About Add Video Add URL Resources Contact
Pronunciation Grammar Slang Idioms Reductions
Alphabet Vocabulary Conversation Songs Business English
English America Common Mistakes Miscellaneous Activities
General News Technology News Economics News Education News Agriculture News
Home - English Pronunciation - North American English pronunciation - /i/, /I/, and /ae/ front vowels in a reading
 
English Pronunciation
North American English pronunciation - /i/, /I/, and /ae/ front vowels
Website: None
Source: YouTube
Channel: PronunciationMeg
Title: North American English pronunciation - /i/, /I/, and /ae/ front vowels in a reading
Description: This video should help you better pronounce the /i/ as in "need", /I/ as in "sit", and /ae/ as in "hat". These are front vowels, or vowels pronounced more in the front of your mouth. Open your mouth the most for /ae/ as in "cat" and the least for /i/ as in "need". The reading I recite here is "Nicknames" and is the 2009 copywright of Delmar Cengage Learning. This is the first thing on my channel I didn't make up myself. Be sure to listen, pause, and practice the front vowels exactly as you hear them.
Please contact us if this video is no longer working
Hi. I personally reviewed this video and found it appropriate for the pronunciation section of English Global Group. This video covers some very important points about English pronunciation. I would appreciate some feedback from both students and teachers about this video. You can comment in the window below using any of a number of different services including Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, and Hotmail.
To post a comment:

• Click "Comment using..." in the window below
• Click your favorite service: Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail
• Login to the service
• Click "Add a comment..."
• Post your comment in the window

Students: Please post a comment stating what you found useful about this video. Add additional information you think might help other students trying to learn this particular pronunciation topic. You are welcome to include links to your English study blogs and any other materials you think might be useful for learning English pronunciation.

Teachers: Please post your thoughts about this video. Add additional information you think might help students trying to learn this particular pronunciation topic. You are welcome to include links to your sites, blogs, and any other materials you think might be useful for learning English pronunciation.

Thank you for contributing.
SEARCH for videos and activities
LIKE and RECOMMEND English Global Group
POST YOUR THOUGHTS about this page
VISIT our other sites
 
Copyright © 2009-2012 English Global Group    All rights reserved