Week 4 Pronunciation Class Level 1
Week 4 Pronunciation Class Level 1
Week 4 Pronunciation Class Level 1
Consonants:
G
Dictionary/phonetic Symbol Sound Organ placement
/g/ guh The back of the tongue touches the soft palate.
Sound is voiced.
Affricate Consonants:
A complete stoppage of air followed by a gradual release.
The centre of the tongue is hollowed ready for the R sound. The release is slow.
E.g. Tree, trick, trap, poetry, entrance, dream, drab, dreary, address.
Sentence to practice:
* Make up your own sentence with at least two words that have a TR or DR
sound.
CH /tʃ/
This consonant is formed by the tip blade and rims of the tongue stopping the
breath flow as they meet the teeth ridge and side teeth. At the same time the
tongue is raised towards the hard palate ready for the SH sound. It is released
slowly with a sound like air escaping.
- Chuh sound
E.g. Chair, choke, match, nature, question, mischief, chief, posture, lecture.
Sentence to practice:
1. Charles's children ate rich cheese cakes instead of cheap chips from choice.
2. The archeologist had an awful headache with all the chaos.
J /dʒ/
E.g. Gin, jest, suggest, adjacent, avenge, soldier, Belgian, ridge, gauge.
Sentence to practice:
George jerked every joint as he was jumping in the gymnasium.
The soldier joked about revenge.
Nasal Consonants
Are formed by the vocalised breath flowing out through the nose, by the lowering
of the soft palate, air is not allowed to pass through the mouth as an organ of
articulation is stopping it.
M - /m/
Two lips come together.
Sentence to practice:
1. Many meat mixers make much noise.
2. I have seen this in many many incidents.
Exceptions:
The M is silent in mnemonic.
N - /n/
The tongue touches the teeth ridge and the sides of the tongue touches the teeth
similar to t and d.
Often after plosive consonants the sound is held e.g. cotton, kitten, trodden,
ridden, often. The sound should come out through your nose.
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Sentence to practice:
1. Kittens should never wander alone at night.
NG - /ŋ/
The soft palate is lowered and the back of the tongue is raised in the same was as
K and G are pronounced.
In standard English, < ng > is pronounced without /g/ at the end of words, so
WRONG /rɒŋ/ HANG /hæŋ/ and FIGHTING /ˈfaɪtiŋ/ are pronounced with /ŋ/.
If < ng > appears in the middle of a word, we also pronounce the /g/, so ANGER
/ˈæŋgə/, HUNGRY /ˈhʌŋgri/ and ENGLAND /ˈɪŋglənd/ are all pronounced with
/ŋg/.
If < ng > is at the end of a root word that has an ending added, it will still be
pronounced /ŋ/ so WRONGLY /ˈrɒŋli/ and HANGER /ˈhæŋə/ don’t have /g/
because they come from the root words WRONG /rɒŋ/ and HANG /hæŋ/.
The exceptions to this rule are superlatives LONGEST /ˈlɒŋgɪst/ and STRONGEST
/ˈstrɒŋgɪst/, and the comparatives LONGER /ˈlɒŋgə/ and STRONGER /ˈstrɒŋgə/,
which all contain /ŋg/
Be careful not to make a K sound when you are doing the NG sound.
Sentence to practice
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1. The young uncle was singing the wrong song.
2. Make up your own sentence that has three NG words in it two not
pronounced and one pronounced
Flapped Consonants
These are spasmodic oral stoppage - R
Lateral Consonants
These are a partial oral stoppage.
Fricative Consonants
These are a narrowing of the oral cavity to cause friction - the air is squeezed out
through a small gap.
F - /f/
Non voiced
It is formed by the teeth touching the lower lip
When /f/ is the final consonant in a singular noun it frequently becomes /vz/ in
the plural form e.g. thief - thieves, leaf - leaves, shelf - shelves.
Sentence to practice
Frances fell forward fiercely against the fireplace.
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V - /v/
Same as f but is voiced.
Sentence to Practice
The valleys of Venezuela are very vast.
Th - Voiceless θ
Most common in words that start with th.
● think
● thin
● thing
● thanks
● thirty
● Thursday
● three
● thumb
● third
● thirteen
TH - Voiced ð
Most common in pronouns and demonstratives (This, That, These etc). Plurals
and verbs derived from the single vowel use the voiced TH form.
● this
● them
● the
● their
● there
● they're
● those
● they
● these
To form this you place your tongue up to the teeth ridge but do not touch it.
Together with Z this is known as a hissing sound or sibilant.
S frequently becomes /z/ after the final vowels and after voiced consonants e.g.
as, is, his, hers, theirs, yours, beads.
Sentence to practice
1) The seven sailors were sea sick.
2) Sally has seven sealions.
Z - /z/
Sentence to practice
1) That zookeeper is so zany.
2) The rose has a zillion thorns.
SH -/ ʃ /
Sentence to practice
1) The snake was behind the shovel in the shed.
2) I am polishing the table by the seashore to make it shine.
ZH - /ʒ/
Examples
1) The conclusion was that the explosion was a diversion.
2) The measuring tape was used to measure the treasure.
Sentence to practice
To gain pleasure, measure your leisure time carefully.
C
The soft C. When C is followed by the vowels e, i or y. It is a soft c and
pronounced as an S sound e.g. Cell. Circle
H -/h/
This is a non voiced sound. Your tongue should be low in your mouth and your
lips open.
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E.g. Heat, hand, home, how, ahead, behave, perhaps, behind, anyhow.
Exceptions. The h is not heard in heir, heiress, honest, honour, hour, vehicle,
shepherd.
Sentence to practice
1) The hard hat was too heavy for his head.
2) The beehive was handy to have.
Now practice the sounds we have done in class in the tongue twisters below.
They are a great way of perfecting the sounds that you have learnt.
Truly Rural
Pegggy Babcock
Mixed biscuits
Abominable Abdominal
She sat upon a balcony inexplicably mimicking him hiccuping and amicably
welcoming him in.
Theophilus Thistle, the successful thistle sifter, in sifting a sieve full of unsifted
thistles, thrust three thousand thistles through the thick of his thumb