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Hello everyone! Today I am helping you understand native speakers. This is for listening. In the last episode about the letter T, we saw that on the ends of some words, T changes to a "stop," a "stopped sound." (What, that, cat, etc.). Today, we are also talking about T. In many words, T or TT is pronounced as D. This happens when the T or TT is between two vowel sounds. Here is the sentence I use to demonstrate: I read an article today that was much better than the one I read yesterday. I felt that the author was more articulate, the grammar was truly clear, and the range of vocabulary was greater. Here are the words I used for examples today: better matter later water native bottle little barter quarter These words have syllables beginning with T that are stressed (e.g. -tiv- in creativity) creativity particulate articulate retell return Please comment below if you have questions. In the iTalki app, you can also subscribe to the podcast. Have a great week!
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Today we are talking about pronunciation, specifically what happens to T's at the ends of many words. This is a response to a student's question. Please comment or message me with questions for me to cover in future episodes! Here are all the words and phrases I talk about today. All of them usually have a "stop" (a stopped sound) instead of a full T sound. I have added some others which are common to the end of the list. Almost all words that end in a vowel sound followed by a T drop the T and make it a stop: cat hot that flat part short and sweet What do you think about that? Did you get it right? Extras (in no particular order): about out but without put not rot butt nut despite kite right alright etc. There are many, many words light these. Comment some below! Have a great week everyone! See you again soon!
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