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hello Mrs. Rachel you said in the word ( pan ) there is a schwa between the sound a and N , is that because the N syllabic or why. and is that for all vowels before N sound.
Ответитьi like this video. Thank you Mrs.Rachel.
ОтветитьThank you! Great explanation!
ОтветитьHello Mr. Rachel. Is sound [æ] before [n], [m] changed to /ɛən/ as in ( pan /pɛən/ )
is Is [æ] before [ŋ] changed to /eɪ/ as in bank [beɪŋk]. please.
I’ve noticed how /æ/ sounds different before /m/ or /n/ since I was a little kid, and I was glad that I found a video that talks about it.
I’ve also noticed that there are three cases in which people who normally use /æ/ tensing before /m/ or /n/ at the end of a word often use a regular lax /æ/ before one of those two consonants.
1. Words that are often used as weak forms (can, and, etc.)
2. Words that are shortened versions of other words (cam, fam, etc.)
3. Verbs used in a past tense form (swam, ran, began, etc.)
Hi, Rachel I have a question. Does the ending 's' take over the schwa sound before it? I hope you will help me, I will appreciate it.
ОтветитьThanks for a wonderful video. I have already linked to it, to answer someone question about this. And I learned from it. I had a vague understanding (based simply on speaking) but this makes it very much clearer. Down with IPA!
ОтветитьConfused English. I am giving up hahah
ОтветитьI got a question,
so in (and)
i heard (ɛ-ə-nd)
is it pronounced like that?
I am so grateful for your video.
This sounds like what I call the Epsilon sound, but I never could come to a way to describe it. Then, following the comments, I found another amazing comment on the topic from one of your followers, giving a reference to Wikipedia.
What an amazing community you have managed to build throughout all of these years of hard and valuable work. You have to be so proud of yourself. You are amazing!!!!
Thank you so much!!
Before leaving, I would like to ask if there is not a yearly conference about IPA? It should be renewed every year.
Huge respect to you, Rachel. This particular problem, It’s confused me for years and it’s finally been solved today. U’re a life saviour.
Ответитьfor a before n sound in the word (and /ænd/) is the sound like
/ɛnd/ or /ɛənd/ and ( pan /pæn/) like /pɛn / or /pɛən/
Hello, Mrs Rachel. for [æ] before [n] as in pan /pæn/ is the sound /æ/ changed to /ɛ/ as in bed /bɛd/ or what.?
ОтветитьLove ya
ОтветитьDid you girls ever figure out how to get this thing to work or figure out cuz I ain't figured out I ain't
ОтветитьHi, Rachel, awesome video I learned a lot in this video thanks
ОтветитьThank you so much for that explanation. I have been struggling for years to catch that diphthong properly and still failed, because I tried to combine the "a" as in "bat" with another sound. While as it turns out the "a" sound here should be more discreet as I learned in your video. Thank you again.
Yet there is another similar diphthong I am still grappling to get properly. It is "oo" as in "room". Some Americans say it as if there was the shwa sound additionally to the normal "u". Could you please shed some light on this as well? Thanks, Dmitry
Is this sound similar to this sound /ɛ/ ?
ОтветитьThank you so much Rachel for this great video!
These sounds of which IPA does not provide a correct transcription are always the most difficult :(
One thing I noticed and would like to ask you is this: is it possible that the sound / ɹ / tends to close the vowels that precede it? For example, at least to me, / ˈvɛɹi / sounds more like / ˈveɹi /, / ˈmɔɹ / more like / ˈmoɹ /, / t͡ʃɛəɹ / more like / t͡ʃeəɹ /, etc.
Is it at least partially correct?
Parabéns. Gosto dos seus vídeos porque eles são muito detalhistas. E é disso que eu preciso.
Ответить/æ/ raising depends on dialect. It doesn't exist outside American English. Some dialects never raise, some always.
Ответить🌹🌹🌹🌹❤❤💐💐
ОтветитьPlease video English letters I am a beginner Please
Instagram atea980
Instagram atea980
Ответитьأسماعيل • قبل يوم واحد
Please video English letters I am a beginner
wow there are many things having to learn
ОтветитьThis video make easier for me to practice on my daily plan ,because now I know what to do to pronounce the words in each of theses cases.
Thank you Rachel
I'm learning your course. thank you so much :D
congratulations 11 years
When [æn] is in unstressed syllable, do we still make it as [æən]? Example word: circumstance. It seems like I don't hear it that way from YouGlish speakers though. Thanks!
ОтветитьI can't thank enough this class it is amazing I was confused with those sounds and Very well explained
Ответитьwoow i really love u Rachel mommy. i was little confused about that and i asked u once time . i have just reached that wonderful clarification
ОтветитьRachel i've spoken to some american guy and he said that there's no eɪ sound after æ in "æŋ". He said that those words are pronounced with just the "e" sound.
He said that "thanks" is pronounced "ɵenks". Is that true?
Wow, very helpful
ОтветитьMæ ð mæ I̧ -- what is that meaning ????
ОтветитьWhat the difference pronunciation of pain, pen and pan
ОтветитьCan we just do like animals do and make noises to comunicate, damn humans
ОтветитьHi! I noticed that the words: ENGLISH, ONLY AND ANGEL have a long sound of the vowel even though they are not in an open syllable. Is there any explanation?
ОтветитьYou turned "pan" and "pain" into homophones.
Ответитьdoes this rule also apply in British English?
Ответитьthe [ae ] pronunciation is a bit confusing
Ответитьplease difference : pen/pain/pan . they sound the same
ОтветитьThanks Rachel.
ОтветитьMiss Rachel, I'm very thankful to you, but my problem is really about the TH, A, E pronunciation. How could i become a CALL CENTER AGENT and yet i don't sound like a native speaker. I am a Filipina
ОтветитьThat's an ultraawesome video.
ОтветитьIt's really helpful. I'm confused at how to pronounce words like fan fang run rang now I know why!!!! thank you a lot Dear Rachel!!!
Ответитьthank you very much [nt]
ОтветитьAmazing lesson, I would like to know where exactly you are from.
ОтветитьI wonder how americans say the word "And" they say /eænd/.... but in IPA it is /ænd/ or /ənd/ when u say "and" here both /e/ and /æ/ are gluttral and a smooth glide connects two... wow! superb! you are the best teacher! I got it!
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