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Pronunciation

English pronunciation is notoriously irregular — the same letters can represent different sounds, and the same sounds can be spelled different ways. This is a legacy of English absorbing words from dozens of languages over centuries. However, patterns do exist, and mastering them significantly improves comprehension and clarity. This page covers the core sounds of American English.

Vowel sounds

American English has approximately 15 distinct vowel sounds — far more than languages like Spanish or Japanese. Distinguishing between similar sounds (like /ɪ/ in "sit" vs /iː/ in "seat") is essential for being understood. Many non-native speakers struggle with vowels because their native language may not distinguish between sounds that English treats as different:

SymbolAs inExample words
/iː/eesee, team, receive
/ɪ/isit, give, myth
/eɪ/aysay, main, weight
/ɛ/ebed, said, friend
/æ/acat, bad, have
/ɑː/ahfather, car (US)
/ɔː/awlaw, all, caught
/oʊ/ohgo, own, soul
/ʊ/oo (short)book, put, could
/uː/oo (long)moon, true, through
/ʌ/uhcup, love, money
/ə/schwaabout, taken, pencil
/ɜːr/erbird, word, learn
/aɪ/itime, buy, eye
/aʊ/ownow, house, loud

The schwa /ə/

The schwa is the most common vowel sound in English, yet many learners don't even know it exists. It's the weak, neutral "uh" sound that appears in unstressed syllables. Mastering the schwa is one of the biggest steps toward natural-sounding English — overemphasising unstressed syllables is a telltale sign of non-native speech:

  • about → /əˈbaʊt/
  • photograph → /ˈfoʊtəˌɡræf/
  • the (unstressed) → /ðə/

Consonant sounds

English consonants are more regular than vowels, but several sounds challenge speakers of other languages. The "th" sounds (/θ/ and /ð/) don't exist in most languages. The distinction between /v/ and /w/, or /l/ and /r/, causes problems for speakers of certain languages. Focus on sounds that your native language doesn't have:

SoundSpelling variationsExamples
/θ/ththink, method
/ð/ththis, mother
/ʃ/sh, ti, ciship, nation, special
/ʒ/s, simeasure, vision
/tʃ/ch, tchchurch, match
/dʒ/j, g, dgejudge, giant, edge
/ŋ/ng, n(k)sing, think

Word stress

English is a stress-timed language — stressed syllables are longer, louder, and higher in pitch, while unstressed syllables are reduced. This rhythm is fundamental to English and can completely change meaning. Compare "REcord" (noun: a vinyl record) with "reCORD" (verb: to record something). Getting stress wrong can make you unintelligible even if your sounds are perfect:

PatternExamples
First syllableANswer, TAble, WAter
Second syllabledeCIDE, beGIN, toDAY
Third syllableunderSTAND, indePENdent

Stress shifts meaning

Noun (first stress)Verb (second stress)
REcordreCORD
PREsentpreSENT
OBjectobJECT
CONtractconTRACT

Sentence stress

Content words are stressed; function words are not:

  • "I WENT to the STORE to BUY some BREAD."
  • Not: "I WENT TO THE STORE TO BUY SOME BREAD."

Intonation

PatternUseExample
Rising ↗Yes/no questions"Are you coming?" ↗
Falling ↘Statements, Wh-questions"I'm ready." ↘
Rise-fallLists"I need eggs, ↗ milk, ↗ and bread. ↘"

Common pronunciation challenges

SoundChallengeTip
/θ/ and /ð/Not in many languagesTongue between teeth
/r/American r is uniqueTongue doesn't touch palate
/l/ vs /r/Distinguished in EnglishPractice minimal pairs
/v/ vs /w/Different mouth positions/v/ = teeth on lip, /w/ = rounded lips

Next: Grammar essentials →

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