Italian - Learn to Pronounce the Italian Vowel Sounds
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- Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
- Pronounce correctly the different vowels in Italian!
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ciao,
Giulia
Finally, someone who slows down and actually teaches! Excellent and helpful as I keep trying to learn the language. You give a sound background and that is what I was looking for.
Thank you for your kind feedback! Grazie! :)
Ciao Margaret! If you wish to learn more I have finally created a fun free course to jumpstart Italian:) you can find it here: www.italianlanguagehub.com ciao ciao!
Yeah same Margaret her English is very good too and she doesn’t even look Italian! Great to learn Italian language so so great 😀
Thank you great and easy to understand as a beginner.
Prego! 😃
I have watched many RUclips videos on Italian, and yours are the very best. Gracie!
Michael D. Grazie a te Michael! Glad you like the videos! :)
Great explanation very very informative, with the exception of the actual production. It is not the air that makes the sound, air is turned into sound in the larynx and then the buzz which is created by the vocal folds vibrating is turned into various vowel sounds depending on the different positions of our mouth, tongue etc.
You're are an excellent tutor ,I really enjoy your lectures..
Yeah,she is a very good teacher!👍
Superb.
Good explanation.
Excellent English
Grazie mille TIm! Too too kind! If you are interested in Italian I have a free course available on my website www.italianlanguagehub.com/corso-freebie. I'm creating more videos for RUclips... so hope you like the other one too! CIAO!
Great lecture, tante grazie!
Giulia,
Your English pronunciation is absolutely excellent!!!
Perhaps you learned how to speak English in the "Mid-West" area of America???
Someday I hope to speak Italian as well as you speak American English.
All the best to you, and please keep posting more videos.
Thank you, sincerely. 🎉☕️🎉☕️🎉
P. Edward DiMarco Hi! :) thank you! I learned English in Switzerland BUT I lived in Arizona ;) for many years :) :)
It isn't excellent this american english more vowels are italian for say back , have she use italian vowel sound/ a/ instead of /æ/ , and/ i:/ italian sound that doesn't exist in english for replaced/ I/ of tip and/ i:/ of see ....however the english vowels are different respect italian vowels .
Lovely teacher🥰🥰
Grazie mille! You are too kind! :) ciao!
Chaio, Thank you so much!!! I have just started learning Italian with a teacher that lives in Milan Italy, I live in the U.S. Vowels have not been covered so this will really help going into my next lesson. I will definitely be augmenting my live tutoring with your videos. Once again thank you so much.
Ciao Roy! Good to be of help! :)
Ciao Roy! If you wish to learn more you can jump to my website at www.italianlanguagehub.com for a free course in Italian and lots of free materials that I send out with my newsletter! This might also help you in your Italian journey or you can find me on Instagram italian_language_hub_official and learn something new everyday for free!!! Ciaoooo!
Grazie mille Giulia 🌞
:)
Some major obstacles I've encountered: faro (lighthouse) vs. farò (I´ll do), venti (wind) vs. venti (20), pesca (peach) vs. pesca (fishing), legge (he/she reads) vs legge (law), collega (collegue) vs. collega (he/she connects).... Difficile
Thanks for sharing! I will make a video on this to help you out! 😊
Your English is very good, and your explanations are clear. Is there a way I can message you privately?
Ciao Emily! Thank you so much! You are very kind! You can get in touch with me by email at giulia@italianlanguagehub.com. A presto! Ciao!
PS: Have you checked my free course? Here is the link! www.italianlanguagehub.com/corso-freebie You will enjoy it if you are looking to learn some extra vocabulary and useful sentences in Italian! :)
Yeah she has a very good English Emily and she doesn’t even look Italian lol ! Where are you from Emily?
Very helpful! Grazie mille!
Nina Ciriello glad it helps! Prego! :)
Are you a native speaker? I was wondering if the "t" was plosive dental as you were doing. I thought it was more of a plosive alveolar t. So a soft "t" not a hard "t"
Ciao! Yes I'm a native speaker. I confirm that the "Italian ‹t› sound is what we call "esplosiva dentale sorda" (plosive dental). I'm from the North of Italy if you go towards the South the pronunciation does change a little bit especially of the influence of dialects... for example in Sicily the ‹t› can be very different from mine (if you ask a Sicilian to say the word "tre" you will hear a biiig difference! But that is the beauty of languages! Isn't it? :)
Yea I figured it could be a different dialect. Very comprehensive video though
@@jhernandez16 Grazie! If you are interested in Italian vocabulary and other useful sentences I have a free course on my website www.italianlanguagehub.com/corso-freebie . The pronunciation course will be available in the next upcoming weeks! I'm also making more free content for RUclips! Thank you for your comment and interest!
@@jhernandez16 Hello J. - just to clarify something - she is NOT speaking any dialect whatsoever. I believe she was emphasizing the fact that, although we do have "standard" Italian throughout the entire country, the pronunciation (and regional accents too) will often change a bit. This is not a dialect actually; just variations on pronunciation. It's more the case that regional dialects have INFLUENCED the pronunciation of regular spoken Italian (i.e. notice the accents from Boston, MA down to somewhere in New Jersey or New York). Thanks and have a great day.
ciao bella mi piace come ti insegni che sei italiano o spagnolo
No Diphthongs in Italian ?
Oh yes! Lots! Esempio: piatto / fiore / chiave / chiodo / fiato / fieno… also with three vowels like CIAO 😀
@@italianlanguagehub Can you do a video on these please :)
@@CountDuckula1908 absolutely yes! Thanks for the suggestion! Ciao!
@@italianlanguagehub Thank you so much! Can't wait for this :)
Vowel I is pronounced towards the BACK of your mouth? (03:20) Come on...
@@LearnItalianconLAmericano Sorry, phonetics is a science. Whatever you feel, [i:] is a front vowel.
@@StefanoMLanza Okay, so "i" is indeed a front vowel - I can't argue with phonetics. www.mimicmethod.com/ft101/vowel-height/
Ciao I m from India, could u plz say me it in Italian,
Ciao Kabita. You can say "Io vengo dall'India"... take note that in Italian you can also omit the subject so you can also simply say "Vengo dall'India"...without "IO" and the sentence still makes sense! Another good option for nationality is: "Sono indiana" (I'm Indian). Hope it helps! ciao!
@@italianlanguagehub thank u so much
@@kabitamurmu4098 prego! :)
Actually, "easily" doesn't have three "i" sounds :)
Nina Scott-Stoddart ciao! It has the Italian "i" sound ;)
it does! the long /iː/, the short /ɪ/, and the unstressed /i/. The first and last are the same in some dialects though. "frankly" and "Frank Lee" for example.
I am 10 months in Italy, can't speak good Italiano yet my teacher is very useless
Mahmud Touray sorry that you are not happy with your teacher... hope these free lessons help.. In the next months I hope to be able to upload more videos. ciao!
Io parlo Italiano ma no è bene, Voglio parlare bene Italiano perche mi piace anche io sono stare que, thanks for the nice videos
@@anthony.waggoner )Good teaching! Molte grazie!