Mastering the American Accent

- Learn to speak standard American-style English with clarity, confidence, accuracy.
- Exercises help you master tricky vowel and consonant sounds and employ correct syllable stress.
- illustrations show you correct configurations of lips and tongue for specific pronunciation exercises.
- Introduction
- The Vowel Sounds
- /i/ AS IN MEET
- /I/ AS IN SIT
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /i/ Versus /I/
- /eɪ/ AS IN TAKE
- /ɛ/ AS IN GET
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /ɛ/ Versus /eɪ/
- /æ/ AS IN FAT
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /ɛ/ Versus /æ/
- /ɑ/ AS IN FATHER
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /æ/ Versus /ɑ/
- /ɘ/ AS IN FUN *
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /ɑ/ Versus /ɘ/
- /ɔ/ AS IN SAW
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /ɘ/ Versus /ɔ/
- /oʊ/ AS IN BOAT
- Quick Review: Word Contrasts for /ɑ, ɔ/ Versus /oʊ/
- /ʊ/ AS IN GOOD
- /u/ AS IN TOO
- Quick Review: Vowel Contrasts for /ʊ/ Versus /u/
- /ɘr/ AS IN BIRD
- /aɪ/ AS IN TIME
- /aʊ/ AS IN HOUSE
- /ɔɪ/ AS IN BOY
- Vowels In Detail
- Review of /I/ and /i/ Sounds
- Review of /ɛ/ and /æ/ Sounds
- Review of /ɘ/, /ɑ/, /ɔ/, and /ou/ Sounds
- The Problematic O
- The American /ɔ/ Sound
- Review of /ɛ/, /æ/, /ɑ/, /ɔ/, /ɘ/, and /oʊ/
- Review of /ʊ/ and /u/ Sounds
- Comparing /u/ and /yu/
- Review of the /ɘr/ Sound
- Vowels Followed by the /r/ Sound
- Consonants
- Voiceless and Voiced Consonants
- Vowel Length and Voiced and Voiceless Consonants
- Stops and Continuants
- Final Stops Followed by Consonants
- Problematic Consonants
- Held t + Consonant
- Held t Before /n/ Sound
- Silent t After n
- When t is Between Two Vowels
- When t is Between Two Words
- The “Fast d” Sound
- The /tʃr/ Sound: tr
- The /dʒr/ Sound: dr
- The /dʒ/ Sound: du and d + y
- The /ʧ/ Sound: tu and t + y
- Words Ending in ed
- Linking ed Ending and a Vowel
- The th Sound
- Comparing th with s and z
- The American /r/
- R Before a Consonant
- The American /l/
- l Before a Consonant
- Long Vowels + /l/
- Understanding /l/ Versus /r/
- Consonants + r and l
- Review of /r/ and /l/
- The /v/ Sound
- Understanding /b/ Versus /v/
- The /w/ Sound
- Understanding /v/ Versus /w/
- The /s/ and /z/ Sounds
- Verbs and Nouns and the Letter s
- The /ŋ/ Sound: Pronouncing ng
- Confusing n and ng Endings
- Consonant Clusters
- Different Sounds for x
- Words Ending with ts
- Pronouncing the ds Cluster
- Syllable Stress
- Stressed and Reduced Vowels
- Dangers of Stressing the Wrong Syllable
- General Rules for Stress Placement
- Noun and Verb Pairs
- Words Ending in -tion and -ate
- -ate Endings of Verbs and Nouns
- More Stressed Suffixes
- Rules for Prefixes
- Syllable Stress Changes
- Reduced Vowels for Review
- Word Stress
- Compound Nouns
- Proper Stress with Adjectives
- Compound Nouns Containing Adjectives
- Phrasal Verbs
- Noun Forms of Phrasal Verbs
- Abbreviations and Numbers
- Names of Places and People
- Word Stress Within a Sentence
- Which Words Should I Stress?
- Content Words in Detail: Verbs
- Stress Nouns but Not Pronouns
- Content Words in Detail: Adjectives
- Reducing Vowels in Unstressed Words
- Weak Forms
- Strong Forms
- Thought Groups and Focus Words
- Contrastive Stress
- Intonation
- Falling Intonation
- Rising Intonation
- Non-final Intonation
- Introductory Words
- Series of Words
- Expressing Choices
- Wavering Intonation
- Sound Like A True Native Speaker
- Rules for Linking
- Linking Consonant to Same Consonant
- Final Stop Between Consonants
- Linking Vowel to Vowel
- Linking Vowels Within a Word
- Reducing Pronouns
- Contractions
- Conditional Tense and Contractions
- Conditional Questions
- Casual Versus Formal Speech
- Commonly Confused Words
- Memorizing The Exceptions
- Same Spelling, Different Pronunciation
- Two Correct Pronunciations
- Especially Difficult Words
- Words with Dropped Syllables
- Words with Silent Letters
- Homophones
- Chinese
- Farsi
- Filipino Languages
- French
- German
- Indian Languages
- Indonesian
- Japanese
- Korean
- Portuguese
- Russian
- Spanish
- Vietnamese

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The activities in "4000 Essential English Words" are specially designed to make use of important learning conditions. Firstly, the words are introduced using sentence definitions and an example sentence. 4000 Essential English Words 4: 600 words (Unit 1 - Unit 30).

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The activities in "4000 Essential English Words" are specially designed to make use of important learning conditions. Firstly, the words are introduced using sentence definitions and an example sentence. 4000 Essential English Words 2: 600 words (Unit 1 - Unit 30).

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