Understanding and Teaching the Pronunciation of English.pdf

(Greg DeLong) #1

Vowel + vowel: When two vowel sounds come together,
a /y/ or /w/ glide can sometimes be heard:


theater pronunciation create


ruin throughout going


Consonant + consonant: Sequences of two identical
consonants, or of a stop plus a stop or a"ricate, are often
found in compound words. Then the two sounds blend
together and become longer.


Same consonant: bookcase roommate house-sitter


Stop + stop or a"ricate: hotdog background


seatbelt eggplant shopkeeper


cute child good judge keep checking


Assimilation (sounds become similar)


We talked earlier about speakers’ natural tendency to !nd
easier ways to pronounce words—to say sounds using smaller
and more e#cient movements of the articulators. Because of
this tendency, a sound sometimes becomes more similar to a
sound that comes before or after it. This process is called
assimilation. (It comes from the same root as the word
similar.) Assimilation makes words easier to pronounce by


bringing about easier movements of the tongue, lips, and
other articulators from one sound to the next. Every language
has some kind of assimilation, although not all languages use
assimilation in exactly the same way.

Assimilation often changes the place of articulation of a
sound to match a sound next to it. The phoneme /n/ often
assimilates to a sound after it. For example, in the following
phrases, we can hear di"erences in the last sound in the
preposition in:
We’re in America. /ɪnəˈmɛrɪkə/
We’re in Nevada. /ɪnnəˈvædə/
We’re in Mexico. /ɪmˈmɛksɪkow/
We’re in Canada. /ɪŋˈkænədə/

We expect in to sound like /ɪn/—that’s its citation form—but
this is not always the case. When in comes before a bilabial
sound, it can also become the bilabial sound /m/. Before a
velar sound, it can become the velar sound /ŋ/. (Note: This
type of assimilation happens with /n/, but not with /m/. For
example, something is never pronounced /sʌnθɪŋ/.)

In the previous example, when two sounds came together,
the second sound caused the !rst sound to change. This is the
most common situation in assimilation. However, in a

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/y/

/w/

/y/ /y/

/w/ /w/
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