Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (17)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Hi Jennifer ,thanks a lot for these videos but i wanted to know that the pronounication you are teaching is 'neutral accent' or US accent ,as i wanted to learn neutral accent but it is not mentioned in your videos ,kindly reply .

  • hi,jennifer ,i have confused about the /ɚ/ and r when you use it as vowel sound.

  • Amazing

  • this is great stuff, but maybe you should specify US/ American English

  • @plan8

    I note this in the introduction of the series. I think you'll like the ending I have planned. In my final video, you'll be able to compare my accent to others'. Before that, though, I need to address diphthongs.

  • I practiced with your pronunciation videos by reviewing thousands of times. In sequence of this series, I would appreciate if you might be able to consider preparing a video, which shows to make the sounds of [j], as in year. Some people said [i] and [j] sounds are different sounds, tough I still don't get such differences. Furthermore, despite many books mentioning those sounds as a minimal pair contrast, such as ear and year, I can't find a good resource enunciating how different they are.

  • Hi Jennifer! :)

    I really enjoy your videos. Keep it up!

    Kostas.

  • This lessons are so great.

    Thank you for giving us happay sutdies!!

  • here is once again Jennifer answering to all my questions about phonetic, I love your channel

  • Great.

  • Thanks a lot!

  • thanks ^^

    I was waiting this part

  • I noticed that I've tended to skip the gliding part. (ex.) HEAR : /hi/ + /er/ ---(2 beats)

    but I should pronounce (cf.) /hi/ + /e/ + /r/ ---(3beats) Is that correct?

  • @MasamuneJJ

    If you skip the first sound /i/ or don't articulate well, "hear" can sound like "her". Also, if you don't raise your tongue into a high position as for /i/ or /ɪ/, "hear" could sound like "hair". But don't see "hear" as three beats. Picture a child going down a slide - the movement is a quick glide. Start with /h/ and let the rest blend together. H + EAR. It's definitely one syllable that joins a consonant and a vowel combination /iɚ/.

  • @JenniferESL Oh...mine was that a child called "/hi/" at the top and its mother answered "/ɚ/" at the bottom. So it was very difficult for me to pronounce "there" either. Now i understand how to pronounce them into one syllable picturing your "a child going down a slide" technique. It will take a certain amount of time for me to make it a quick glide though, because in Japanese it can be copied in two morae (or two syllables) like this "there"=ゼア /ze. a/. I will practice them. Thank you so much!

  • @MasamuneJJ

    I like the imagery! How about if you picture the child /h/ at the top of the slide and the mother as /ɚ/ at the bottom? The /i/ brings them together in a quick, smooth motion. /i/ is handing the child down to its mother. :)

  • @JenniferESL Oh my! It's easy now^^ It definetly works for me, because I can articulate both /h/ and /i/ and make them not only strong enogh but also flexible enogh. Hmm Thank you again so much. You are wonderful, Jennifer-sensei :p

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more