and welcome back to English with Lucy.
I have the most incredible treat for you today.
I am shortly going to welcome two lovely guests
who have generously given their time to help teach you
the differences between Australian English,
American, English, and British English.
We're going to look at how we pronounce words differently.
We've already done a video on differences in vocabulary.
You can click on the link in the description box
If you want to improve your pronunciation
and your listening skills even further
then I highly recommend the special method
whilst listening to that audio book counterpart on Audible.
This is how you use the method.
Take a book that you have already read in English
or a book that you would like to read in English,
I've got plenty of recommendations
down below in the description box.
whilst listening to the audio book version on Audible.
Reading alone will not help you with your pronunciation
because English isn't a strictly phonetic language.
The way a word is written in English
may not give you much indication at all
as to how it's pronounced in English.
But, if you listen to a word at the same time as reading it,
your brain will start making connections.
And the next time you hear that word
you'll know exactly how it's spelled,
and the next time you see that word written down,
you'll know exactly how it's pronounced.
It is such an effective method,
and the best part is you can get one free audio book,
that's a 30 day free trial on Audible,
all you've got to do is click on the link
in the description box and sign up.
I've got loads of recommendations down there for you.
- Hey there, I'm Emma from the MMMEnglish YouTube channel
coming at you from Perth in Western Australia.
- Hi, I'm Vanessa and I live in North Carolina in the U.S.
I run the YouTube channel Speak English with Vanessa.
- And I'm speaking with modern received pronunciation.
So not everyone from Britain speaks like me.
These are two fantastic teachers,
and I have left all of their information
so you should definitely go and check them out.
We are going to look at six sounds,
and for each of these six sounds,
I have included five example words.
So you'll hear us say the words
and then we'll look at how we pronounce them differently.
Okay, we've got the first five words.
- Tuesday.
- Tuesday,
- Tuesday.
- Tuesday.
- Tuesday.
- Tuesday.
- YouTube.
- YouTube.
- YouTube.
- YouTube.
- YouTube.
- YouTube.
- Tuna.
- Tuna.
- Tuna.
- Tuna.
- Tuna.
- Tuna.
- News.
- News.
- News.
- News.
- News.
- News.
- Duty.
- Duty.
- Duty.
- Duty.
- Duty.
- Duty.
does something called yad dropping.
In British English and Australian English
tuna,
duty,
news.
In American English they often drop this yuh sound.
Duty.
- Tuesday.
Duty.
- You can also hear when we join tuh and yuh sound
sometimes we blend these together to make a chuh sound.
And Emma does this when she says Tuesday.
Tuna.
- Tuesday.
Tuna.
- This is also common in British English.
especially when I'm speaking quickly.
Many people say this is wrong or lazy.
Let's have a look another time at Vanessa
Duty.
- Duty.
So not only does she drop that yuh sound to make do,
she also replaces the tuh sound
and that is something we're going to look at
Emma also replaces the tuh with a duh sound.
But she doesn't drop the yuh sound.
- Judy.
- And that's funny because we do say Judy in English,
but it only refers to the woman's name Judy,
Let's have a look at the next set of words.
All of these in British English pronunciation
- Modern.
- Modern.
- Modern.
- Modern.
- Modern.
- Modern.
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- Sorry.
- Sorry.
- Sorry.
- Sorry.
- Sorry.
- Sorry.
- Shopping.
- Shopping.
- Shopping.
- Shopping.
- Shopping.
- Shopping.
- Borrow.
- Borrow.
- Borrow.
- Borrow.
- Borrow.
- Borrow.
Now you can hear that where we say the ah sound
Vanessa, in American English says the awe sound,
- Modern.
- She also pronounces the awe, the er sound
and we don't tend to do this in British English.
Now the Australian pronunciation is very similar here
to the British English pronunciation.
Emma's ah sound is maybe slightly more relaxed,
but the difference is absolutely tiny.
If I were to speak really quickly,
But if I'm speaking slowly and clearly,
Australian English, American English,
- Bottle.
- Bottle.
- So Australian English and British English here
American English is quite different.
So, now we're going to look at the tuh sound
because in American English and Australian English,
sometimes they don't pronounce the letter T as a tuh.
Now it's interesting because both Vanessa and Emma
do seem to alternate slightly.
Sometimes they use the tuh sound
and sometimes they use the duh sound.
- Okay, for me personally,
these T ones are kind of weird.
sometimes it's a fully pronounced T.
The flap T is pretty common in Australia though.
- Daughter.
- Daughter.
- Daughter.
- Daughter.
- Daughter.
- Meeting.
- Meeting.
- Meeting.
- Meeting.
- Meeting.
- Meeting.
- Little.
- Little.
- Little.
- Little.
- Little.
- Little.
- Percentage.
- Percentage.
- Percentage.
- Percentage.
- Percentage.
- Percentage.
- Interview.
- Interview.
- Interview.
- Interview.
- Interview.
- Interview.
So you can see here with the word little,
- Little.
- Little.
- They both use a duh sound in the middle,
but in other words they use the tuh sound like percentage.
- Percentage,
- Percentage.
- Vanessa really does pronounce that er sound
She says percentage, percentage.
we are looking at the R sound.
For me, it's quite different in American English.
And there's a slight difference in Australian English.
I wonder if you'll be able to pick up on it
'cause it is very, very slight.
- Car.
- Car.
- Car.
- Car.
- Car.
- Car.
- Hard.
- Hard.
- Hard.
- Hard.
- Hard.
- Hard.
- Parking.
- Parking.
- Parking.
- Parking.
- Parking.
- Parking.
- Shark.
- Shark.
- Shark.
- Shark.
- Shark.
- Shock.
- Barnyard.
- Barnyard.
I would never say that. (laughs)
Shed.
- Barnyard.
- Barnyard.
- Barnyard.
- Barnyard.
So let's start with American English.
car.
- Car.
- In British English and Australian English
We don't use this er sound in the R words.
But, British English is more of an awe sound.
Awe.
Awe.
Australian English is ever so slightly more open
than the British vowel sound here.
Car.
- Car.
- Can you hear the difference?
It's almost like the vowel sound is shorter
- Shark.
- Now let's look at words with the O sound
- Go.
- Go.
- Go.
- Go.
- Go.
- Go.
- No.
- No.
- No.
- No.
- No.
- No.
- Overflow.
- Overflow.
- Overflow.
- Overflow.
- Overflow.
- Overflow.
- GoPro.
- GoPro.
- GoPro.
- GoPro.
- GoPro.
- GoPro.
- Showing.
- Showing.
- Showing.
- Showing.
- Showing.
- Showing.
Can you hear the ever so slight difference
between the British English no,
- No.
- In British English we start with the shore sound ah,
So we blend that into the uh sound.
Oh.
Oh.
In American English pronunciation
which starts further back in the mouth
and then they blend it into the uh sound.
Oh.
Oh.
coming from further back in your mouth.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Now Australian English pronunciation can be very different.
but there are a couple of times where she goes oh,
oh,
oh,
oh,
oh,
oh.
It's almost like she includes a yuh sound.
One example is where she says both.
And another one is when she says overflow.
It's just leaning towards overflow.
- Overflow.
she almost completely matches my pronunciation as well.
Okay, let's look at how we pronounce
E R
- Better.
- Bedda.
- Better.
- Better.
- Bedda.
- Better.
- Water.
- Water.
- Water.
- Water.
- Water.
- Water.
- Later.
- Later.
- Later.
- Later.
- Later.
- Later.
- Seller.
- Seller.
- Seller.
- Seller.
- Seller.
- Seller.
So with the pronunciation of E R at the end of words,
and this works for many A R words as well.
In American English they pronounce the R at the end,
and in Australian English and British English we don't.
- Bedda.
- Better.
- Also pay attention to the way they pronounce the T's.
In American English in the middle of words
this is nearly always a du sound.
- Better.
- In Australian English it completely depends, it appears.
Sometimes Emma uses the duh sound,
sometimes she uses the tuh sound.
- It might be depending on her mood. (chuckles)
For me, and I'm speaking with modern received pronunciation.
So not everyone from Britain speaks like me.
Sometimes if I'm speaking quickly
and in an informal situation I might use that duh sound.
For example, instead of saying "But I want to go",
I might use a glottal stop instead of the tuh sound,
Some of the most profound differences
between American English pronunciation,
Australian English pronunciation,
and British English pronunciation.
we have a much more lighthearted vocabulary lesson as well,
where we compare the way we say,
where we compare the different vocabulary words that we use.
Thank you so much to Emma and Vanessa
for generously giving up their time
to help me make this video for you guys.
I have left all of their information in the description box.
Go and check out their channels.
They are really fantastic teachers.
Don't forget to check out Audible.
You can claim your free audio book.
All you've got to do is click the link in the description.
And don't forget to connect with me
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