Added: 2 years ago
From: EnglishLessons4U
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  • I love these lessons!!!=D

    ..and I'm italian=)))

  • can you make a videos about the word "you" when it comes to pronunciation because i hear a lot of people saying "you" like "chu" ei. i don't know about "chu" but i like her.. but also "you" is pronounce like the vowel "U"... and the same thing about "i dont know", some people say "i ron know" ......

  • i really love this teaching ability,,,,i know that being a poor people that doesnt have a capability to enroll for college as to elaborate my english lesson,,,but sad that i cant pursue those dreams,, but because of this channel,, it helps me a lot thanks GOD that your there to support us

  • thank you thailand yeh yeh

  • thanks for u explanation and although i know these words but i liked to say after u like i feel you are teaching me now thanks

  • very very

    

  • Rani you are reali  great I learned to much to improve my accent which I could not yet living US more than 3 years. I appreciate you

  • THANKS!

  • hey its ..greeeeeaat  ..

  • Thumbs up for English !! ♥

  • i really like u r classes

  • thank you

  • its helpful and everything good but please smile a little bit because u have a pretty face :)

  • rani.. u tech really well..

    i m a big fan of urs..

  • thanks for this lesson,it gave me a lot of help.I'll keep learning English

    and hope Engvid.com can make more and more great and useful English lessons to help everyone who's learning English~

  • You look great on this red hoodie.

  • it's very helpfull for me!

    thanks

  • Hello Ronnie. I am Spaniard and I would love a video about "a" and "u" I have difficulties in some words like pat/put, run/ran, drugs/ drags,club, pub... This is very difficult for us because we do not make differences between those sounds. Thanks a lot

  • Thanks Ronnie you're awesome..!!!

  • thank you

    you are a very good teacher

    please go on :)

  • from algeria, I'm very great to follow your best method of teaching, so thank you so so much good luck from algeria

  • it is really inspiring me a lot and even I am doing the same style to provide pedagage and adagaguge.

    Raghuram.

  • such a great lesson, I watch a lot of your video in one night, thank you so much

  • Thank you for the lesson, im Spaniard and it is quite difficult for me to see the slight difference between this 2 sounds. i am gonna subscribe and if you dont mind,it would be perfect if i could practice with you a little bit,maybe i can post a response or something, just an idea. thank you!!

  • Comment removed

  • Mixing pronunciation and writting in English is an awful idea because English spelling is a bunch of inconsistent and contradictory rules.

    Knowing that the name of "e" is "eee" and the one of "i" is "eye" doesn't help at all to know all the different sounds you can represent with those written vowels, that have nothing to do with the spoke vowels.

  • Is that right?

    (see below)

    Thanks for subscribing to my awful teaching methods channel!

    I also offer private lessons to help you with your grammar and spelling!

  • Thank you, but prefer to keep everything public, no grammar improvement needed, all ok here great totem help me every morning :-)

  • The misspelling in your 'writing' suggests you should spend some more time learning those rules. The fact is, that while they are complicated, phonetic rules will give you the correct pronunciation 70-80% of the time. While there are many divergences, they are usually slight, and fall neatly into subcategories. I assue you there are consistent rules for when not to say eee. And although EA can sound more than one way depending on the consonants, it can never sound like I.

  • Pea?

  • Will never sound like pi. If ea concludes the word, then it will sound like the letter E.

  • Do you mean like 'E' in 'teen' or like 'E' in 'bed'? Do you mean like 'I' in 'I' or like 'I' in 'insect'? Or may be it's like 'O' in 'women'?

  • Yes, the letters have more than one sound, but English is syllable based, rather than individual letter based. Teen, bed, I, and insect are all 100% phonetic words. Many words are not 100%phonetically predictable, but the majority are. Some are just strange, like women. Most words are not as strange as that.

  • Therefore it is true to say that there is ALWAYS a distinction between I and E, so it is indeed useful information.

  • Great lesson! ) Good technic for "i", I'm gonna use it for sure!

  • THANX RONNIE

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