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Phil|Accent Trainer
プロの講師Improve YOUR English pronunciation for free: Syllables in English pronunciation:
The following is about syllables in English phonology (not orthography).
First of all, syllables and words are never separated in speech — everything is connected smoothly. *Connecting the last consonant of one word or syllable to the first vowel of the next word or syllable will usually make English much easier for you to pronounce*, and will also sound more native.
As far as rhythm, syllabification does make a subtle difference, and it may help to know the difference between tense vowels (including diphthongs) and lax vowels.
Example words with tense vowels:
Fee, day, spa*, paw, go, goo, by, boy
feet, fate, caught*, goat, boot, light, voice
Example words with lax vowels:
fit, pet, pat, cot*, cut, put
*Note “spa” and “cot” have the same vowel sound in Canadian and most American accents. “Caught” is pronounced with the same vowel as “cot” in Canadian and some American accents.
Tense vowels and diphthongs can end a syllable, in which case the syllable is “open”. Lax vowels must always be followed by a consonant in the syllable, in which case the syllable is “closed”. So in words like “having” or “giving”, the /v/ is the end of the first syllable, not the beginning of the second. This affects the rhythm, but the /v/ will still connect to the following syllable — do not separate them with a pause or glottal stop or anything. The consonant will also connect across a word boundary, for example, “have it” is usually pronounced as if it were one word, with the /v/ connecting with the vowel in “it”.
The most frequent vowel of all is the reduced vowel (“schwa”), found only in unstressed syllables (both open and closed). This is a neutral vowel analogous to the neutral tone of Mandarin (輕聲), but much more common in English.
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2021年4月15日 02:06
回答 · 9
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0:56
2021年4月15日
1
UNRELEASED FINAL STOPS (Question raised by Eduardo)
Great question, Eduardo. Yes, we usually do pronounce the final ‘d as an *unreleased* occlusive. This is true of all the occlusives in syllable-final position before a consonant most of the time. The reason you’re asking about the ‘d is that it constitutes a complete word (“had”, “would”, or even “did”), and is the regular simple past-tense ending, so hearing it is important.
Between vowels (or continuant consonants), occlusives (ptkbdg) involve stopping the airstream entirely, and then releasing it as we pronounce the following vowel. If there is no following vowel, then we only pronounce the first part (the stop) and there is no audible release. (Of course there is a release at some point — but it is covered by the articulation of the following consonant, or by shutting our mouths.)
Most natural languages have “lazy” ways of producing different phonemes, but these shortcuts are different from one language to another. In Spanish, the bdg are usually pronounced as fricatives or approximants and not as full stops. Native speakers will barely notice the difference in their own language, but the differences in other languages will confuse them — until we have internalized the phonological “rules”.
Getting back to the /d/ in American English, note that it (as well as /t/) is pronounced as a so-called “quick-D” in many intervocalic contexts — this is similar to the sound of the simple R in Spanish, Japanese, etc. In fact the T phoneme is almost never realized as /t/ in American English (and in many “British” accents other than RP).
Back to the ‘d: In many cases, while you’re continuing to train your ear, you’ll be able to guess its presence by the verb it governs:
He likes eating / to eat pizza.
He’d like (not “likes”) to eat (not “eating”) pizza. (‘d = would)
He’d eaten a lot of pizza. (‘d = had)
What’d he do? (‘d = did)
What’d he done (‘d = had)
2021年4月15日
1
CORRECTION: In the last sentence of PART 3, I meant to say:
In my opinion, the final syllable in the VERB “certificate” is pronounced with a secondary accent. (The final syllable in the noun “certificate” is unstressed, and the vowel is reduced to a schwa. This is typical of noun / verb pairs in English.
2021年4月15日
1
PART 3 OF 3:
We can look up some words in the Cambridge Dictionary, which shows syllable breaks by means of a little dot. Additionally, a tiny vertical line on top is placed before the syllable with primary stress. A tiny vertical line on the bottom is placed before the syllable or syllables with secondary stress (if any).
Here is the link to the dictionary page with the key to the phonetic symbols. In my opinion, the three levels of stress (primary, secondary, and unstressed) are much more important than syllable breaks.
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/help/phonetics.html
Phonetic transcriptions from the dictionary:
civilization
noun (UK usually civilisation)
UK /ˌsɪv.əl.aɪˈzeɪ.ʃən/
US /ˌsɪv.əl.əˈzeɪ.ʃən/
certificate
noun [ C ]
UK /səˈtɪf.ɪ.kət/
US /sɚˈtɪf.ə.kət/
certificate
verb [ T ] UK
UK /səˈtɪf.ɪ.keɪt/
US /sɚˈtɪf.ɪ.keɪt/
significantly
adverb
UK /sɪɡˈnɪf.ɪ.kənt.li/
US /sɪɡˈnɪf.ə.kənt.li/
Notes: In my opinion, the final syllable in the noun “certificate” is pronounced with a secondary accent.
2021年4月15日
1
PART 2 OF 3:
Another principle in English is relative sonority. Briefly, here are some typical consonant clusters that can begin a syllable:
(s or occasionally sh) + (k, or p) + (l or r)
(s or occasionally sh) + (t, k, or p) + r
For example: stray, screen
Syllables generally cannot begin in other clusters.
Syllables can end in more than one consonant, but the rules are complex. Here are some examples of very complex finals in English: Worlds, adjuncts.
2021年4月15日
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Phil|Accent Trainer
語学スキル
カタルーニャ語, 中国語 (普通話), 中国語 (広東語), 英語, フランス語, ドイツ語, ヘブライ語, イタリア語, ポルトガル語, スペイン語
言語学習
中国語 (広東語), ヘブライ語
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