American English Pronunciation Podcast

Become a more fluent English speaker by learning how to pronounce American English sounds, words, and phrases. Practice your English with each episode!

https://americanenglishpronunciation.podbean.com

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 8m. Bisher sind 200 Folge(n) erschienen. Dieser Podcast erscheint jede zweite Woche.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 1 day 4 hours 34 minutes

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episode 221: 221: Compare ’unvoiced th’ to /f/, /s/, and /t/


How to pronounce words like "thin/fin," "mouth/mouse," and "both/boat." Perfect your English fricative sounds by never stopping the air from passing through your mouth. Transcripts at pronuncian.com


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 November 29, 2016  12m
 
 

episode 220: 220: The ’n-g’ spelling creates /ŋ/, as in the word ’song’


At the end of the word, the /ŋ/ doesn't need an additional /g/. The /g/ is potentially included mid-word. Transcripts available at pronuncian.com


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 November 12, 2016  6m
 
 

219: /g+n/ as in ”signal” and ”ignore”


"Coarticulating" the /g/ and /n/ is the trick to fluent pronunciation of these two sounds. Don't release the /g/ before starting the /n/. Transcripts available on Pronuncian.com


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 October 26, 2016  9m
 
 

218: Learn to hear vowels to learn to pronounce them


Test your ability to identify vowel sounds with this special listening quiz episode. Transcripts available on pronuncian.com.


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 October 14, 2016  14m
 
 

217: Compare long e, short i, and short e /i, ɪ, ɛ/


The long e, short i, and short e /i, ɪ, ɛ/, are three front vowel sounds that can be practiced from a high, front tongue position to a mid-front position. Compare and contrast! Full podcast transcripts available at pronuncian.com.


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 September 29, 2016  11m
 
 

216: The Cardinal Vowels--long e /i/, oo sound /u/, short o /ɑ/, and short a /æ/


All about that vowels diagram that shows the vowel sounds placed over a sort of square-like shape that’s bigger on the top than it is on the bottom. Transcripts at pronuncian.com.


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 September 18, 2016  12m
 
 

215: Adding ”bonus” information by using a low pitch


Use a low pitch to signal a spoken aside (like information that would be written in parentheses or between commas). Transcripts available at pronuncian.com.


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 September 1, 2016  8m
 
 

214: Yes/No Pitch Patterns


Understand the rising and falling pitch patterns for yes/no questions and learn how to read emotion. Transcripts on pronuncian.com. Classes available from seattlelearning.com.


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 August 20, 2016  10m
 
 

213: Intonation of Wh- Questions


What are you *really* asking? Using a rising or a falling pitch on a wh- question means something different than using a rising pitch. Transcripts available at pronuncian.com


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 August 7, 2016  6m
 
 

212: /r+ɚ/ “explore” into “explorer”


Adding /ɚ/ (schwa+r) to an /r/ can be difficult. Make it into two syllables, but don't add a vowel sound between. Learn how here! By Seattle Learning Academy. Transcripts on pronuncian.com.


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 July 25, 2016  7m