How to Pronounce /æ/ & /ʌ/ + "Rubbish" Explained
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- Опубліковано 17 жов 2024
- Remember, you don't NEED an RP British accent to speak English well... There are loads of accents out there! I'm just here to help people who have a love for modern versions of RP.
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In this episode of #asketj we cover the difference between the vowel sounds /æ/ & /ʌ/, which non-natives can easily get confused by. We will also learn some British vocabulary, and pronunciation tips, as always!
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Lakey Inspired / lakeyinspired
The best English channel ever
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Hello Eliot, I am pronunciation teacher at The Queen's English House. I have been following you for about a year or so and I enjoy watching your pronunciation lessons.
Hi Elliot 🙋🏼♀️
I’m in love with British accent 😍
And, of course, your voice is clear and beautiful! Congrats from Brazil! 🇧🇷👋🏼
I working in Phuket with my starter English .. I really like to use British accent.. This way I just like it.. But a few days ago .. I met Indian guy who got citizens he poked my heart by his words " the way your pronounce it's funny " but the way he push me want to back to your Chanel agian and agian I promise I never give up
I am absolutely happy to listen to you, repeat after you and sound more and more like a native speaker! Thank you!
I think pronouncing /æ/, /ʌ/ and /ɑː/ is my greatest weakness in English pronunciation. After studying this for some time I hear the tiny difference, but it's still incredibly difficult to pronounce them correctly and show this difference. Some time ago I didn't even know there are so many different vowels, I wasn't aware of the difference between them and I thought it's the same, as in my first language we only have one "a" sound, so this is really tough to start noticing that they are not the same... I'm glad I've found your channel and course.
What's your native language? Polish?
Thank you! Now i know how to pronounce Pint, i like beer. \,, /
I love your ways of saying "Bye"! :) Thank you!
Your lessons are always interesting. Thank you Elliott!
Oh! This is a video of this century! I was waiting for it I don't know how long. Because in the Russian language we don't have a sound
/æ/
I could really learn British accent and improve my English from your channel Elliot 😊 Thank you, from Malaysia
It makes me feel so good your voice
I asked a half-pint yet at a pub and this video was pretty useful. The barman got it quick and easy. Now I just got drunk easier every Friday, here in Manchester. Thank you, Elliot.
The British accent is so great and soulful
I love that you use IPA! Helps us visual learners.
Thanks for clarifying these points, Elliot. I, too, am very fond of pronunciation.
Thanks a lot this is really helping me making my English sounding better
Thank you so much crack, I'm from Colombia and l understand you almost perfectly, thank you for the information.
Thank you for sharing! I'm learning and practicing British accent and your videos help a lot. Cheers!
Your episode always very exciting.
Hi Elliot
Your pronunciation make me better to other person.
Thank you.
You are amazing teacher!
Thank you so much!
Big love!
Rubbish? I remember Hermione Granger😃
-Her cat killed Scabbers! (Ron)
-Rubbish! (Hermione)
Her cat
@@柳風-x3f ohh thanks❤
I glad to listen your lessons, Best teacher
I think, the difference accents makes it beautiful. I love to hear people with different accents, different slang, different dialects what you call it.. it’s interesting
Elliott, I teach TESL English and use your videos a lot because they are the best! Do you have a video with the 'a' sound for 'parents' please? Italians tend to say the word that sounds like parrents
Hello Elliot, I just came across your helpful pronunciation tutorials and I liked the lessons on Rubbish, Negotiate, Schedule etc.
Please could you say when we could use the sound /a/ and /ei/.
How do we say the words in this sentence.
"Elliott is a great Pronunciation teacher".
Is it /ae/ or /ei/
Great and useful answers! It was a real pleasure to watch it. Cheers, Elliot!
Thanks to explain, Your video is very clearly.
Szkoda, że nie miałem takiego nauczyciela w szkole, świetnie tłumaczy.
It is a pity that I did not have such a teacher at school.
@Nom Nomek What language is that?
@@carolbounce49 It's polish :-). A little bit more difficult than english.
You’re awesome!! Love your voice
I was wondering how native speakers say the word 'very' so naturally but that's not the case with me. Now I got the logical reason from you. The mistake I have been doing so far is putting equal force irrespective of position of /v/ in the words. Thanks .
You are a Great Teacher Elliot😊 it's been a while I have been following you. I am glad that I discovered recently, it is quite helpful.
Can you kindly do a Pronunciation of some hard or common words which we non native pronounce wrong.
I love your "cheers, byee!" haha awesome
I always enjoy ur courses Elliot!
You are really expressive 👍👏👋
Thanks you liked my comment
I use your videos to get used to English speaking. Thanks a million!
I love the way you teach! Many thanks!!😉
Hi, Elliott. I'd like you to comment on the variations of phoneme /ʌ/. Depending on the following vowel sound, it may sound a bit different. Particularly before a dark /l/ (as in culture, indulge, dull, result) it sounds to me rather like a schwa.
Eres el mejor .... Te admiro por tu juventud y a la vez experiencia...!!
Hi Elliott please make videos about connected speech
Hello Elliott , love your voice and your pronunciation a lot , here is the thing , i can easily tell the difference of the pronunciation between CAN&CAN'T in American accent , but i am little bit confused of it in British accent , is that ok you put it in your video maybe next time please?? thanks a tons.
OMG I forgot to say HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!😂😂😂
Love your pronunciation, your British accent, your videos ...
Lots of love around here, right?
Ha ha ha
Thanks for your work!
Best explanation ever!
Thanks!!
I love British accent! I had grown up in London until 6, so the accent or I could say the atmosphere reminds me of my childhood. X
Hi, just subscribed to your channel and I love it! I used to live in the UK for 3yrs and half but now with my Italian and Spanish accent it's kind of losing my British accent lol
Dear Elliott,
Thank you for your cool British accent videos. I am interested in a number of approaches of how to teach best English pronunciation to students of some other origin with a mother tongue so different from English, there being Russian or Ukrainian, in my case, of the East Slavic languages.
If you do not mind it, I would just like to discuss some thuoghts all about the middle, so-called murmur vowels:
1) [ə] the schwa sound, a neutral middle vowel,
2) [ɜ:], an open-mid central unrounded vowel,
3) [ʌ], an open-mid back unrounded vowel.
It is a pity that NO BOOKS on English phonetics I have been encountering so far have offered any shorter, reasonable terminology for these two latter sounds I mentioned above for the students to easily remember them. You would come to know why I have been so regretful of that a bit later.
The schwa sound is quite understandable and can be acquired very soon.
Only on my fifteenth year of constantly listening to the BBC Radio (doing “shadowing” as a technique of repetition of what has just been said) did I realise exactly what was that that made these two last vowels stand so drastically weird to the Eastern-Slavonic ear.
This WAS and IS- and this was immensely important - the use of some special muscles located in your oropharynx, which is behind the oral cavity, apart from merely laying your tongue flat and still at the bottom of your mouth, as all instructing guidelines might suggest to us. The muscles fell out of use in these Eastern-Slavonic languages long ago. With an epitomic loss of the sound represented by the letter «ѣ» (equivalent to Latin ě).
It has gripped me by the throat actually. Therefore, in order to ease the process of coming to grips with this particular muscle group, all I could think of was to use a looking glass while producing these sounds. So I could clearly see and follow the movement of the superior wall of my oropharynx and control it by finding the proper way of operating it as the English do. I have found that wielding the muscle that operates this wall is KEY to acquiring a correct pronouncing model of the [ʌ] sound. I have called this sound “the little roof” because it helps my students remember it as they do their practice and always have it in mind.
So this pharyngeal upper part consists of the inferior surface of the soft palate and the uvula. Only when a student can consciously move up this farthest part of the soft palate (together with the uvula) will he or she be able to produce the sound the way it has to be produced in English. Period.
Secondly, although the IPA symbol for [ɜ:] takes its form after a reversed Latinized variant of the lowercase epsilon, ɛ, it does nonetheless look like the Cyrillic small letter (з) (which is a phonetic equivalent of “z”). There is something behind it, by the way, and well it might be one. So the word I have invented for the other sound [ɜ:] is “zievik”. It is a diminutive form of the Russian «зев» (“ziev”) which stands for “pharynx”. Students do find it useful when a teacher is representing it as having a name and appropriate meaning.
Now, what is the actual difference between [ʌ] and [ɜ:]? I think the solution lies in the way you stretch your lateral pharyngeal muscles, so to say, further sideways, making it a more oval and wider throat. You can’t see how wide it is in the looking glass, though. The training method for this is so simple that one wouldn’t believe it. YAWNING. The exercise is this, a student makes a conscious attempt at yawning, stops this process as fast as he can and remember how the muscles of the lateral walls are positioned at the moment of yawning. Learn to repeat it without making any yawning. The soft palate and the uvula being not so high as in the little roof [ʌ], you will get the zievik [ɜ:]. Period.
Hello from Brazil
Thanks a lot for all your lessons! Keep going)
Hi Elliot,
Can you please make for us an videos for the different between letter P and B and how to pronounce it it's really difficult for us to distinguish between each of them and thanks for your amazing videos it's really helpful for us please keep going.
4:20 it's okay, you can say "bullshit" to explain it. We'll still love you anyway
I believe that would more likely be "bollocks" in BrE.
Good video! Thank you
Nice class thank you so much
Hi ETJ thanks a lot!👌🙏🙏👍
I love your pronunciation
Please make a video of teaching all of vowels and constronants in British English?
Is there any PERFECT UA-cam channel like this for American accent?
@Mario Thank you, Mario! 🌹 To make my English better, I've been watching vidoes on UA-cam for a long time! 'Rachel's English' & 'The English Coach' are very good & I learnt a lot from them, but when I found this amazing channel (ETJ English) on UA-cam, I thought to myself maybe there is an American version of it with the same quality.
I'm so in love with your videos they are just awesome !! Cheers :-))
Thank you for ur lessons.
Thanks
Finally a normal haircut and (a?)good shaving! always shave your beautiful face! thank you in advance :) still, a struggle for me when to use 'a'...:(
and yes, your lessons are great! subscribed!
Dear Teacher! Is your course one-by-one class? Or is it just available video for us to study ?
?
Really helpful man.
Actually, Elliot, I have been confusing about the differences in the pronunciation of /æ/ and /ʌ/ and /ɑ/. Can you help me out, explain a little more detail? Many thanks
I'm no elliot, but i can tell u how i learn wey tp pronounce vowels.
For example sound from words "cut, run, fun". Can u just say one of those words like natives, u can just make a parody, not really serious.
@@somnvm37 Thanks for your suggestions, but the thing is that I am studying the course of English pronunciation, and I need to differentiate these troublesome things
Nice video!
Elliot, you are the number 1
How to properly pronounce called and cold, please? I'm still trying to get it right and would appreciate your vid on that. Many thanks. PS. Love your channel
Eliot you are awesome!
Have a good weekend teacher .
Great video! 👍🏻
Great vid
The English vowel sounds are my biggest struggle in my learning journey.
thank you
I love British accent
here we learn even if you do not wants! mastering Elliot! thank you!!!
Hi Elliott could please do a video about pronunciation of words ending wuth S and starting with TH such as "I waS THinking"...do I have to drop the S in connected speech? Thank you
You’re very great 😊
Hello again 😃
This goes beyond an English course! 🙂
Thank you ❤️🌺
My idol!
Sir waiting for your new video please make more video if you can
I love Eliot
Thank you!
Hi Elliott how can to be very very charmoso 💘 Stayed great this lesson ( video) rich in details
The /^/ sound, I mean the U in words like rubbish, cut, Sunday. I would like to learn British pronounce it. Its different from the same sound in American English. I hear like if it was /a/ & /u/ together. Its difficult to explain but I'll master it soon :)
Hello!
I really apreciate it, thank for share, your knowledge. By other hand I need to any sugestión to pass level A2. Today I am studing for an online oxford pleacement test. It's a pain in the neck then I don't have a good level of british listening.
Could you please help me!
Regards from Bogotá-Colombia.
I think English should be mostly taught be people who have done the language learning journey. Although pronunciation is fair. Rly appreciate your content.
Appreciate all the effort you put in your videos, much love 💞
Ohhh,,I love so much..I really do like British accent and I hope you to help me 😇😇
hello Elliot! You are amazing
Could you please make a video for the difference between "B" and "P" ?
please set the difference between e and ʌ thanks
could you tell please about how the sounds d and t are changed by following [ju] and [r] - i’ve been learning English for at least 25 years and really love upgrading my skills but have just recently discovered this peculiarity (( no teachers or textbooks told me about that and i was not able to recognize it myself (( did(j)you had(j)you count(j)ry sched(j)ule - i hear it so clear now!! so surprising......
Tnx a lot man
The best videos ever!
I won't miss any of your video! hhhhh
i'm your new student from Zanzibar
Hi Elliot.. can u explain what is the meaning of "catch-22" is it an British Idiom?
I could give you a quick summary: A "Catch-22" basically describes a paradoxial situation from which someone can't escape because of contradictory rules or limitations. The term itself was coined by Joseph Heller, who used it in his novel "Catch-22" in 1961. An example would be a situation in which someone is in need of something that can only be had by not being in need of it. Sounds quite complicated, but for instance will a bank never issue someone a loan if they need the money. That's what you would call a catch-22. :)
@@generalsiranthonycecilhogm3551 thanks verymuch bro ricky grimes. thats a complate exp. now I know what its meaning. GBU
Hello,
How do I know the letters' sounds of a word especialy when I'm pronunciating it for the 1st time?