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  • If you first started studying English in China, there's a good chance that you learned that

  • the TR consonant cluster should be pronounced CH. Well, that's not quite right. In this

  • American English pronunciation video, we're going to make an important adjustment to that

  • concept.

  • I made a video a while back explaining that the T in the TR consonant cluster can sound

  • like a CH. You'll hear native speakers do this all the time: try, true. But I've noticed

  • with my Chinese students that they will pronounce this cluster with just the CH, and no R sound

  • at all. But the R needs to be just as strong as the CH in this consonant cluster.

  • Let's take for example the word 'try'. Now if I replace that T with the CH, try, try,

  • I get an acceptable pronunciation. But if I replace it with the CH and drop the R, chai,

  • chai, then I get a different word. Now, I love a chai tea latte just as much as much

  • as the next person. But when we're trying to use the word 'try', the word 'chai' is

  • no good.

  • When I say the word 'chai', my tongue tip is in the front of my mouth the whole time.

  • It's here for the CH, cha-, down here for the first half of the diphthong, chai. And

  • then the tip is still here, but the front part reaches forward, towards the roof of

  • the mouth for the second half of the diphthong. Chai, chai, chai, chai. So, we're not getting

  • the R. The R involves a pull-back of the tongue. So, in order to get an R sound, chr-, chr-,

  • chr-, it has to come back from that initial forward position for the CH. Chr, chr, chry.

  • It will then come back forward for the diphthong sound. Try. Try.

  • Another way to make sure that you're making an R sound is to watch your lip position.

  • So, the lips will need to come in to an even tighter circle to make the R in this cluster.

  • Let's take a look in up-close and slow motion.

  • First, try, with the R. See how much the lips come in to make that R sound. Now, chai, without

  • the R. After the CH sound, the lips do not round. So, in the top you have the R position

  • after the CH. And below you have just the position for the CH. The top position is correct

  • to get the R sound in the TR cluster.

  • Now, we'll watch from the side to try to see the tongue position. In the word 'chai', the

  • tongue is just coming down from being up for the CH position. No pull-back of the tongue.

  • In the word 'try', it's harder to see that tongue has pulled back because the lips come

  • into a more tightly-rounded position. But you can see that the tongue here at the end

  • is coming forward for the diphthong from being back for the R.

  • As you practice the TR cluster, slow it down and hold out the R. Trrrrrrry. Make sure that

  • you're feeling and seeing the correct tongue position. Do this over and over, drill it

  • repetitively. Eventually, speed it up so that you're putting the R sound in at a normal,

  • conversational pace. This is how you will turn it into habit. Other words: train, trade,

  • truth, trouble, trust.

  • I hope this video has helped.

  • That it, and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.

If you first started studying English in China, there's a good chance that you learned that

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TR子音群の発音の仕方 - アメリカ英語 (How to Pronounce the TR Consonant Cluster - American English)

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    Sam に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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