PSEP 4050: The Words Plæ Tu/ and /su/ Plæ T Ɑk T BƏR/, / V (Ə) L/ MƏN/ Ɑk Toʊbər/, / Oʊv (Ə) L/ Oʊmən
PSEP 4050: The Words Plæ Tu/ and /su/ Plæ T Ɑk T BƏR/, / V (Ə) L/ MƏN/ Ɑk Toʊbər/, / Oʊv (Ə) L/ Oʊmən
PSEP 4050: The Words Plæ Tu/ and /su/ Plæ T Ɑk T BƏR/, / V (Ə) L/ MƏN/ Ɑk Toʊbər/, / Oʊv (Ə) L/ Oʊmən
Lesson 3. The sounds of /u/ as in fool and /ʊ/ as in full, /˄/ as in dull and /ɒ/ as in doll, /ɔ/
as in fall and /oʊ/ as in foal
The phoneme /u/ is a high back rounded vowel. The lower jaw is as close to the roof of
the mouth as possible. Compared to any other American English speech sound, the lips are more
rounded and protruded. The back of the tongue is raised high toward the soft palate. The muscles
of both the tongue and jaw tense and the sound is long. The sound is also spelled in various
ways:
eu u/ue oo oe o ew ui ou
maneuver prune pool shoe lose news fruit ghoul
euphemism pursue loose cooed tomb stew suit group
Europe rude goose booed womb flew bruise souvenir
pneumonia plume soothe shrew
/ʊ/ as in full is also a high back rounded vowel. However, the jaw is slightly lower than
for /u/. The lips are also slightly rounded and protruding. The tongue is relaxed with the back just
a little lower than for [u]. Lastly, the sound is short. The sound is commonly spelled with letter u
like in pull and full but it is also spelled as oo like in wood and food, o like in woman and wolf
and ou like in should and would.
Note that u, o, ou and oo in many words are also articulated as /˄/ which has the sound of
“ugh”. Some examples are:
u o ou oo
duck, cup, jump, run, love, dove, come, touch, double, cousin, blood, flood
ugly, us other, onion, enough, rough
Moreover, o is also articulated as /ɒ/which is a low back lax vowel. To produce this
vowel, keep the back of the tongue lax and low. Protrude the lips slightly and make a short
sound. The lips are not as rounded as for /ɔ/ in ball. Adrian Underhill (2016) describes it as like
having a whole orange in your mouth which pushes the tongue and jaw back and down. You try
to close your lips on the orange creating a space in your mouth and before the tongue. The jaw is
low and the lips are protruded, slightly rounded and not open wide. This sound is spelled in most
words as o like in stop, hot, knowledge, cost, boss, office and drop.
The phoneme /oʊ/ as in foal, go, tone and vote is not a critical sound for most Filipino
speakers of English but some articulate it as /u/ like in pronouncing the words plateau and sew as
/plæˈtu/ and /su/ instead of /plæˈtoʊ/ and /soʊ/ or /ɔ/ like in pronouncing the words October, oval
and omen as /ɑkˈtɔbər/, /ɔv(ə)l/ and /ɔmən/ instead of /ɑkˈtoʊbər/, / oʊv(ə)l/ and /oʊmən/. It is
spelled in various ways, like:
PSEP 4050
o eau oa ou oe ow ew
bonus chateau oath though woe blow sew
ocean beau boat dough foe bowl
overt bureau roam furlough toe meadow
won’t trousseau coach thorough hoe mow
cobra tableau broach although doe sow
Lastly, /ɔ/ as in ball, fall and awe is a low back tense rounded vowel. The jaw drops to a
low position, the lips are protruded and rounded and the back of the tongue rises slightly toward
the soft palate. The muscles of the tongue and jaw are slightly tense and the sound is long. Many
Filipinos replace this sound with /oʊ/ like in pronouncing the words caught, taught and law as
/koʊt/, /toʊt/ and /loʊ/ instead of /kɔt/, /tɔt/ and /lɔ/. Note that a single difference in sound can
cause a difference in meaning so that when you say /koʊt/, /toʊt/ and /loʊ/ instead of /kɔt/, /tɔt/
and /lɔ/, you are producing the words coat or cote, tote and low instead of caught, taught and
law.
This sound is spelled in various ways as shown in:
a aw au/augh oa ou/ough o
call awe laud broad ought horse
tall law naught board sought lord
For more illustration on how to articulate the critical sounds /ʊ/, /ɔ/, /ɒ/ and /˄/, try to
watch the youtube videos below:
/ʊ/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moLTR-
dLQQY&list=PLYJV5Moz9cfyRIyd3HKzwRGnDM_BSbEuI&index=10
/ɔ/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pr_KAu-_Hmo
/ɒ/https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=R5CY1UniS68&list=PLYJV5Moz9cfyRIyd3HKzwRGnDM_BSbEuI&index=8
/˄/https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=X1utTZqC3AI&list=PLYJV5Moz9cfyRIyd3HKzwRGnDM_BSbEuI&index=7
______________________________________________________________________________
Contrasting Drills
Read the words in the list carefully enunciating the focus sounds to contrast them.
Read the phrases and sentences containing the sounds /u/ and /ʊ/.
Read the words in the list carefully enunciating the focus sounds /˄/ as in dull and /ɒ/ as in
doll to contrast them with /æ as in stand and /a/ as in star.
Read the following phrases and sentences articulating and contrasting the focus sounds
distinctly.
PSEP 4050
1. large almond
2. blood and thunder
3. hunt for money
4. a whole ton of tan cloth
5. toss the dollar
6. The lost dog was found covered with moss
7. The art department helped Sergeant Clark to search deep into the heart of the matter.
8. As the thunder roared and lightning tore the heavens asunder, the hungry bum trudged his
way along the rough road.
9. His tough love for money angers his rough brother.
10. The other arc on the façade of the hearth was a breakthrough in architecture.
11. Sam, I was really wrong to lend my some of my clocks to Pam.
12. All I want is a proper cup of coffee made in a proper copper coffee pot.
13. One hot summer day, a fox was strolling through an orchard till he came to a bunch of
grapes just ripening on a vine above his head.
14. Mr. Hunt left his hat in his hut and it was so hot!
15. The cat which was on the cot cut its paws while climbing the iron gate.
The words in the list contrast the sounds /oʊ/ and /ɔ/. Read them.
1. aural-oral approach
2. saw a sower
3. bought a boat
4. called for cold water
5. fall of the foal in the hole
6. I was awed a when I learned how much he owed the bank.
7. He bought a boat after getting a loan from the bank.
8. He pronounced the words sawed, sewed, soared and sword correctly.
9. Note the naughty glint in Nat’s eyes.
10. Paul got very low grades in his law class that he decided to try pole dancing.
PSEP 4050
Here is a fun poem that contains the sounds we learned.