2:51 uh, oo, oh ow there is a mistake. word that end in uh sound never happens. for example book cook look put pull push... they need a cosonant follow them.
A great video. A shame that it's portrayed as American English because connected speech, and so many of the features related to it, are common to British English as well.
Well, I thought it was a really good video till I saw that you have connected 'slice of' as vowel + vowel sounds, which I totally disagree with . The 'e' sound of the word 'slice' is silent. The connection will be consonant + vowel, not vowel + vowel.
WOW, I loved every single detail here, great job
I liked this for my beginning Accent Reduction class.. Thanks!
Simple and short but it so clearly huhuu i like it 😉😉
I like you lesson .
Great video! Very helpful!
Hello!
I wish some more videos lessons on this topic.
Thanks in advance.
Thanks
Hi there! Thanks for your amazing videos ! Is there a contraction or linking for these words literary realism ?
👍
Love it
Great now I have a question '' like you '' in that sentence the end of the '' e '' is silent then is v-v sound right? So K and you go together?
This comes natural if we speak with American sounds, yea?
Short and fun
good job
How=>'ow'
How+w+are you? => How (wa)re you?
Indeed.
thank U so much
2:51 uh, oo, oh ow there is a mistake. word that end in uh sound never happens. for example book cook look put pull push... they need a cosonant follow them.
no more content ?
How are you?
How /w/ are you?
A great video. A shame that it's portrayed as American English because connected speech, and so many of the features related to it, are common to British English as well.
2021 SCHOOL HOMEWORK?
Well, I thought it was a really good video till I saw that you have connected 'slice of' as vowel + vowel sounds, which I totally disagree with . The 'e' sound of the word 'slice' is silent. The connection will be consonant + vowel, not vowel + vowel.
useful
my tongue crashed uwu