BRITISH VS AMERICAN ACCENT EXPLAINED
What people commonly describe as a âBritish accentâ is actually called âreceived pronunciationâ. Regardless of the way people call it, you can definitely mas...
About this video
What people commonly describe as a âBritish accentâ is actually called âreceived pronunciationâ. Regardless of the way people call it, you can definitely master this accent in less than 10 minutes.
Download my English workbook: https://marinamogilko.co/workbook
(1) Donât pronounce every written R
This is a MUST! Some languages and accents do pronounce every written "r", but not standard British English. If a written "r" is followed by a spoken vowel sound, say the R, and if it doesnât, then DONâT say it.
(2) Touch the teeTH.
There are two fricative TH sounds in English: voiceless /θ/ and voiced /ð/. In GB English they are both made with the tongue touching behind the teeth, but in some accents theyâre replaced with /f/ and /v/.
(3) Pronounce U in with the âewâ or âyouâ sound
In a British accent, a liquid âuâ sound, as said in the word you, is used in places where an American accent would pronounce âoo.â
(4) Always stress the vowels
It should always be the vowel sounds that are stressed in British pronunciation. Putting stress on the vowel sounds essentially means emphasising it, and most speakers do that with a change of pitch or tone.
(5) Observe that "h" is not always pronounced
The "h" is pronounced in the word "herb," in contrast erb. However, in many British accents, the "h" at the beginning of a word is often omitted, such as in many Northern accents and the Cockney accent.
(6) Practice those vowels
The hardest vowel sounds for Americans to nail are the short âoâ as in ânotâ and the long âawâ as in ânaughtyâ. For ânotâ, âshotâ, etc. practice them as ânutâ and âshutâ then round the lips over that short vowel.
(7) Use British slang
British slang and American slang are very different. Be careful as some terms can have drastically different meanings depending on which side of the pond you are!
Time codes:
0:00 My experience using both American and British accents
1:40 When you should not pronounce "r"
2:47 Tricky "th" sound
3:50 "Ew" instead of "u" and "you"
5:19 Always emphasize vowels
6:34 Some words are pronounced differently
6:56 Practice this in order to sound more British
7:27 Use British slang
8:48 About my English workbook
â INSTAGRAM - linguamarina
â LEARN LANGUAGES ABROAD - https://linguatrip.com
â ENROLL IN MY YOUTUBE COURSE - https://bit.ly/2D1Z6gf
â DOWNLOAD MY ENGLISH WORKBOOK - https://bit.ly/3tqj5A1
Get your English text corrected instantly - https://fluent.express/
FILMING EQUIPMENT
- Gear for making my 'talking head' videos - https://kit.co/linguamarina/gear-for-...
- Gear for vlogging - https://kit.co/linguamarina/current-v...
PROMOS
$20 TO SPEND ON UBER - http://ubr.to/2k1B89L
I use affiliate links whenever possible (if you purchase items listed above using my affiliate links, I will get a bonus)
#EnglishAccents #Brirtish #American
Download my English workbook: https://marinamogilko.co/workbook
(1) Donât pronounce every written R
This is a MUST! Some languages and accents do pronounce every written "r", but not standard British English. If a written "r" is followed by a spoken vowel sound, say the R, and if it doesnât, then DONâT say it.
(2) Touch the teeTH.
There are two fricative TH sounds in English: voiceless /θ/ and voiced /ð/. In GB English they are both made with the tongue touching behind the teeth, but in some accents theyâre replaced with /f/ and /v/.
(3) Pronounce U in with the âewâ or âyouâ sound
In a British accent, a liquid âuâ sound, as said in the word you, is used in places where an American accent would pronounce âoo.â
(4) Always stress the vowels
It should always be the vowel sounds that are stressed in British pronunciation. Putting stress on the vowel sounds essentially means emphasising it, and most speakers do that with a change of pitch or tone.
(5) Observe that "h" is not always pronounced
The "h" is pronounced in the word "herb," in contrast erb. However, in many British accents, the "h" at the beginning of a word is often omitted, such as in many Northern accents and the Cockney accent.
(6) Practice those vowels
The hardest vowel sounds for Americans to nail are the short âoâ as in ânotâ and the long âawâ as in ânaughtyâ. For ânotâ, âshotâ, etc. practice them as ânutâ and âshutâ then round the lips over that short vowel.
(7) Use British slang
British slang and American slang are very different. Be careful as some terms can have drastically different meanings depending on which side of the pond you are!
Time codes:
0:00 My experience using both American and British accents
1:40 When you should not pronounce "r"
2:47 Tricky "th" sound
3:50 "Ew" instead of "u" and "you"
5:19 Always emphasize vowels
6:34 Some words are pronounced differently
6:56 Practice this in order to sound more British
7:27 Use British slang
8:48 About my English workbook
â INSTAGRAM - linguamarina
â LEARN LANGUAGES ABROAD - https://linguatrip.com
â ENROLL IN MY YOUTUBE COURSE - https://bit.ly/2D1Z6gf
â DOWNLOAD MY ENGLISH WORKBOOK - https://bit.ly/3tqj5A1
Get your English text corrected instantly - https://fluent.express/
FILMING EQUIPMENT
- Gear for making my 'talking head' videos - https://kit.co/linguamarina/gear-for-...
- Gear for vlogging - https://kit.co/linguamarina/current-v...
PROMOS
$20 TO SPEND ON UBER - http://ubr.to/2k1B89L
I use affiliate links whenever possible (if you purchase items listed above using my affiliate links, I will get a bonus)
#EnglishAccents #Brirtish #American
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Duration
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Published
Aug 6, 2024
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