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How to read the IPA transcription for English? 

Authentic Linguistics
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#transcription #IPA #english #pronunciation
Are you struggling with English pronunciation?
English spelling is notoriously complicated, with a huge number of exceptions. But there's a solution: the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). It's a great way to learn how to pronounce English words correctly, and it can also help you learn any other language.
Even if you're a native speaker, the IPA can help you improve your pronunciation or learn another accent of English.
Support my channel: / authling
Photos from Unsplash: Thom Milkovic, Luke Porter, Nathan Riley, Pedro Lastra, Natalie Chaney, Thom Milkovic, Omer Nezih Gerek, freestocks.
00:00 Introduction
00:51 Consonants
03:25 Vowels
07:30 Diphthongs
08:18 Practice
09:33 Quiz
09:43 Questions

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23 май 2024

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Комментарии : 27   
@Artur_M.
@Artur_M. 10 месяцев назад
It reminds me of this quote: 'English can be weird. It can be understood through tough thorough thought, though.' Seriously though, thank you for this video! It's very interesting and helpful. But it also shows me how much my stupid brain is trying to reduce the English phonemic inventory to that of my native Polish. For example, refuses to acknowledge that schwa is a thing. 😅
@maxs_hidden
@maxs_hidden 2 месяца назад
Thank you.
@Nwk843
@Nwk843 10 месяцев назад
Nice video do more applied on all romanics idioms spoked on all world. IPA helps all idioms in discover ours culturals paths.
@hamishstening1090
@hamishstening1090 11 месяцев назад
This is such a clear, helpful explanation. Thank you very much!
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Glad it was helpful! Thanks for watching!
@cailinscath
@cailinscath 11 месяцев назад
I remember my biggest surprise was that 'picturesque' doesn't read as 'pictures'+'queue' :D Very interesting, I hope you make a whole IPA series!
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
"picturesque" is a nice example!
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Can you suggest some compelling topics that you would like me to cover? Phonetics is my passion but most people get bored by it, so I need to carefully choose a topic.
@BigBoyRoma
@BigBoyRoma 10 месяцев назад
Holy shit bro your channel is amazing bro, I'm surprised that you dont have more subscribers
@agostonschranz8810
@agostonschranz8810 11 месяцев назад
My take was push, sing, heart, hub, queue, rite. After looking at others ' solutions, the last two seem to be ambiguous. Nice content, by the way; thank you for sharing! I would be interested in a full IPA tutorial if you have the time and/or the mood for it.
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Correct! I intentionally chose ambiguous transcriptions to make this quiz more interesting.
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Phonetics is my passion and I would enjoy making a full IPA tutorial. My concern is that such video would not be compelling for most viewers. Phonetics seems to be a very niche topic, much harder than grammar or spelling.
@agostonschranz8810
@agostonschranz8810 11 месяцев назад
@@AuthLing Got it, do something that you like and helps you grow the audience!
@illia47
@illia47 11 месяцев назад
Push, sing, heart, hub, cue, write. Looking forward to British accent as well!
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Good job! I will have to speak with the British accent for the British video 😉
@ulfr-gunnarsson
@ulfr-gunnarsson 11 месяцев назад
5:55 Remembering Geoff Lindsey's video, I would correct: most AmE dialects doesn't really distinguish /ə/ and /ʌ/. So, /əˈbəv/. BTW, even the most popular AmE dictionary, Merriam-Webster, doesn't use the vedge (ʌ) in transcriptions. 9:37 push, sing, heart, hub, cue/Q/queue, write/right/wright
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
There are so many conventions in different dictionaries: * Wiktionary: /kʌp/ /nɝs/ /ˈlɛtɚ/ * Oxford Learner's Dictionaries: /kʌp/ /nɜːrs/ /ˈletər/ * Merriam-Webster: /ˈkəp/ /ˈnərs/ /ˈletər/ * Cambridge /kʌp/ /nɝːs/ /ˈlet̬.ɚ/ I use Wiktionary every day, so I give its convention here. Wiktionary is also closer to the convention used by John Wells. Finally, Wiktionary is a free dictionary that covers plenty of languages, so it's useful to be acquainted with its transcription system.
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
I certainly agree with Geoff Lindsey. /ʌ/, /ə/ and /ɜ/ are the same phoneme in American English. Different symbols are used mainly for consistency with the classical British transcription by Gimson - a transcription uses outdated IPA ([ɜ] was previously used for any mid central vowel, now it should be open-mid central) and describes an outdated pronunciation (Conservative RP).
@alexeyshpakov
@alexeyshpakov 11 месяцев назад
At school they taught us to use a colon ":" to mark the long vowels. E.g. "i" is short, "i:" is long. I am surprised you talk about using different characters for short and long vowels instead. Why are there two different ways to do the same thing?
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 10 месяцев назад
This is a great question! British and Australian transcriptions show vowel length explicitly (/iː/ vs /ɪ/) but the American one does not: /i/ vs /ɪ/. Vowel length is phonemic in British and Australian English. This means that there are pairs of words that differ only in vowel length: shared [ʃɛːd] - shed [ʃɛd], foreword [ˈfoː.wəːd] - forward [ˈfoː.wəd]. Vowel length is not phonemic American English: there are no pairs of words that differ only in vowel length. Shared and shed sound as /ʃɛrd/ vs /ʃɛd/. The words foreword and forward sound the same: /ˈfɔr.wɚd/.
@WasickiG
@WasickiG 11 месяцев назад
push sing heart hub Q, queue right, write, wright, rite
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Correct! I like that you gave multiple spellings where several words sound the same.
@gachimix
@gachimix 11 месяцев назад
Push, sing, heart, hub, queue, right
@AuthLing
@AuthLing 11 месяцев назад
Correct!
@gaukharbokanova3860
@gaukharbokanova3860 11 месяцев назад
[gud d͡ʒɒb]! [jet ə'nʌðə 'ɔ:səm 'vɪdɪəu ɔn ðɪs 'ʧænl]
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