Easy Word | Luyện nghe


Luyện nghe Mastering the American Accent - (Unit 137 : Native Language Guide - German)


It is recommended that you study all of the American vowel sounds in detail. (See Chapters One and Two.) However, pay special attention to the vowel sounds highlighted below which are the most problematic ones for German speakers of English.

Confusing /æ/ and /ɛ/

You might have a tendency to confuse /æ/ (as in bad) with /ɛ/ (as in bed.) If so, you will want to review the explanations and many exercises for these sounds in Chapters One and Two. A typical mistake would be to pronounce sand and send the same way.

Word Contrasts for Practice

Make sure you pronounce the words in each pair differently.

/æ/ /ɛ/
1. flash flesh
2. man men
3. salary celery
4. ex axe
5. taxes Texas

The /ɔ/ Sound

Be careful that your /ɔ/ sound (as in saw) is not influenced by the very different British version of this sound. In British English pause sounds almost like “pose,” but in American English it sounds much more like /pɑz/, and has the same /ɑ/ sound as in father or watch.

Word Contrasts for Practice

Make sure you pronounce the words in each pair differently:

// /ɔ/
1. low law
2. boat bought
3. coat caught
4. woke walk

The /I/ Sound

You might have a tendency to pronounce /I/ (as in sit) incorrectly. Make sure you pronounce the following words differently:

/I/ /i/
1. sit seat
2. live leave
3. fill feel

The /ɘ/ Sound

You might confuse /ɘ/ as in fun, with /ɑ/ as in hop. Practice pronouncing the following words differently:

/ɑ/ /ɘ/
1. shot shut
2. lock luck
3. cop cup

The /ʊ/ Sound

Do not make the common error of confusing /ʊ/ as in good, with /u/ as in food. Make sure you pronounce the following words differently:

/ʊ/ /u/
1. full fool
2. pull pool
3. look Luke

Title - The /r/ Sound

Các task khác trong bài học