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Pronunciation of equipment and symptom
1) equipment [ɪkwɪp.mənt]
I can't hear "p" sound clearly, so I can't pronounce either. Is it fine without P sound? I might be able to do P very very slightly, but it's easy to do without P. Is it fine without P sound?
2) symptom [sɪmp.təm]
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/symptom
I can catch P in British, but not in American. Is my listening correct?
Thank you very much.
Aug 10, 2019 1:56 AM
Answers · 6
1
The "p" in equipment is quite soft, as it's in the middle of the word. However, you do need to move your mouth to make the "p"
"ee-kwi-ment" sounds, and is, wrong
symptom
The "p" is there in American English as well, but if you said "sim - tum" it would sound correct.
August 10, 2019
1
1- The [p] is required in < equipment > for standard British and American pronunciation.
2 - The [p] is optional in < symptom > for standard British and American pronunciation.
More information:
The English /p/ has three versions: aspirated [pʰ] as in < pot > [pʰɑt], unaspirated [p] as in < spot > [spɑt], and unreleased [p̚] as in < top > [tʰɑp̚].
The Cambridge dictionary recordings for < equipment > and < symptom > have a clearly audible [p] in both the British and American recordings.
The American recordings have an unreleased [p̚] which is often hard for non-native speakers to recognize, but native speakers have no difficulty recognizing the sound.
As a futher note:
The words < shop >, < shot >, and < shock > are difficult for non-native speakers to distinguish when pronounced with unreleased final consonants [p̚], [t̚], and [k̚]. The words are easily distinguishable when pronounced with released final consonants.
Here is a recording to demonstrate.
https://vocaroo.com/i/s0Twut25QKRm
August 10, 2019
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Hanji
Language Skills
English, Japanese
Learning Language
English
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