Linking Past Tense to Vowels

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024
  • Let's practice the art of linking past tense verbs so they sound smooth but we can still tell that they are past tense and not present tense. The next video will be linking past verbs to consonants.
    Find the full video with more examples and explanation on Udemy or Skillshare:
    www.udemy.com/...
    skl.sh/3CP2ACw

КОМЕНТАРІ • 24

  • @GeraldoSimoes-sh1rs
    @GeraldoSimoes-sh1rs 16 годин тому

    Oh darling,God bless you!

  • @bantorio6525
    @bantorio6525 Рік тому

    💜💜💜💜💜💜💜 ... !!! ... excellent ... !!! ... this is why I love American English ... !!!

  • @batman-cg8br
    @batman-cg8br 11 місяців тому +1

    obrigado pelos videos

  • @user-eo4fm1hr7p
    @user-eo4fm1hr7p Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much teacher! I am getting better and better through your lessons ❤🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @comoaprenderingles3143
    @comoaprenderingles3143 Рік тому +1

    Thanks,more videos ma'am please

  • @user-jk5pp6is1t
    @user-jk5pp6is1t 7 днів тому

    ❤❤❤

  • @GeraldoSimoes-sh1rs
    @GeraldoSimoes-sh1rs Місяць тому

    A hug for you!

  • @urielmayorga9501
    @urielmayorga9501 Рік тому

    Thank You Miss. I love your way of teaching!

  • @ALSAIBANI
    @ALSAIBANI Рік тому

    you are the best
    I like your lessons
    an amazing and useful channel

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 Рік тому

    Hello, great video. can I dropped the K in asked /ˈæskt/ to /ˈæst/ and if i added a new word to /ˈæst/ like (me) can i drop the t also asked me to /ˈæsmi/.

    • @SmoothEnglish1
      @SmoothEnglish1  Рік тому

      only if you are speaking really fast. Be sure your diction is good enough to speak that fast! I personally hate "assed" instead of "asked" but I hear it a lot from Americans. To me , it sounds like "assed" as in "ass" bad word. hate it. ugggg.

  • @movfx3701
    @movfx3701 Рік тому

    Love your lesson ❤❤ I learning a lot.. thank you 🙏

  • @MsTranthihai71
    @MsTranthihai71 Рік тому

    ❤️

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 Рік тому

    I'm sorry. I hope the audio for the next video more louder.

    • @SmoothEnglish1
      @SmoothEnglish1  Рік тому

      interesting- it's quite loud when I play it here off of YT.

  • @Nintend0nepiece
    @Nintend0nepiece Рік тому

    First of all, thanks for your content. I'm a Brazilian English teacher and I've been strugling to teach how to link some words in English. Your videos are very useful! By the way, could you help me, please?
    You said that some verbs with a "t" sound (like "asked") have a "d" sound before a vowel. So, "liked it" sounds like "like dit", right? What about "cooked it"? Is it something lke "cook dit"?

    • @SmoothEnglish1
      @SmoothEnglish1  Рік тому

      Thanks! Yes, "liked it" sounds like lik dit- with a fast d. A "T" would be too harsh there.

  • @Michael-ic9ey
    @Michael-ic9ey Рік тому

    About "found her" linking, I hear some native speakers keep the D drop the H, then link D to ER(like: found-er), but others drop the D keep the H, then link N to HER, (like: foun-her), which one is right?

    • @WhatWillYouFind
      @WhatWillYouFind Рік тому

      Both are fine for conversational speaking as long as it is clear, dropping the H is more likely to be silent in a lot of cases. " I saw her by the bay" "I've seen her today" "Have you played with her at the tournament yet? Yes, both H in the last example could sound silent. IT really depends on the accent too, American English and British English have different emphasis.

    • @SmoothEnglish1
      @SmoothEnglish1  Рік тому

      Both are good. Some people, when speaking quite fast, drop both the N and the H. I know I would!

  • @YangCheung
    @YangCheung Рік тому

    my teacher. One detailed puzzled me for a long time. There is a linking rule in English, it says when the “nt”between vowels, the “t”in “nt” can be dropped, such as international, important. Here come the question: “isn’t an”, “nt” is not between vowels, so the linking sound is /ˈɪzən-næn/ or /ˈɪzən-tæn/? Tanks!

    • @SmoothEnglish1
      @SmoothEnglish1  Рік тому

      You can do it either way. Dropping the T in "isn't an" is perfectly normal and follows the rule. "An" is unstressed. Of course, the faster you speak, the more likely you are to drop the T.

    • @YangCheung
      @YangCheung Рік тому

      @@SmoothEnglish1 thank you so much!