Really helpful and interesting video. I also find it interesting how the ʊә seems to have fallen out of so many accents. It used to be more prevalent in American English as well; but now you only hear it in some New York/New England accents and some regional variations of African American Vernacular English (AAVE).
Yes, it's interesting how a sound can slowly get pushed out of a language. I wonder why it happened in the first place. Thanks for watching my video and I'm really glad you've found it useful :)
Do they evaporate "T" and "TT" so they sound swallowed so that seem to have a glottal stop so bottle sounds like "buh-le, I should think. And navy sounds "na-veh" Am I right? ✅
@@GADFLY53 yes, they use glottal stops but the O in bOttle is very open and doesn't sound like UH. You are absolutely right about the end sound in NAVY but A is pronounced like a long closed /ee/ 😉
@@carlitoz82718 it's in Hyde Park from 17th November. It's a huge German Christmas Market and it's fantastic! You need to book it in advance. How long will you be here for?
@@EnglogicSam perfect i land nov 22 in London and im staying in kensington.. but im a cabin crew so unfortunately im only there for 24 hours.. but im going to be the biggest tourist london has every seen..
If you can completely unlearn your current English pronunciations and learn RP from scratch ideally through complete immersion in England, then you'd pick it up in a few years. That's how my cousin who had barely spoken a word of English when she left Sri Lanka for Canada at the age of 6, had rapidly picked up not just perfect Canadian English but perfect French as well, by the time she returned to Sri Lanka 6 years later.