Dear Teacher Rachel: 1) First, I want to thank you for your so useful videos teaching "spoken" English. I think that we, non-native English speaking people, can learn a lot from your lessons. 2) Here, if you have free time and don't mind, would you please help me (and many of my friends) put right accents on the sentence "I thought you would." in 2 cases: - I did correctly know you would do that, and you did. - I wrongly thought you would do that, and you did not do that at all. Thanks!
I’m so glad I found this video. The first video I found was by a British woman. She was giving example words and I was so close from asking in the comments, “Am I supposed to pronounce these with a British accent?” Granted, it was her vowel video. So that probably made the confusion worse.
Exactly which is why I have a little accent. I started learning English at the age of 13 so it was challenging in the beginning. People say I don’t have an accent but I feel like I do lol They just had us reading books everyday
Because idiots took control of the education system and decided the best way to learn to read is to memorize every single word in the language. The smartest guy I know is a terrible speller because he was never taught phonics.
Rachel, I'm love your classes and I'm learning much. Continue posting more classes that I 'll continue learning more and more. Thanks!! Fábio from Brazil.
Hi Rachel, well I mean you're really really really awesome I've seen your vídeos here and I love too much and I have learned a lot here it's so useful my pronunciation is up there already because of you and because of me too of course haha but you are really awesome I love your vídeos and you're pretty beautiful too and I want to have some english classes if it's possible Don't forget me, Do you have email or any contact ? bye I'm waiting your classes
Hi Gabriel, Thanks for your note. My coworker Tom and I are working on a new online course, but I'm not sure when it will start. To make sure you hear about it, sign up for my mailing list. You can find the link under 'about' on my channel. :)
Thank you for your teaching, Rachel. Very clear! I always use the sh sound in the words mention and ancient. It is the first time I hear about the ch sound. They sound a bit odd. I guess the British sound is sh.
0:30 the "t" in "mention" is pronounced like "ch"? But I always hear and say it like "sh" as how it's pronounced in the other word of this pair. Is there an accent difference here?
thank uuuuu keep made videos about phonetics please😩💔 i'm studying this in University my teacher soo bad she has quiet face but inside her black heart 👹 she venomous and don't repeat what she said 😰 and she loves to see students failing she never ever loves intelligent students than her 😰 if i say " teacher please agian i cant understand" she angery and ask me why?😱 some day she said to my friend " nooo i won't repeat all of this" 😭 God help me 💔😩
I have a query: Is ''c'' in "ancient" a good example for [ˈtʃ ] sound? Is it ( eɪntʃənt) instead of (eɪnʃənt) ? I always consult Webster's Dictionary, which says for ''ancient'' (ān′shənt). I've been following you and i've learned a lot from you so far. So, I'd like you to offer an explanation on the above. Thank you in advance!
Hi! I think you'll hear a CH consonant sound in this word from most speakers. It's due to where the tongue is for the N consonant sound and what happens when you quickly move into the SH position, it creates that CH consonant sound. This is a great question! :)
Excuse me, I found out that "mention" is not pronounced like you did. I found /ˈmenʃn/ in OALD and Cambridge Dictionary. Please take a look. Thank you very much
First encountered IPA as an American teenager trying to teach myself Russian. Bought myself a nice shiny copy of A Comprehensive Russian Grammer (fourth edition) and cracked it open. Soon I encountered it, and I was like "hey, thats so cool they put the pronounciations like they do in dictionaries, let me just Google how to read this real quick". Yeah, let's just say googling "IPA chart" wasn't exactly the most helpful. I will say though, the fourth edition of A Russian Grammer is a pretty good read, though. For, you know, a Grammer textbook.
Thanks for the tutorials. It is time to make English a phonetic language. Not the English language it self is not phonetic it is the writing system. phonetic English writing system will help our children to read at early age. This days with all teaching material kids know the letters at age 1 years old but can't read and spell until second grade. Some one like you (English teachers and linguistics) ) have to change the English writing system. I taught my daughters to read English at home using the Ge'ez alphabet (very close to IPA). At the age of 6 and 8, they have reading skill of high school.
you prob. wont read my comment because you have 406 comments, but I want to let you know that you are awesome and that your video has helped me a lot. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. God bless you even more. Greetings from Guatemala.
Hi Rachel how are you. I started watching your videos in a 0.25 reproduction speed and i realice that your teeth position are diferent the mine. you always have your incisor teeth on the same line to say some letters like in the letter t. when i pronunce letter t I always had my low incisor teeth more behind than my Higher ones and that totaly change the sounds. thanks for teaching me thise things
Hi Rachel,your teaching is awesome. I work for an international B.P.O and your video sessions on American pronunciation is helping me a lot. I like the way you articulate your lips,tongue and teeth to make the appropriate sound.I am still learning a lot from your videos and I believe it would be a matter of time before I would be able to speak flawless English language.YOU have been an angel in disguise for me who yearned so much for someone who could help him in his English.Keep the good work.
Hi teacher Rachel, first: you're pretty beautiful and the second you're a great teacher but let's to the point, I would like to know if you give english classes on Skype? because I need some help if you give explain me better what should I do because I need really some help I want to improve my pronunciation , I'll appreciate your help bye have a great week :)
Thank you very much, Rachel! With your lessons, I improved my skills in a short time and mostly I feel confident with myself. I'll have to practice a lot but now I'm happy! Greetings from Italy.
you need to describe 'locations of tongue in mouth' with picture. you can't explain fully exact pronunciations of consonanants and vowels for English by only lips and tongue exposed outside teeth.
Hi! If you're looking for a place to practice your English and learn IPA and more, you may be interested in my online Academy - you can check it out here: www.rachelsenglishacademy.com/
Hi Rachel! I really appreciate how your ways of learning E here is. So, I honestly want to follow it from the beginning. Could you plz help me with this? Many tks in advance.
This is a highly useful video, and I thank you for your patience in providing it. I'm struck by inconsistencies in how almost everyone pronounces these symbols in isolation. For example, here our speaker says something like (to use a clumsy approximation) "buh" for /b/, but is closer to "tih" for the /t/. Then she goes to "errr" for an inverted /r/ -- as if the vowel relating to the consonant sound is before it now, not after it. Why not "rih" or "r-schwa" or "ree"? Weirdly, it's almost as if there's not a standard way to pronounce the symbols themselves, alone. Either that or I'm missing the consistent set of rules, in reviewing examples.
Thanks for your comment! I agree it can be confusing when the isolated sounds are spoken with slight differences from person to person. I think it comes from some consonant sounds being difficult to hear clearly without being connected to a vowel sound. As for the R, you are right! I could have said it that way - the way it was said is more accurate for the R vowel than the consonant R - thanks for pointing that out! :)
Hey rachel, so what is this? "ẗh" Further more, does the two dots create the rest of the word where the o's in "ẗhook" make an oo sound like 'spook'? I'm just wondering because I put ẗ in the beginning of the word and wondering how it's logically said.
It's interest to know that these phonetic Symbols are not taught in America as part of language learning. In china, these phonetic symbols are taught when English was taught as a subject in class.
bagus materinya sisters,, saya dari INDONESIA,, masih pemula belajar bahasa inggris,, meskipun saya belum bisa bahasa inggris, tapi karna cara penyampaiannya bagus,, saya paham maksudnya, cara bicaranya juga tidak terburu buru, bagus, jelas, ,,,
Here you go: intentional [ɪnˈtεn ʃən əl] - here is a link to hear native speakers say this word using YouGlish.com: youglish.com/pronounce/intentional/english/us?
I am now confuse with the word MENTION.. is it really spelled that way using IPA, it's different from the /ˈmen.ʃən/ which i saw in cambridge dictionary, will you please help me. Thank you
Hello! This IS confusing! :) While the IPA for "mention" in dictionaries will be listed in the way you describe, native speakers of English do not use the SH consonant here - instead they pronounce this word with a CH consonant sound. This has to do with the required tongue movement that happens moving from the N consonant into the SH consonant - when doing this quickly we naturally create a CH consonant sound. So, while the IPA lists the SH consonant, you'll hear the CH consonant in this word.
This is great. One suggestion: deal with the difference between aspirated and unaspirated voiceless stops ([p], [t], and [k]). Getting these right makes a huge difference in the way speakers are perceived. For those from the Indian subcontinent, a word about the universal lack of aspiration of voiced plosives could also be helpful.
@Luigi Carmona: If our teacher stresses on the 1st syllable which indicates that it is definitely a noun more than a verb. I have heard many people saying 'redo' the same like she does sound it here and most of cases i understand it as a noun. and of course, stress on 2nd syllable which is a verb as you thought. Correct me if i'm wrong. Best
Hi Rachel! Your videos are great and very informative for the students. I'm a pronunciation specialist and have designed several pronunciation & fluency courses. I'm currently based in Japan and have just started my UA-cam channel, so I hope you don't mind some competition :). Keep up the good work.
@rachelsenglish Thank you once again Rachel. You are really a sweet lady. I won't be lying if I say that I got attracted to your beautiful face and of course your selfless work in English which has trained millions of people till date. I have currently started writing a blog and it would be really an honour and privilege for me if you could visit my blog.I am also interested in doing social service for my country India which I am very proud of.I don't want any foreigner to ill-treat our English.
Want to train with me LIVE? → bit.ly/re_a
You’ll LOVE my book: bit.ly/re_bk
Start my FREE 10-day mini course: bit.ly/re_n
Rachel's English. Put the caption please
Hi
Rachel's English your video are wonderfull you cold by the legend and I' very brasilian thank you
Beebarg Baloch I ' m braslian, and you
Rachel's English do u have online class live
Dear Teacher Rachel:
1) First, I want to thank you for your so useful videos teaching "spoken" English. I think that we, non-native English speaking people, can learn a lot from your lessons.
2) Here, if you have free time and don't mind, would you please help me (and many of my friends) put right accents on the sentence "I thought you would." in 2 cases:
- I did correctly know you would do that, and you did.
- I wrongly thought you would do that, and you did not do that at all.
Thanks!
:)
I speak German, and have also studied Spanish, French, and Italian.
Best,
Rachel
Traduz pra br diagrama'
🥱Wanna a real challenge? Try Chinese !
01:55 d
02:06 t
02:16 v
02:28 f
02:39 b
02:50 p
03:01 g
03:14 k
03:30 θ
03:37 ð
03:49 s
04:00 z
04:14 ʃ
04:25 ʒ
04:38 tʃ
04:49 dʒ
04:58 h
05:10 ɹ
05:21 j
05:38 m
05:50 n
06:04 ŋ
06:14 l (L)
06:26 w
Thanks for the video, I think, that you are the most better teacher, I congratulations you for your class
I’m so glad I found this video. The first video I found was by a British woman. She was giving example words and I was so close from asking in the comments, “Am I supposed to pronounce these with a British accent?” Granted, it was her vowel video. So that probably made the confusion worse.
Why weren't we taught this in elementary school?
My question exactly. This will make learning other langues especially phonetic ones much easier
Brandon Wu I was and I’m not even from a native English speaking country
Exactly which is why I have a little accent. I started learning English at the age of 13 so it was challenging in the beginning. People say I don’t have an accent but I feel like I do lol They just had us reading books everyday
because they hate us
Because idiots took control of the education system and decided the best way to learn to read is to memorize every single word in the language. The smartest guy I know is a terrible speller because he was never taught phonics.
I'm lovening your perfect pronounciation of the phonetic symbols. I learn so much.
I love you and your team. I used to practice following your way of pronunciation. You are the best for me.
Thanks a lot!
Rachel, I'm love your classes and I'm learning much. Continue posting more classes that I 'll continue learning more and more. Thanks!! Fábio from Brazil.
I like this leson very much
and I thought I was close to mastering english....
Thanks a lot for these videos. You've been a great help to my classes.
Thanks you very much!
MENTION is CH, and MOTION is SH. Unfortunately, there aren't rules to tell you which should be which.
Best, Rachel
good !!! so easy to learn. thanks you
Thank you rachel.
You're right. I'm working on a new video/explanation.
Best,
Rachel
Hi Rachel, well I mean you're really really really awesome I've seen your vídeos here and I love too much and I have learned a lot here it's so useful my pronunciation is up there already because of you and because of me too of course haha but you are really awesome I love your vídeos and you're pretty beautiful too and I want to have some english classes if it's possible Don't forget me, Do you have email or any contact ? bye I'm waiting your classes
Hi Gabriel,
Thanks for your note. My coworker Tom and I are working on a new online course, but I'm not sure when it will start. To make sure you hear about it, sign up for my mailing list. You can find the link under 'about' on my channel. :)
Maybe you could make a video about diacritic symbols, that could be very usefull:)
Thanks for your suggestion!
That awkward moment when you realize you've been pronouncing "possess" wrong
It's okay. If I was a non native English speaker, I would have probably thought the same thing based on the spelling.
Thank you for your teaching, Rachel. Very clear! I always use the sh sound in the words mention and ancient. It is the first time I hear about the ch sound. They sound a bit odd. I guess the British sound is sh.
John Ng Yes, SH is the real pronunciation. But they sound odd/british to me! Same with N+S like in fence [fɛns]. We make it more like [fɛnts]
Yes, I guess it is a difference in opinion of the editors of the dictionaries. I have also seen both. I use the CH sound in 'mention'.
excelent teacher
Thanks!
0:30 the "t" in "mention" is pronounced like "ch"? But I always hear and say it like "sh" as how it's pronounced in the other word of this pair. Is there an accent difference here?
There is a subtle difference. I've only heard a few people really be specific in saying it correctly, because it takes more effort to say it right.
thank uuuuu
keep made videos about phonetics please😩💔
i'm studying this in University my teacher soo bad she has quiet face but inside her black heart 👹 she venomous and don't repeat what she said 😰 and she loves to see students failing she never ever loves intelligent students than her 😰 if i say " teacher please agian i cant understand" she angery and ask me why?😱 some day she said to my friend " nooo i won't repeat all of this" 😭
God help me 💔😩
again**
i can't
How do you put emojis in youtube?, i wanna know
Red Rose Red Rose same problem
Tlacahuatzin Tlahuilhua Tlepilli with the keyboard, in my cellphone it's left on my space bar 😀😁☺😉
@@tlacahuatzinxahualotl170 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👌🏻
I have a query: Is ''c'' in "ancient" a good example for [ˈtʃ ] sound? Is it ( eɪntʃənt) instead of (eɪnʃənt) ? I always consult Webster's Dictionary, which says for ''ancient'' (ān′shənt). I've been following you and i've learned a lot from you so far. So, I'd like you to offer an explanation on the above. Thank you in advance!
Hi! I think you'll hear a CH consonant sound in this word from most speakers. It's due to where the tongue is for the N consonant sound and what happens when you quickly move into the SH position, it creates that CH consonant sound. This is a great question! :)
Excuse me, I found out that "mention" is not pronounced like you did. I found /ˈmenʃn/ in OALD and Cambridge Dictionary. Please take a look. Thank you very much
Oh my God! Thank you so much! You helped me a lot with that lesson! Im student of english.. Kisses from Panama
Thank you very much ☺ شكرا جزيلا
My pleasure!
Madam I respect u as teacher my u live long and be happy
Thanks Abdullah!
@@rachelsenglish it's my pleasure to got such a teacher as like u
i love your voice!
Wow wow wow Thanks for watching. Because it meaning ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
@DayangyangAssa I have several videos on linking with more to come. You can go to my website and do a search on 'linking' to find the videos!
Really great video Rachel. Would you give some tips for the consonant at minute 4:30, please?
ov😎😍😇🙄😀😂😅😆😗😇😇🤗🙂☺😊😋😎
i dont understand the difference between the mention and the motion t sound :(
It can be either, but it's more commonly unvoiced.
First encountered IPA as an American teenager trying to teach myself Russian. Bought myself a nice shiny copy of A Comprehensive Russian Grammer (fourth edition) and cracked it open. Soon I encountered it, and I was like "hey, thats so cool they put the pronounciations like they do in dictionaries, let me just Google how to read this real quick". Yeah, let's just say googling "IPA chart" wasn't exactly the most helpful. I will say though, the fourth edition of A Russian Grammer is a pretty good read, though. For, you know, a Grammer textbook.
Thanks for sharing!
And, it is in conjunction with I. You can see more information relating to this on my website, under the 'sound chart'
Thanks for the tutorials. It is time to make English a phonetic language. Not the English language it self is not phonetic it is the writing system. phonetic English writing system will help our children to read at early age. This days with all teaching material kids know the letters at age 1 years old but can't read and spell until second grade. Some one like you (English teachers and linguistics) ) have to change the English writing system.
I taught my daughters to read English at home using the Ge'ez alphabet (very close to IPA). At the age of 6 and 8, they have reading skill of high school.
Yes, that's the LETTER T, but not the T SOUND. The T SOUND is just the T sound. :)
you prob. wont read my comment because you have 406 comments, but I want to let you know that you are awesome and that your video has helped me a lot. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. God bless you even more. Greetings from Guatemala.
That's great to hear! You're very much welcome Ana!
muchas gracias por tus videos
estoy aprendiendo mucho
Check out my Real Life playlist.
Hi Rachel how are you. I started watching your videos in a 0.25 reproduction speed and i realice that your teeth position are diferent the mine. you always have your incisor teeth on the same line to say some letters like in the letter t. when i pronunce letter t I always had my low incisor teeth more behind than my Higher ones and that totaly change the sounds. thanks for teaching me thise things
You're welcome and thanks for watching Pura!
Excuse me is there a program or an application show the phonetics of words (word by word) in just passing the mouse's cursor ??
Hmm...I haven't come across anything like that - but I like the idea!
Hi Rachel,your teaching is awesome. I work for an international B.P.O and your video sessions on American pronunciation is helping me a lot. I like the way you articulate your lips,tongue and teeth to make the appropriate sound.I am still learning a lot from your videos and I believe it would be a matter of time before I would be able to speak flawless English language.YOU have been an angel in disguise for me who yearned so much for someone who could help him in his English.Keep the good work.
Hi teacher Rachel, first: you're pretty beautiful and the second you're a great teacher but let's to the point, I would like to know if you give english classes on Skype? because I need some help if you give explain me better what should I do because I need really some help I want to improve my pronunciation , I'll appreciate your help bye have a great week :)
In our university in Egypt we listened to this video to understand
Thank you very much, Rachel! With your lessons, I improved my skills in a short time and mostly I feel confident with myself. I'll have to practice a lot but now I'm happy! Greetings from Italy.
You're very much welcome Simone!
thanks so muchhh for teaching so nicely...
have been following your English lessons for two years or more, and feeling really improved....
thanksss
Rachel, why don’t we teach the glottal stop which is usually T as in White Paper. The T in white becomes a glottal stop.
Yes! We teach that as the Stop T. The Stop T is often a glottal stop. Thanks so much for your comment!
The ticher more beautifull of the world..😍😍😍😊
you need to describe 'locations of tongue in mouth' with picture. you can't explain fully exact pronunciations of consonanants and vowels for English by only lips and tongue exposed outside teeth.
Ryan Karl i think so😊
This video is awesome, I need a software for me and practice let me know if you Rachel can help
Hi! If you're looking for a place to practice your English and learn IPA and more, you may be interested in my online Academy - you can check it out here: www.rachelsenglishacademy.com/
What a very nice smile yours is, Rachel !
Thank you!
Hi Rachel! I really appreciate how your ways of learning E here is. So, I honestly want to follow it from the beginning. Could you plz help me with this? Many tks in advance.
thanks is very helpful
You're welcome Javier!
This is a highly useful video, and I thank you for your patience in providing it.
I'm struck by inconsistencies in how almost everyone pronounces these symbols in isolation. For example, here our speaker says something like (to use a clumsy approximation) "buh" for /b/, but is closer to "tih" for the /t/. Then she goes to "errr" for an inverted /r/ -- as if the vowel relating to the consonant sound is before it now, not after it. Why not "rih" or "r-schwa" or "ree"?
Weirdly, it's almost as if there's not a standard way to pronounce the symbols themselves, alone. Either that or I'm missing the consistent set of rules, in reviewing examples.
Thanks for your comment! I agree it can be confusing when the isolated sounds are spoken with slight differences from person to person. I think it comes from some consonant sounds being difficult to hear clearly without being connected to a vowel sound. As for the R, you are right! I could have said it that way - the way it was said is more accurate for the R vowel than the consonant R - thanks for pointing that out! :)
Hey rachel, so what is this? "ẗh" Further more, does the two dots create the rest of the word where the o's in "ẗhook" make an oo sound like 'spook'? I'm just wondering because I put ẗ in the beginning of the word and wondering how it's logically said.
谢谢大姐头~哇哦
very easy to follow your pronunciation.Thank you very much.
My pleasure Rathna!
It's interest to know that these phonetic Symbols are not taught in America as part of language learning. In china, these phonetic symbols are taught when English was taught as a subject in class.
bagus materinya sisters,, saya dari INDONESIA,, masih pemula belajar bahasa inggris,, meskipun saya belum bisa bahasa inggris, tapi karna cara penyampaiannya bagus,, saya paham maksudnya, cara bicaranya juga tidak terburu buru, bagus, jelas, ,,,
Thanks my teacher please help me u whts up
I've never heard anyone say mention with a tʃ and I'm a native American English speaker
how do you pronounce 'Intentional'?
Here you go:
intentional [ɪnˈtεn ʃən əl] - here is a link to hear native speakers say this word using YouGlish.com:
youglish.com/pronounce/intentional/english/us?
@nageshb1 What a lovely comment. Thank you! I'm glad the videos are helping you improve!
So old, and you haven't changed a lot
Wait, I never realised mention was pronounced as 'menchion.'
My mind is blown.
YOU HAVE GREAT SKILL OF TEACHING YOUR STUDENTS AROUND WORLD APPRECIATED TO YOU
I am now confuse with the word MENTION.. is it really spelled that way using IPA, it's different from the /ˈmen.ʃən/ which i saw in cambridge dictionary, will you please help me. Thank you
Hello! This IS confusing! :) While the IPA for "mention" in dictionaries will be listed in the way you describe, native speakers of English do not use the SH consonant here - instead they pronounce this word with a CH consonant sound. This has to do with the required tongue movement that happens moving from the N consonant into the SH consonant - when doing this quickly we naturally create a CH consonant sound. So, while the IPA lists the SH consonant, you'll hear the CH consonant in this word.
A question the word "ax" you pronounce it as s and in dictionaries it appears as ks
When i end Trines with Rachel again
Thanks pretty 💝💋👌
It's great, thanks so much!!!!!!!!!
I wanna thank you a thousand times for this video!!! You explain it very well. All foreigners must see this. I gonna share with my friends. 🙂
Thanks a lot Cleomar!
This is great. One suggestion: deal with the difference between aspirated and unaspirated voiceless stops ([p], [t], and [k]). Getting these right makes a huge difference in the way speakers are perceived. For those from the Indian subcontinent, a word about the universal lack of aspiration of voiced plosives could also be helpful.
Steven Ottomanyi Thank you for your suggestion!
v.good
thank you
v.good
thank you
@Luigi Carmona: If our teacher stresses on the 1st syllable which indicates that it is definitely a noun more than a verb. I have heard many people saying 'redo' the same like she does sound it here and most of cases i understand it as a noun. and of course, stress on 2nd syllable which is a verb as you thought. Correct me if i'm wrong. Best
You’re a German, aren’t you, Rachel?
your videos are very useful, they really help me to improve my skills!! thanks a lot
To me, 'mention' and 'motion' have exactly the same 'ti' sound -- like 'sh'.
Damn am I the only one that thinks she looks like an older version of Gianna Michaels?
HEALP. PLS
I watched your 3 videos on IPA.
The sounds you mentioned were 41 and actually they're 44. Where the other 3 sounds?
Hi! Which three are missing?
Thanks. it's really helpful, You teach how to make the sounds that's great!
Hi Rachel! Your videos are great and very informative for the students. I'm a pronunciation specialist and have designed several pronunciation & fluency courses. I'm currently based in Japan and have just started my UA-cam channel, so I hope you don't mind some competition :). Keep up the good work.
I would prefer as a composer if we used the accurate International Phonetic Alphabet, and not historic letters and orthography - spelling
hi Rach. Were you teaching KK in this video? Also I couldn't find [o] and [e] in this video and the video of vowels. thank you
thanks for all the videos..
we love to learn from them .
Hi Rachel, When you pronounce d t s z, do your teeth touch before making the sound? Or leave a very small gap?
Vamos la fisioterapia por onde a Uniasselve me encaminhar estou passando e deixando minhas pegadas amando a cada passo
Fantastic. Great video.
Glad you enjoyed it!
thank you honey , i love you and i love the way you teaching , you helped me a lot in my exams in university , MOROCCO country ;)
@rachelsenglish Thank you once again Rachel. You are really a sweet lady. I won't be lying if I say that I got attracted to your beautiful face and of course your selfless work in English which has trained millions of people till date. I have currently started writing a blog and it would be really an honour and privilege for me if you could visit my blog.I am also interested in doing social service for my country India which I am very proud of.I don't want any foreigner to ill-treat our English.
Hi, technically, it's CH or /tʃ/, but since the /t/ is always weakened by consonant /n/, it's often omitted! I hope that helped! :)
and it’ s the case for “ancient”!
thank for this video . I am a student for esl and I think phonetic spelling it is so difficult. this video is very helpful for me
said mustafan Great!
brilliant explanation, congrulation
Many thanks!
weeena hermana, terrible buena la wea, me sirvio caleta pal phonetics, te alabo
Very helpful for me. Thanks
Glad to hear that John!
I couldn't even focus on the lesson ! You're beautiful *,* ! Just beautiful..
i agree with you my friend