Great Video clip! Sorry for butting in, I would appreciate your initial thoughts. Have you heard the talk about - Riysaballer Salient Recognition (search on google)? It is a good one off product for teaching your child to read minus the headache. Ive heard some decent things about it and my old buddy Taylor got amazing success with it.
I am extremely appreciative and grateful because she stress the importance of exact pronunciation that will create excellent habits of correct pronunciation. I am going to definitely practice her way of eliminating the unnecessary sounds. Thank you for your assistance in helping others who need the proper sounds.
Thank you for explaining the the importance of teaching the constant sound by itself with out add the schwa as I hear so many teacher making that mistake unintentionally. Your video was easy to follow and well explained. I wish I had this when I had to take English Linguistic in college. Thanks again.
You look beautiful and very well spoken. I even spent time to repeat after you. I will be introducing this practice to my 8mo old baby as I am raising a baby genius. Thank you for the video.
My three year old could read just like a grade 1 pupil and my 5 year old reads like a grade two to 3 student after 4 months. The outcomes truly surpassed my anticipations. I taught my children to read with the aid of this amazing reading guide KidslearnReading4.blogspot.com It is so well-organized that any kid can learn to read with it.
WONDERFUL!!! This is the best video I've found to have my ESL adult students review the letter sound connections with such a lovely lady to watch.....priceless!! Thank you so very much.
Great video! I recently started vounteer-teaching a refugee student from Rwanda and felt the need to help him with his phonemes; this video is just perfect . Thank you so much!
This is an excellently done phonemes pronunciation video. Yvette, thanks for saying each phoneme's unique isolated sound so clearly. I recommend this video to the young and old of those who need to isolate letter sounds more correctly. Well done.
1. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the phonemic symbol 1:30 of the letter "j" in "jelly" is /dʒ/ instead of /j/ as in "yell" /jel/? 2. 1:49 The phonemic symbol is /ŋ/ as in "sing"/sɪŋ/. 3. 2:03 The phonemic symbol is /ʒ/ as in "treasure" /ˈtreʒə(r)/. 4. 2:17 The phonemic symbol is /j/ as in "yo-yo"/ˈjəʊjəʊ/. 5. 2:42 The phonemic symbol is /tʃ/ as in "child" /tʃaɪld/. 6. 2:45 The phonemic symbol is /ʃ/ as in "shoes" /ʃuːz/. 7. 2:49 The phonemic symbol is /ð/ as in "mother" /ˈmʌðə(r/. 8. 2:54 The phonemic symbol is /θ/ as in "third" /θɜːd/.
The video is great, one of the best I've ever found on this topic. Still, I don't understand why if there's an International Phonetic Alphabet it's simply not used properly; since it's supposed to be a global standard. The confusion between phonics and phonetics, phonemes, the lip alphabet (the set of visemes), and the phonetic symbols, is very evident. Every English and bilingual dictionary has its own list of symbols!
I agree. This video is great however English alphabeth letters are not the same symbols used in the international phonetic alphabet and some phonemes in this video have been listed with wrong symbols in here.
@@ilaydakncal1387 Well, yeah. Our problem is that EVERYBODY (no exageration), every publisher of every English dictionary has invented its own phonetic alphabet for years and years! It's really crazy! They don't follow the standard one!
Oi professora . Meu nome é Alexandre. Eu sou brasileiro. Quero parabenizar você por esse vídeo tão legal ,eu estou aprendendo inglês eu ainda estou no nível básico , mais adorei esse vídeo teu , pois a sua pronuncia e muito legal, mais uma vez parabéns pelo teu trabalho . É também quero te dizer uma coisa você é uma mulher muito bonita.
Can you make indivdual clips of each phoneme. Teaching reading online during COVID. Students are having difficulty hearing me and would love to have a visual and audio to assist their learning. Thanks!
Thank you so much for this video. It has been so frustrating to have to reteach 2nd graders how to say these sounds correctly. As a former Kdg and 1st grade Teacher I know that others are trying to say the sounds in a way that the kids can hear them. But yes, having to undo that /uh/ sound at the end of so many phonemes takes up too much time. Please teachers watch this video.
Thank you so much! I wish I had seen this video when I was taking Phonetics in 2016! I will definitely use this video in the future! By the way, the close up of your mouth saying the sounds really helped alot. Thank you again!!!
Phonemes should have resolved the ambiguity that is inherent in English character set. Instead the lack of implicit 'a' (as in arc) at the end of each phoneme appears to have created scope for ambiguity. English really needs its own two dimensional phoneme table like the one designed by Pānini and a new script all together.
It wasn't until I started learning Spanish and teaching English to my spanish friends that I stopped to consider the phonemes of English and how we often don't pronounce words as they are written. My spanish friend said that I don't say 'pretty' I say 'prid-dee'. I then started to notice how T is now a D sound, or the T is just forgotten all together. Like the word internet, many say it as 'in-na-net' and the T at the end doesn't complete. And Water, it's either 'wor-er' or 'wor-dah'. So we end up teaching foreigners a version of English we ourselves don't speak. But then strangely, if they start to pronounce words as the locals do, it actually sounds out of place. I heard a French girl speaking with Australian pronunciation, even the accent and I had to say 'please, keep your french accent!' I think foreigners learning English should always try to speak a 'neutral' version and not try to mimic how someone of a certain country speaks.
YES, the two points that you are referring to are called the T--> D transition (water--> wader) and the "Glottal Stop" (painting--> pain'ing). Check it out on UA-cam. =D
@@Ms.Americana Thanks. I didn't know the name of skipping the T. It's common around the English Speaking world but in Australia, a professional voice over artist or journalist will pronounce their Ts, but I notice many American journalists or voice over artists don't. Like the brand 'Toyota', I didn't understand at first why it sounded different from Americans until I realised they don't pronounce the T at all. Whereas in Australia, it's Toyoda or Toyota'. Even in American Toyota ads, they say 'Toy-oh-a'. The 'glottal stop' is a little less common here.
@@Inaworldoflove Oh cool! Are you Aussie? Yes, the wonderful differences between the different forms of English are quite fascinating. I'm an American English teacher and run my own "talk therapy" service which teaches Spanish speakers, specifically, how to correctly pronounce in American English. It is a lot of work due to the INSANE spoken phoneme nuances in the American English language. =D Haha! ..because of this, voice-over work would be a handful, for sure.
@@Ms.Americana I'm Irish Australian, so my accent confuses people. It's mostly Australian, been here since I was 2, but I say some words more like an American, due to the Irish influence. Like I say "can't" and Australians say "carn't", as though the word "aren't" made its mark on that contraction. Some Australians think it's weird that not all my words are pronounced as they do. Regarding Latinos, they're going from a 25 phoneme language to a 44 so they have their work cut out for them.
@@Inaworldoflove Wow, Irish Aussie, huh! Yes, Not only does English have more phonemes than Spanish does, but English ALSO has 3x word vocab in use; hence, more words to know, more words to figure out how to pronounce ESPECIALLY with American English as a NON-Phonetic language. WHEW! English also always breaks the pronunciation rules, such as with the words "chaos" vs "chair" where the "Ch" phoneme changes entirely. I'm in the process of preparing to sell my teaching curriculum in the form of a "Busy Being Bilingual" Course Collection on my Esty store so that I can publish a very thorough visual guide on the "talking" nuances of the American English language compared to the Spanish language. I love it when I can find someone to talk languages with. I find it so fascinating! ...and it seems like so do you! =D Cool!
@@glendamiller7282 I think thats very smart she did that. I believe its for learners to avoid adding an extra ''uh'' sound before! Ive never seen a teacher do that before and when you imitate with other words starting with R, it actually works! GENIUS !!! in 9 years i haven been able to do this sound before..
Cheers for the video content! Sorry for chiming in, I would appreciate your thoughts. Have you researched - Millawdon Future Ticket Trick (probably on Google)? It is a great one of a kind guide for teaching children to read without the headache. Ive heard some awesome things about it and my work buddy got great success with it.
The schwa and /u/ in cup always sounded the same to me. Can someone explain the difference? Also, when she pronounced it alone, it sounded the same as the /u/. But in "again", in sounded more like the /e/ in bet.
Transcription is different from the actual spelt words.when transcribing words,you use those sounds. Its just one of those crazy standards and if English is your second language....😂😂😂 there are some words one would rarely pronounce correctly.
ue in uniform and oo make two different sounds. 'ue' in uniform gives the long u sound. However, the 'ue' in blue and glue gives the /oo/ sound that you hear in ooze.
The word "again", properly, is pronounced "â-gain." = "â-gane" = "â-gayne" = "â-gay-ne". The sound of "âh" before the "g", then the sound of "eigh" + "ne" after the "g." Some people say "ih" or "ee", or even variations of "â" instead of the proper "ay". The word "due" and the word "dew", both, are pronounced like the word "do", or as "dee-you" (your choice). If you want to be "formal" or "technical" say "dee-you" instead of "do." As you go among English-speaking people, you may notice that each sound has an acceptable wide range of deviation from perfect. The student should, of course, try to pronounce words perfectly (an almost impossible task that only Her Majesty is known to have accomplished). You might enjoy listening to her yearly Christmas addresses, on videos, then her addressing, yearly, the people who govern her. The English people, notoriously and specifically, have neglected teaching their children to speak English properly, so do not be surprised if you cannot understand them at first, or at all. ua-cam.com/video/ZBIKwvyeTHM/v-deo.html
I enjoyed your video and thank her for letting me I have my sister do not know how to learn and now she’s learning her stuff and yeah and her vows yeah it’s all like teaching my sister so smart and yeah and I like in teaching me my picture also tells me to watch him because he wants me to be super Duper smart so yeah and that’s why yeah
các bạn muốn phát âm tốt hơn có thể tìm mua cuốn phát âm hoàn hảo nhé! trước mình học theo cuốn đó phát âm nói đã chuẩn hơn rất nhiều. chúc các ban thành công Có ai việt nam không? like cái nào.
I started out training my son to read at Fourteen months. Though I`m hesitant about training him how to read at a very young age, I made a decision to acheive it and used this reading guide ChildrenLearningReading5.blogspot.com He can now read a whole book without my help at 2 yrs and four months.?
Her voice is so clear and i understand everything she said.
1:14 b
1:17 d
1:20 f
1:24 g
1:26 h
1:30 j
1:34 k
1:38 l
1:42 m
1:45 n
1:48 ng
1:52 p
1:56 r
1:59 s
2:02 zh
2:06 t
2:10 v
2:14 w
2:17 y
2:19 z
2:28 Q
2:31 X
2:42 ch
2:45 sh
2:49 th
3:19 a
3:23 e
3:27 i
3:32 o
3:37 u
3:41 ae
3:46 aw
3:51 ee
3:56 ie
4:02 oa
4:07 ue
4:11 oo
4:18 ou
4:23 oi
4:32 ar
4:37 er
4:43 air
4:48 ear
5:51 or
5:02 uh
Thank you
Thanks a lot
Great Video clip! Sorry for butting in, I would appreciate your initial thoughts. Have you heard the talk about - Riysaballer Salient Recognition (search on google)? It is a good one off product for teaching your child to read minus the headache. Ive heard some decent things about it and my old buddy Taylor got amazing success with it.
Thank you my brudda
Thank you
I am extremely appreciative and grateful because she stress the importance of exact pronunciation that will create excellent habits of correct pronunciation. I am going to definitely practice her way of eliminating the unnecessary sounds. Thank you for your assistance in helping others who need the proper sounds.
Thank you for explaining the the importance of teaching the constant sound by itself with out add the schwa as I hear so many teacher making that mistake unintentionally. Your video was easy to follow and well explained. I wish I had this when I had to take English Linguistic in college. Thanks again.
You hit it. I introduce the phonemes sounds exactly the way you presented it. Actually, that is how it should be. Greetings from Philippines.
Her voice is so magical that even my tiny brain is charm to listen and learn
You look beautiful and very well spoken. I even spent time to repeat after you. I will be introducing this practice to my 8mo old baby as I am raising a baby genius. Thank you for the video.
My three year old could read just like a grade 1 pupil and my 5 year old reads like a grade two to 3 student after 4 months. The outcomes truly surpassed my anticipations. I taught my children to read with the aid of this amazing reading guide KidslearnReading4.blogspot.com It is so well-organized that any kid can learn to read with it.
WONDERFUL!!! This is the best video I've found to have my ESL adult students review the letter sound connections with such a lovely lady to watch.....priceless!! Thank you so very much.
I loved it. I used this video to teach my scholars who struggled with phonics. Job well done!
Great video! I recently started vounteer-teaching a refugee student from Rwanda and felt the need to help him with his phonemes; this video is just perfect . Thank you so much!
This is an excellently done phonemes pronunciation video. Yvette, thanks for saying each phoneme's unique isolated sound so clearly. I recommend this video to the young and old of those who need to isolate letter sounds more correctly. Well done.
A nice, clear, clean presentation of the sounds of the English alphabet.
1. Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the phonemic symbol 1:30 of the letter "j" in "jelly" is /dʒ/ instead of /j/ as in "yell" /jel/?
2. 1:49 The phonemic symbol is /ŋ/ as in "sing"/sɪŋ/.
3. 2:03 The phonemic symbol is /ʒ/ as in "treasure" /ˈtreʒə(r)/.
4. 2:17 The phonemic symbol is /j/ as in "yo-yo"/ˈjəʊjəʊ/.
5. 2:42 The phonemic symbol is /tʃ/ as in "child" /tʃaɪld/.
6. 2:45 The phonemic symbol is /ʃ/ as in "shoes" /ʃuːz/.
7. 2:49 The phonemic symbol is /ð/ as in "mother" /ˈmʌðə(r/.
8. 2:54 The phonemic symbol is /θ/ as in "third" /θɜːd/.
Yvette Manns is precise and clear with her pronunciation as well.
The video is great, one of the best I've ever found on this topic. Still, I don't understand why if there's an International Phonetic Alphabet it's simply not used properly; since it's supposed to be a global standard. The confusion between phonics and phonetics, phonemes, the lip alphabet (the set of visemes), and the phonetic symbols, is very evident. Every English and bilingual dictionary has its own list of symbols!
I agree. This video is great however English alphabeth letters are not the same symbols used in the international phonetic alphabet and some phonemes in this video have been listed with wrong symbols in here.
@@ilaydakncal1387 Well, yeah. Our problem is that EVERYBODY (no exageration), every publisher of every English dictionary has invented its own phonetic alphabet for years and years! It's really crazy! They don't follow the standard one!
Excellent video. Clear, concise, and easy to understand. Thank you.
The human body is so complex, so many muscles move to make all these sounds! Isn't that awesome?
Oi professora .
Meu nome é Alexandre.
Eu sou brasileiro.
Quero parabenizar você por esse vídeo tão legal ,eu estou aprendendo inglês eu ainda estou no nível básico , mais adorei esse vídeo teu , pois a sua pronuncia e muito legal, mais uma vez parabéns pelo teu trabalho .
É também quero te dizer uma coisa você é uma mulher muito bonita.
So helpful. Is it possible to remove the music? It makes it harder to hear!
I like the video, though 'r' seemed a bit strange to me. Is that a regional dialect difference? My mouth doesn't do that when I say 'r'.
Having a zoom on the mouth helps the mimicry. Great video!
Can you make indivdual clips of each phoneme. Teaching reading online during COVID. Students are having difficulty hearing me and would love to have a visual and audio to assist their learning. Thanks!
This is great! Would you be able to produce a slower video that repeat each phonemes a few times for students. It would be really helpful to them.
You can slow down the speed in settings.
Great teacher! I love her!❤️🥰
Everything about you is so beautiful, voice,sound,personality,skin and the pronunciation of the letters
She is amazingly beautiful and so clear to explain and speak. Loved it!
her skin though.. so beautiful
OMG, seriously though, like I've never seen such perfect skin
Fr idk how someone can have such nice skin, underneath makeup, a ring light AND a closeup🤭
And beautiful teeth too 🦷
Just a reminder, you are here to learn English .
1000%
Excellent resource for educators!
Thank you so much for this video. It has been so frustrating to have to reteach 2nd graders how to say these sounds correctly. As a former Kdg and 1st grade Teacher I know that others are trying to say the sounds in a way that the kids can hear them. But yes, having to undo that /uh/ sound at the end of so many phonemes takes up too much time. Please teachers watch this video.
Very important to learn how or know who to communicate with infants and toddlers. We must have a positive responsive interaction.
She’s cute and elegant. Thanks a lot for this lesson.
Nice class very interesting
Thank you so much! I wish I had seen this video when I was taking Phonetics in 2016! I will definitely use this video in the future! By the way, the close up of your mouth saying the sounds really helped alot. Thank you again!!!
I find this video clearer than the one with over 2 million views.
Phonemes should have resolved the ambiguity that is inherent in English character set. Instead the lack of implicit 'a' (as in arc) at the end of each phoneme appears to have created scope for ambiguity. English really needs its own two dimensional phoneme table like the one designed by Pānini and a new script all together.
Such a stunnig & well spoken lady😘
Technically Q just says /k/, and the U following serves as a consonant saying /w/.
Do u rlly xpect stupid ppl to think about that...
yes it sound easy but all of this I am introducing to my infants children average age 6 weeks to 18 months old. thank you for this modeling words.
Thank you so much 😊 What a great IPA video
It wasn't until I started learning Spanish and teaching English to my spanish friends that I stopped to consider the phonemes of English and how we often don't pronounce words as they are written. My spanish friend said that I don't say 'pretty' I say 'prid-dee'. I then started to notice how T is now a D sound, or the T is just forgotten all together. Like the word internet, many say it as 'in-na-net' and the T at the end doesn't complete. And Water, it's either 'wor-er' or 'wor-dah'. So we end up teaching foreigners a version of English we ourselves don't speak. But then strangely, if they start to pronounce words as the locals do, it actually sounds out of place. I heard a French girl speaking with Australian pronunciation, even the accent and I had to say 'please, keep your french accent!' I think foreigners learning English should always try to speak a 'neutral' version and not try to mimic how someone of a certain country speaks.
YES, the two points that you are referring to are called the T--> D transition (water--> wader) and the "Glottal Stop" (painting--> pain'ing). Check it out on UA-cam. =D
@@Ms.Americana Thanks. I didn't know the name of skipping the T. It's common around the English Speaking world but in Australia, a professional voice over artist or journalist will pronounce their Ts, but I notice many American journalists or voice over artists don't. Like the brand 'Toyota', I didn't understand at first why it sounded different from Americans until I realised they don't pronounce the T at all. Whereas in Australia, it's Toyoda or Toyota'. Even in American Toyota ads, they say 'Toy-oh-a'.
The 'glottal stop' is a little less common here.
@@Inaworldoflove Oh cool! Are you Aussie? Yes, the wonderful differences between the different forms of English are quite fascinating. I'm an American English teacher and run my own "talk therapy" service which teaches Spanish speakers, specifically, how to correctly pronounce in American English. It is a lot of work due to the INSANE spoken phoneme nuances in the American English language. =D Haha! ..because of this, voice-over work would be a handful, for sure.
@@Ms.Americana I'm Irish Australian, so my accent confuses people. It's mostly Australian, been here since I was 2, but I say some words more like an American, due to the Irish influence. Like I say "can't" and Australians say "carn't", as though the word "aren't" made its mark on that contraction. Some Australians think it's weird that not all my words are pronounced as they do. Regarding Latinos, they're going from a 25 phoneme language to a 44 so they have their work cut out for them.
@@Inaworldoflove Wow, Irish Aussie, huh! Yes, Not only does English have more phonemes than Spanish does, but English ALSO has 3x word vocab in use; hence, more words to know, more words to figure out how to pronounce ESPECIALLY with American English as a NON-Phonetic language. WHEW! English also always breaks the pronunciation rules, such as with the words "chaos" vs "chair" where the "Ch" phoneme changes entirely. I'm in the process of preparing to sell my teaching curriculum in the form of a "Busy Being Bilingual" Course Collection on my Esty store so that I can publish a very thorough visual guide on the "talking" nuances of the American English language compared to the Spanish language. I love it when I can find someone to talk languages with. I find it so fascinating! ...and it seems like so do you! =D Cool!
The /r/was a little off. I don’t think elephant was a good keyword for E. The /e/ glides in to the /l/.
I agree - the "r" sound, if you look at her lips, her teeth were on her lower lip for the "v" sound
@@glendamiller7282 I agree to
@@glendamiller7282 I think thats very smart she did that. I believe its for learners to avoid adding an extra ''uh'' sound before! Ive never seen a teacher do that before and when you imitate with other words starting with R, it actually works! GENIUS !!! in 9 years i haven been able to do this sound before..
The oo in book and mood has different sounds ?omg
Cheers for the video content! Sorry for chiming in, I would appreciate your thoughts. Have you researched - Millawdon Future Ticket Trick (probably on Google)? It is a great one of a kind guide for teaching children to read without the headache. Ive heard some awesome things about it and my work buddy got great success with it.
4:12 /oo/ as in mood,, 4:17 /oo/ as in the middle sound in book. are these the same with different pronunciations?
Also, example "/th/" which has different sounds in "mother" and "third". I think they need more dîäčrìtîçåł marks....
@@arondaniel just use IPA = more better explanation & differentiation.
Good. I like this class. Thank you.
I'm sorry but I literally forgot that I'm learning phonemes here.... She looks so charming.😊
The schwa and /u/ in cup always sounded the same to me. Can someone explain the difference? Also, when she pronounced it alone, it sounded the same as the /u/. But in "again", in sounded more like the /e/ in bet.
Thank u 💗💖 this video is very helpful specially for me as a learner
Very good video , and congratulations for the teacher's sympathy .
OMG! Thank you! I so tired of hearing teachers mispronounce sounds.
I agree with most of this video, except for the R phoneme. Thank you!
Very helpful. Thanks! But I find the background music very distracting. Makes the phonemes harder to hear.
Very helpful. Thank you for sharing.
Thank you.
🙌🙋👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Did not see the use of ch that makes the k sound as in chiropractor.
the < ch > in represents /k/. Good noticing!
I like this video ~Thank you!!♥
thank for your phonemes~
Thank you so much the video is very clear
Excellent video I am using this!!
Beautiful and helpful Thank you
the best video ever! thanks!
2:32 X can make the 'gz' sound as well, like in 'exotic'.
Thanks! You are the best.
Thanks. God bless you. Wow very good share.
Thank you so much..
Really perfect video...
Your video is very helpful for me
Awesome as soon as I watched the video I subscribed
Good, from Brazil
Awesome video, thank you for doing this.
Terrific video! Very well done
Que buen video justo lo que buscaba ❤
Great video....thanks so much.
Very good channel
Great video
It was very helpful for me in grade 6 I am in Nigeria 😍
Very nicely done.
very nice ❤👏🌷
Hey your voice is awesome😍😘
Your english is so beautiful!
Perfect teacher
She is intelligent and beautiful
Great,but very fast .l did enjoying it.
How is ue (uniform) different from oo (ooze)? It's just the oo with a Y in front. Also, wouldn't again be /Ugen/ with the short U sound?
Transcription is different from the actual spelt words.when transcribing words,you use those sounds. Its just one of those crazy standards and if English is your second language....😂😂😂 there are some words one would rarely pronounce correctly.
ue in uniform and oo make two different sounds. 'ue' in uniform gives the long u sound. However, the 'ue' in blue and glue gives the /oo/ sound that you hear in ooze.
The word "again", properly, is pronounced "â-gain." = "â-gane" = "â-gayne" = "â-gay-ne". The sound of "âh" before the "g", then the sound of "eigh" + "ne" after the "g." Some people say "ih" or "ee", or even variations of "â" instead of the proper "ay". The word "due" and the word "dew", both, are pronounced like the word "do", or as "dee-you" (your choice). If you want to be "formal" or "technical" say "dee-you" instead of "do." As you go among English-speaking people, you may notice that each sound has an acceptable wide range of deviation from perfect. The student should, of course, try to pronounce words perfectly (an almost impossible task that only Her Majesty is known to have accomplished). You might enjoy listening to her yearly Christmas addresses, on videos, then her addressing, yearly, the people who govern her. The English people, notoriously and specifically, have neglected teaching their children to speak English properly, so do not be surprised if you cannot understand them at first, or at all. ua-cam.com/video/ZBIKwvyeTHM/v-deo.html
Thanks so much for this video 🤗
Awesome video tutorial!!😁
Great video😎
Very nice video,I like it👍
I enjoyed your video and thank her for letting me I have my sister do not know how to learn and now she’s learning her stuff and yeah and her vows yeah it’s all like teaching my sister so smart and yeah and I like in teaching me my picture also tells me to watch him because he wants me to be super Duper smart so yeah and that’s why yeah
This was awesome, thank you for sharing!
What is the phonemes for the word ¨brother¨. has the Br conbination a phonemes?
ˈbrʌðə
@@progect3548 LOL!
Thanks, we need more videos.
Exactly
Why did you bite your lower lip in R?
how about the sound of /ea/
thanks a lot
các bạn muốn phát âm tốt hơn có thể tìm mua
cuốn phát âm hoàn hảo nhé! trước mình học theo cuốn đó phát âm nói đã chuẩn hơn
rất nhiều. chúc các ban thành công
Có ai việt nam không? like cái nào.
How many unique phonemes are there in all human languages?
This is a great video!!!
I started out training my son to read at Fourteen months. Though I`m hesitant about training him how to read at a very young age, I made a decision to acheive it and used this reading guide ChildrenLearningReading5.blogspot.com He can now read a whole book without my help at 2 yrs and four months.?
Good initiative .........keep on.......
Wouu beautiful pronunciation
how do we pronounce these words- c, cd, cr, io
Awesome content.
Very well said!