vowel sounds part1

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DESCRIPTION

This document shows English vowel sounds from the perspective of mouth opening. The first sounds describe the position of the mouth slightly open, then the rest of the sounds show the position of the mouth more widely open. Pronounce it Perfectly in English by Jean Yeats was used as the main reference to create this document.

TRANSCRIPT

English Vowel Sounds

Part I Juan Soto, M. A.

NOTICE

•  Spelling is not a full trust worthy source for the pronunciation of English words. Some vowels can be placed in the same order in a word, but that does not necessarily mean that they will be pronounced the same way. For instance: read vs. read (past tense); lead vs. lead (metal)

/əә/ schwa (1of 9)

•  Schwa is the most common sound in English. It appears in every vowel (a, e, i, o, u)

•  Open your mouth slightly and let some noise out to produce this sound. It’s a short sound

•  It appears in unstressed syllables •  Examples:

ago effect partial method upon

/ɪ/ (2 of 9)

•  Keep your lips relaxed and slightly open •  It is a short sound •  Examples:

gym sieve women If build busy pretty English

/u/ or /ʊ/ (3 of 9)

•  Push your lips forward to make an open circle •  The sound is short •  The jaw is slightly open •  Examples:

put look would wolf woman

/iy/ or /i/ (4 of 9) •  Spread your lips to form a ‘big smile’ •  The sound is long •  Examples:

be the honey eat people amoeba either niece mommy sweetie ski police suite chassis debris chamois NOTE: The last three words come from French so DO NOT pronounce the final ‘s’.

/uw/ or /u/ (5 of 9) •  Tense your lips as you push forward •  Make a small circle •  The sound is long •  Examples:

do lose loose two food flu rude due new canoe through juice lieu rheumatism NOTE: The word ‘lieu’ comes from French.

/iuw/ (6 of 9)

•  This sound combines /iy/ and /uw/ •  The sound is short •  Examples:

use music few view beauty you hue ewe

/ʌ/ (7 of 9)

•  Keep your mouth slightly open •  The sound is short •  Examples:

up cousin trouble rough flood goes was

/ɛ/ (8 of 9)

•  Spread your lips in a half-smile •  Lower your jaw slightly •  The sound is short •  Examples:

egg step any again said says head leopard friend guest bury

/ow/ or /o/ (9 of 9)

•  Lips move from a bigger to a smaller circle •  The sound is long •  Examples:

over go plateau owner slow oh depot though hoe groan sew soul bone brooch mauve faux NOTE: The last two words come from French.

CREDITS

•  Yates, J. (2005) Pronounce it Perfectly in English (2nd Edition). Barron’s Educational Services: China

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