Jmat
Pronunciations of Various Words (feel free to upload your own recordings)

There have been a lot of discussions about pronunciation on this recently. There's another discussion going on right now (which for some reason I can't find) where both English native speakers and learners have been uploading recordings. The idea is so that people can compare different English accents, and so English learners can upload their own recordings and get feedback.

I'm doing something similar - I've written out a bunch of words that have similar pronunciations, have the same pronunciation only in some accents, or word pairs that are commonly mixed up by English learners.

http://vocaroo.com is a useful website where you can upload recordings without any registration.

I've uploaded my recordings onto Soundcloud instead of Vocaroo because it is much quicker to upload multiple files and allows me to share all my recordings with a single link.

All of my recordings can be found here: https://soundcloud.com/user-680684195/sets/english-pronunciation

For each recording, feel free to upload your own recordings, whether . It would also be helpful if you wrote out how many words in the recording you pronounce the same way (or if they rhyme). 


Marry - Merry - Mary:

All three are different for me.


Can (as in "to be able to") - Can (as in a can of soft drink):

I pronounce these differently.


Do - Day - Die - Dee (the letter) - Doe - Dare - Door


Hid - Had - Head - Hired - Hoard - Whored - Herd - Heard

I pronounce "whored" and "hoard" the same way. The same goes for "herd" and "heard".


Planet - Plan it:

I pronounce these differently.


Buy - Pie - Vye - Why:

This one's mainly aimed at English learners who struggle to distinguish "b", "p", "v" and/or "w".


Man - Main - Mine - Moan - Mean - Mourne


Cut - Cot - Caught - Cart - Kit - Kite - Kate - Coat:

I pronounce all these differently. In different accents, "u", "o", "aw" and "ah" have merged together in different combinations - that's what I want to hear.


Flower - Flour - Flyer

I pronounce "flower" and "flour" the same way.


Bath - Ask - Laugh - Aunt - Graph - Glass - Can't - Ant - Can - Dance - Branch - Chant - Chance

This tests for the trap-bath split. I pronounce everything up til "can't" with an "ah" sound, and after that I pronounce everything with an "a" sound.


Salary - Celery:

I pronounce these differently, although apparently people in Melbourne say them the same way.


Pan - Pin - Pen - Pan - Pine - Pain - Pawn - Porn:

I pronounce "pawn" and "porn" the same way. Otherwise I pronounce everything else differently. Apparently "pin" and "pen" sound the same in some accents.


Bin - Bean - Been - Bun - Barn - Ban:

I pronounce "been" and "bean" the same way. Americans would pronounce "been" and "bin" the same way I believe.


Hiss - House - Horse - Hoarse

I pronounce "horse" and "hoarse" the same way.


Mandarin (language) - Mandarin (fruit):

I pronounce these the same way. I've heard a lot of Americans put emphasis in a different spot for one/both of these.


Nectarine:

I've uploaded two pronunciations. The second one is how most older Australians pronounce it, although not many people my age say it that way. As far as I'm aware the second pronunciation is exclusive to Australia.


Garage:


Schedule:

I pronounce this with a "k" sound, although older generations pronounce it the British way (with a "sh" sound) here.


Water:

How you pronounce "water" can tell a lot about your accent - different accents pronounce the "a", "t", and "er" in different ways.


Live - Leave:

A lot of English learners mix these up.


Data:

I pronounce this the British way.


Where - Wear - We're:

I pronounce all three of these the same way.


Nut - Not - Knot - Nought - Knit - Night - Knight:

I pronounce "not" and "knot" the same way, as well as "night" and "knight". I don't pronounce any of the other words the same way. I understand some American accents pronounce "nut" and "not" the same way, and others pronounce "not" and "nought" the same way.


Fewer - Newer - Cure - Tour:

All of these rhyme with each other for me. I believe "tour" is pronounced differently outside of Australia, and I think "cure" is pronounced differently in northern England.


Band - Banned:

I read online that the bad-lad split exists in some British accents, where they pronounce these two words differently. My accent has the bad-lad split, but I pronounce these two words the same way!


Her - Sur - Fur - Were:

These all rhyme to me.

24 Şub 2016 22:08
Yorumlar · 7
2

2 of 2 

Garage: Second syllable rhymes with 'ridge' or 'fridge.'
Schedule: Strangely, I don't really favour one pronunciation or the either. If I had to pick one I'd probably go with the 'British' one with the 'sh' sound.
Water:
Data: Vowel sound is the same as for 'date' or 'mate.'
Where - Wear - We're: 'where' and 'wear' are the same, 'we're' is different.
Nut - Not - Knot - Nought - Knit - Night - Knight: 'Night' and 'knight' the same. 'Not' and 'knot' the same.
Fewer - Newer - Cure - Tour: 'Fewer' and 'newer' rhyme. 'Tour' and 'cure' have different pronunciations to those and to each other. 'Tour' rhymes with 'door' and 'floor.' 'Cure' rhymes with 'pure.'
Band - Banned: Same pronunciation.
Her - Sir - Fur - Were: They all rhyme for me too.

24 Şubat 2016
2

1 of 2

 

https://soundcloud.com/safeeuropeanhome/sets

 

Marry - Merry - Mary: Different vowel sound for each.

Can: Same pronunciation for both the verb and the noun.

Do - Day - Die - Dee (the letter) - Doe - Dare - Door: Distinct pronunciation for each.

Hid - Had - Head - Hired - Hoard - Whored - Herd - Heard: 'Hoard' and 'whored' are the same, as are 'heard' and 'herd.' (I sound like a right yokel when I say 'hired.')

Planet - Plan it: Pronounced the same way.

Man - Main - Mine - Moan - Mean - Mourn: All different.

Cut - Cot - Caught - Cart - Kit - Kite - Kate - Coat: All different.

Flower - Flour - Flyer: 'Flower' and 'flour' are the same.

Bath - Ask - Laugh - Aunt - Graph - Glass - Can't - Ant - Can - Dance - Branch - Chant - Chance; Contrary to what a lot of learners probably think, many British people use a short vowel sound for many of these words. I use a short vowel sound for all of them except 'aunt' and 'can't', which rhyme with each other.

Salary - Celery: Different pronunciation.

Pan - Pin - Pen - Pine - Pain - Pawn - Porn: 'Porn' and 'pawn' the same. The rest different.

Bin - Bean - Been - Bun - Barn - Ban: ''Bean' and 'been' are the same when I pronounce them as individual words. In a sentence that changes and 'bin' and 'been' have the same pronunciation.

Hiss - House - Horse - Hoarse: 'Horse' and 'hoarse' the same.

Mandarin (language) Mandarin (fruit): The same.

Nectarine: That second pronunciation is hilarious. I think you're right about it being exclusive to Australia.

 

24 Şubat 2016
1

Thank you for this discussion. I really tried:) I think there are a lot of words for me.

25 Şubat 2016
1

For real?

 

Compare: This is how I would normally pronounce these words. http://vocaroo.com/i/s0uKveWOyhIQ

 

This is a set of recordings where (at least I think I am) using a longer vowel sound.

http://vocaroo.com/i/s0uRtypZkwWd

 

As for 'cut' vs 'cat' vs 'cart, they are as you described. http://vocaroo.com/i/s0vXPxGr5gKv

 

 

25 Şubat 2016
1

After that I only had free characters left!


Here's the link to the recordings for those who don't want to scroll up (it'll also be easier to copy it from a phone if it's on its own line):


https://soundcloud.com/user-680684195/sets/english-pronunciation

24 Şubat 2016
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