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Tim's pronounciation workshop, 26- Tim's final words of wisdom

26- Tim's final words of wisdom

Hi. I'm Tim and this is my Pronunciation workshop. Here I'm going to show you how English is

really spoken. Come on, let's go inside.

Well, here we are in the pronunciation workshop

for the final time. Today, let's look back on what we've covered during this series and I'll

offer some final tips and words of advice. When we write English, each word is separate;

there are spaces between the words. But, that's not how we speak English. If. We. Did. It.

Might. Be. Easier. To. Understand. But. We. Would. Sound. Like. Robots. No. When we speak

English, although there are some pauses, we mostly bump the words together. And when these

words bump into each other certain things can happen that affect the sounds. We've learned

how /t/ and /d/ sounds disappear between consonants:

'Mashed potato' becomes /mæʃpəˈteɪtəʊ/.

Consonant sounds can link with vowel sounds:

'An egg' becomes 'anegg'.

Certain vowel sounds can link with certain other vowel sounds by adding sounds:

'The shoe is…' becomes 'the shoe /w/ is…'

Two consonant sounds can join together, or twin.

'It takes two' becomes /ɪt:eɪks tuː/.

Some sounds can change completely:

'Green Park' /griːn pɑːk/ becomes /griːmpɑːk/.

Unstressed grammar words are often weak:

'I'd have been late' becomes /aɪdəv bɪn leɪt/

And we've also seen how a little sound, schwa, is important to the rhythm of natural spoken

English.

'A piece of cake' /ə piːsə keɪk/

These are all features of what we call connected speech. Natural speech is full of these features.

And for native speakers, these changes happen automatically. The more you can get used to

listening to and speaking English, the more naturally they'll come to you too. But my

advice is that the most important thing to pay attention to is schwa. Getting schwa in

the right place is the first step to getting English pronunciation right. And that, for

the last time, is about it from the pronunciation workshop. And always remember that if you

want to learn more about pronunciation or other aspects of English, then please visit

our website, bbclearningenglish.com. Thank you so much for watching this series and I'll

see you soon. Bye bye!

Erm, hello? Hello? Erm. I can't get out. What do I do? Help!

Help! Oh. Somebody?

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26- Tim's final words of wisdom 26- Tims letzte Worte der Weisheit 26- Tim's final words of wisdom 26- Las últimas palabras de sabiduría de Tim 26- Les derniers mots de sagesse de Tim 26- Le ultime parole di saggezza di Tim 26- ティムが最後に残した名言 26- 팀의 마지막 지혜의 말씀 26- Ostatnie słowa mądrości Tima 26- As últimas palavras de sabedoria de Tim 26- Последние мудрые слова Тима 26- Tim'in son bilgelik sözleri 26- 蒂姆最后的箴言

Hi. I'm Tim and this is my Pronunciation workshop. Here I'm going to show you how English is

really spoken. Come on, let's go inside.

Well, here we are in the pronunciation workshop

for the final time. Today, let's look back on what we've covered during this series and I'll

offer some final tips and words of advice. When we write English, each word is separate; dar algumas dicas e conselhos finais. Quando escrevemos em inglês, cada palavra é separada;

there are spaces between the words. But, that's not how we speak English. If. We. Did. It.

Might. Be. Easier. To. Understand. But. We. Would. Sound. Like. Robots. No. When we speak

English, although there are some pauses, we mostly bump the words together. And when these ||||||||bunch|||||| اللغة الإنجليزية، على الرغم من وجود بعض التوقفات، إلا أننا في الغالب نجمع الكلمات معًا. وعندما هؤلاء

words bump into each other certain things can happen that affect the sounds. We've learned

how /t/ and /d/ sounds disappear between consonants:

'Mashed potato' becomes /mæʃpəˈteɪtəʊ/.

Consonant sounds can link with vowel sounds:

'An egg' becomes 'anegg'.

Certain vowel sounds can link with certain other vowel sounds by adding sounds:

'The shoe is…' becomes 'the shoe /w/ is…'

Two consonant sounds can join together, or twin.

'It takes two' becomes /ɪt:eɪks tuː/.

Some sounds can change completely:

'Green Park' /griːn pɑːk/ becomes /griːmpɑːk/.

Unstressed grammar words are often weak:

'I'd have been late' becomes /aɪdəv bɪn leɪt/

And we've also seen how a little sound, schwa, is important to the rhythm of natural spoken |||||||||||||rhythm||| |hemos|||||||||||||||

English.

'A piece of cake' /ə piːsə keɪk/

These are all features of what we call connected speech. Natural speech is full of these features.

And for native speakers, these changes happen automatically. The more you can get used to

listening to and speaking English, the more naturally they'll come to you too. But my ascoltando e parlando inglese, più naturalmente verranno anche da te. Ma il mio

advice is that the most important thing to pay attention to is schwa. Getting schwa in

the right place is the first step to getting English pronunciation right. And that, for

the last time, is about it from the pronunciation workshop. And always remember that if you

want to learn more about pronunciation or other aspects of English, then please visit ||||||||aspectos de inglés|||||

our website, bbclearningenglish.com. Thank you so much for watching this series and I'll

see you soon. Bye bye!

Erm, hello? Hello? Erm. I can't get out. What do I do? Help!

Help! Oh. Somebody?