
542080
5260
09:07
Is it CHOC-o-late, or do most Americans say ‘choc-late?’
79
547340
5760
09:13
80
553100
14940
09:28
Okay, so it's two syllables. Choc-late.
81
568040
3960
09:32
Well, is it FAV-o-rit of ‘fav-rit’?
82
572000
4560
09:36
83
576560
17880
09:54
Okay, so it's two syllables.
84
594440
2380
09:56
FAV-rit.
85
596820
1520
09:58
There isn’t an absolute rule, because there are so few absolute rules in American English pronunciation.
86
598340
5960
10:04
But there are some guidelines that can help you know when to drop a syllable.
87
604300
4120
10:08
When we drop a sound or a syllable like this, it’s called ‘syncope’. The example given here in this is ‘probably’.
88
608420
7920
10:16
This word is often pronounced ‘PROB-li’, two syllables, prob-ly.
89
616340
5620
10:21
I do have a video specifically on that word, i'll link to it in the video description.
90
621960
5620
10:27
But, that doesn’t actually follow the ‘rule’, as I said, it’s not a perfect rule. It’s more of a guideline.
91
627580
5620
10:33
And the guideline is:
92
633200
1300
10:34
an unstressed vowel might be dropped if the next sound is R, L, or a nasal consonant M, N, NG.
93
634500
10880
10:45
Let’s look at the words we already studied.
94
645380
2400
10:47
FAMILY – that was an unstressed vowel followed by M. It does follow that guideline.
95
647780
5620
10:53
Vegetable – hmm.
96
653400
2700
10:56
Here, the dropped vowel wasn’t followed by R, L,
97
656100
4300
11:00
or a nasal consonant so that one doesn't follow the guidelines.
98
660400
3980
11:04
Interesting – that one does.
99
664380
2460
11:06
The unstressed vowel was followed by R.
100
666840
2680
11:09
Comfortable – also followed by R.
101
669520
3560
11:13
Favorite – followed by R.
102
673080
2540
11:15
Chocolate, followed by L.
103
675620
2340
11:17
Does follow the guideline.
104
677960
2600
11:20
Now I’m going to go over a few more common words here that have two different pronunciations,
105
680560
4920
11:25
with one being shortened and that one more common.
106
685480
3300
11:28
We won’t go look them up on Youglish, but I invite you to do that.
107
688780
3220
11:32
It’s a great way to do research on how Americans actually pronounce different words and phrases.
108
692000
7360
11:39
Different.
109
699360
1040
11:40
Two syllables. Not diff-er-ent, but diff-rent.
110
700400
5120
11:45
Say that with me. Diff-rent.
111
705520
3300
11:48
Cam-er-a should be cam-ra.
112
708820
4160
11:52
Say that with me. Cam-ra.
113
712980
3760
11:56
Cath-o-lic. We say that: Cath-lic. Two syllables.
114
716740
5220
12:01
Say that with me. Cath-lic.
115
721960
3320
12:05
Int-er-est. Again, we say this as two syllables: in-trest.
116
725280
6140
12:11
This is just like shortening ‘interesting’.
117
731420
3260
12:14
In-trest. Say that with me. IN-trest.
118
734680
5080
12:19
Listening is often ‘lis-ning’. Lis-ning.
119
739760
5780
12:25
Say that with me. Lis-ning.
120
745540
3100
12:28
Notice the T is silent there.
121
748640
2220
12:30
That’s not part of the syncope,
122
750860
1720
12:32
that’s just the pronunciation, even in the full pronunciation of the word, that's silent.
123
752580
6420
12:39
Mem-o-ry is often ‘mem-ry’.
124
759000
4540
12:43
Mem-ry.
125
763540
1260
12:44
Say that with me. Mem-ry.
126
764800
3500
12:48
Trav-el-ing is often ‘trav-ling’.
127
768300
4740
12:53
Two syllables.
128
773040
1220
12:54
Say that with me. Trav-ling.
129
774260
3000
12:57
Natural is often ‘NAT-rul’.
130
777260
3260
13:00
Just Two syllables.
131
780520
1760
13:02
Try that with me. NAT-rul.
132
782280
3800
13:06
Actually is often pronounced AK-shul-ly, three syllables instead of four.
133
786080
7420
13:13
AK-shul-ly.
134
793500
1320
13:14
Rest-au-rant is often ‘rest-rant.’ Two syllables.
135
794820
5920
13:20
And sometimes, you’ll hear a CH because of that TR cluster: res-chront, res-chront.
136
800740
7280
13:28
Try that with me. Restaurant.
137
808020
3060
13:31
SEP-uh-rit is often SEP-rit. Two syllables.
138
811080
5340
13:36
Say that with me. Separate.
139
816420
2820
13:39
SEV-er-al is often SEV-ral.
140
819240
3540
13:42
Say that with me. Several.
141
822780
3620
13:46
TEMP-er-uh-ture is often TEM-pruh-chur. Temperature. Say that with me. Temperature.
142
826400
10080
13:56
Now here’s a word that isn’t a syncope, but it’s a word that’s often mispronounced by non-native speakers
143
836480
6080
14:02
because they put an extra syllable in it: business.
144
842560
4560
14:07
It looks like it should have an extra syllable, BIZ-ih-ness. But that’s not the actual pronunciation.
145
847120
7480
14:14
That is a two-syllable word.
146
854600
2280
14:16
Business.
147
856880
1500
14:18
Business.
148
858380
1000
14:19
Both syllables have the IH vowel even though one is spelled with the letter U
149
859380
5260
14:24
and the other is spelled with the letter E.
150
864640
2380
14:27
BIZ-ness. Say that with me. Business.
151
867020
4380
14:31
This is true of ‘every’ as well. The actual pronunciation isn’t three syllables.
152
871400
5240
14:36
That’s not what you’ll see in a dictionary.
153
876640
2380
14:39
But I do hear my students do that sometimes.
154
879020
2440
14:41
The pronunciation is two syllables: EV-ry. Every.
155
881460
5700
14:47
Try that with me. Every.
156
887160
3120
14:50
Ok, now the guidelines that I gave you.
157
890280
2780
14:53
Remember that some of the syncopes we studied didn’t follow these guidelines.
158
893060
4280
14:57
Well, there are a lot words that have an unstressed vowel
159
897340
2940
15:00
followed by one of these3 consonants where we don’t drop it.
160
900280
3340
15:03
That’s why I didn’t really want to call that a ‘rule’.
161
903620
2860
15:06
For example, someone asked me about the word ‘lottery’.
162
906480
3920
15:10
There’s an unstressed vowel, the schwa, followed by the R.
163
910400
3600
15:14
But we wouldn’t drop the syllable, turning it a two-syllable word: Lot-ry.
164
914000
5740
15:19
This is still a 3-syllable word: lottery, lottery.
165
919740
4440
15:24
So this is something you have to learn as you go.
166
924180
2740
15:26
As you learn new words, as you notice how Americans pronounce things.
167
926920
4700
15:31
If you’re ever not sure, go to Youglish and hear 25 different people pronouncing the word.
168
931620
5320
15:36
They might not all be exactly the same, but you can see which pronunciation is the most common.
169
936940
5820
15:42
Can you think of a syncope that was not mentioned in this video?
170
942760
3460
15:46
Put it in the comments below.
171
946220
1520
15:47
Now I’m going to play video spin-the-wheel.
172
947740
2700
15:50
The next video I think you should watch is THIS one, which youtube is suggesting, I don’t even know what it is,
173
950440
6260
15:56
it will be different for everyone, and I think that’s fun.
174
956700
2620
15:59
Don’t forget to click that subscribe button if you haven’t already
175
959320
3260
16:02
and be completely sure to join me every Tuesday for a new video.
176
962580
4420
16:07
That’s it and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
177
967000
4100
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