How to pronounce the Word ARE

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I’ve gotten a few questions recently about the wordare’. Specifically someone recently

asked if they were hearing correctlyWhat you doing?” instead ofWhat are you doing?”

That is not grammatically correct, and a native speaker would not sayWhat you doing?”

However, a native speaker may reduce the wordareso much that a non-native speaker

would have problems hearing it. The wordarecan be reduced simply to the schwa/R sound,

er, er, er. So in this sentence, What are you doing?, you may very well hear whater,

whater, whater you doing? Whater you doing? With the er very low in pitch and very fast.

What are you doing? What are, what are, it sounds like the wordbutter’. Butter,

what are, what are you doing? Now that you know what youre listening for, see if you

can hear it in this sentence: What are you doing, what are you doing, what are you doing?

The wordareis often shortened in writing as well, as a contraction withyou’,

we’, orthey’. Theyre, for example. But it doesn’t have to be written as a contraction

for it to be pronounced with this shortersound. Let’s look at a few more sentences

where the wordarecan be reduced. My cousins are coming tomorrow. My cousins are,

my cousins are, My cousins are coming tomorrow. My cousins are coming tomorrow. The cookies

are good. The cookies are, are, the cookies are good. Where are the girls? Now here the

word before ends in the schwa/R sound, er, where er the girls? I would explain it as

a re-emphasizing of the er sound: Where er the girls? But in fast speech, it actually

all blends together. Where are the girls? Where are the girls? So it sounds like the

word R is being dropped. Where are the girls? And someone else asked about the wordare

and the wordwere’ – about them sounding the same when theyre both reduced. The

wordwerewill always have that W sound at the beginning, so there is a difference

in the pronunciation of these words. Let’s look at an example sentence. The kids are

there. The kids er, er, er, just the R sound, the kids are there. The kids were there. The

kids ww, ww, were, were, the kids were there. The second one has that W sound in it. The

kids are there, the kids were there. The kids are there, the kids were there. Can you hear

the difference? Now that you know this concept of the reduced wordare’, try it out

in your speech. And listen for it when youre listening to native speakers. That’s it,

and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.