A Complete Guide to the /R/ Sound in British English

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 52

  • @sciencenerd7639
    @sciencenerd7639 2 года назад +10

    Fascinating. As a U.S. American, I had not realized that linking R's were a thing. I had noticed intruding R's in other accents but I did not know much about when they come into play. I must admit, I feel like the way we do R seems a lot simpler. Interesting video, keep up the good work!

    • @sciencenerd7639
      @sciencenerd7639 2 года назад

      Oh, and fun fact, it turns out that a few Americans do the intruding R. I know I heard Eddie Murphy say "drawing" with an intruding r one time in a movie. He is from New York City. This is not super common though.

    • @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260
      @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260 2 года назад +1

      There are linking r's in NY, Boston, New Orleans non-rhotic. In the 'old South' simple non-rhotic, they don't have them.

  • @francescalc1716
    @francescalc1716 2 года назад +3

    I've always struggled with this sound. Thanks Tom, you helped me a lot.

  • @vesislavazheleva9977
    @vesislavazheleva9977 2 года назад +1

    The word Brother is a good example of having both spoken and silent r in one. Good one.

  • @auldfouter8661
    @auldfouter8661 2 года назад +3

    As a Scot the SE English pronouncing fire as fi-yah and yet often puting an R into draw-ring just bamboozles me.

  • @DanDaMan92790
    @DanDaMan92790 2 года назад +2

    I'm an American, we don't pronounce the R sound when saying China and India. And in most cases, we do pronounce the R at the end of a word like car, and pronounce the R in the middle of a word like park and work. The only exception is in the northeast part of the US where we tend to drop the R in these cases.

  • @AnastasiaYuldubaeva
    @AnastasiaYuldubaeva 2 года назад +6

    Thanks a lot! Love your super clear and super simple explanations ❤ I’d add “better off” to a Linking R group, though, since it has an actual R. Or maybe I just should revise my knowledge from school 😅

  • @mosku66
    @mosku66 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for your videos and teachings!

  • @juanap132
    @juanap132 2 года назад

    To me as a Swedish person the intrusive R is very interesting. I have of course heard it, but it wasn't something we learned in school and I haven't"used" it myself. It's little things like that you need to get a grip of if you want to learn the language better! Thanks Tom!😊

  • @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260
    @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260 2 года назад +1

    One nuance--the tendency to change a medial r into a tapped sound in 'very'. Also, I think you will find the most strongly rhotic accents of North America are actually in Canada. So a typical Toronto accent is quite a contrast to a typical S England accent. Both are quite good models for EFL students to understand and to mimic if they wish to sound like a native speaker.

  • @defnedurukan3688
    @defnedurukan3688 2 года назад +2

    Hey Tom! its chooseday innit ? 💕 love you

  • @sunmithaarul7963
    @sunmithaarul7963 2 года назад +2

    Much needed video
    Thanks mate🤍

  • @pattygalarce8019
    @pattygalarce8019 2 года назад +2

    Thank you Tom. Good lesson 👍

  • @nadiahm4939
    @nadiahm4939 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for your informative lessons 🙏💚

  • @peterphiong6724
    @peterphiong6724 2 года назад +1

    I’ve never done the intrusive R but I do do the linking R depending on some English words. Sometimes I think that linking the R to the first vowel of the next word causes some pronunciation confusion cause it can become another word which will change the whole meaning of a sentence. So I sometimes skip it and smooth it out a little bit not sounding too choppy.

  • @jcr1138
    @jcr1138 2 года назад +1

    Hello Tom!
    Brother has the /r/ spoken and silent, respectively.

  • @noynadisley3921
    @noynadisley3921 2 года назад

    Thank you so very much teacher Tom xx

  • @aleksey.f
    @aleksey.f Год назад

    Appreciate your hard work, mate

  • @cristinap.morais6878
    @cristinap.morais6878 2 года назад +1

    My lecturer of English Phonology used to give us this example for intrusive R: LAW-/r/ and ORDER 😇

  • @josepferrerserra
    @josepferrerserra Год назад

    Thnaks a lot! This video is amazing. Regards from Catalonia.

  • @ai3kcoa3jkcls
    @ai3kcoa3jkcls 2 года назад

    Very helpful. Thank you.

  • @JCatalann_J.C
    @JCatalann_J.C 2 года назад

    Thank u 4 sharing this video coach...

  • @brestonbritish6980
    @brestonbritish6980 2 года назад

    Hi Tom...Great job lad, how about we do something about liaison in pronunciation... Cheers and Happy Holidays

  • @user-oz7lr4bg9x
    @user-oz7lr4bg9x Год назад

    for Thai speakers (especially Krung Thep accent), the /r/ sound just one of laziest consonant, it's just plain [ɹ], then we usually use the same ways as British speakers. our difficult consonants is [ð] and [θ], our Thai speakers trend to cheat as /d/ and /t/, not the [tʰ], just [t]. English speaker generally can't distinguish between [tʰ] and [t].

  • @MrClaycorn
    @MrClaycorn 2 года назад

    Tom, for the intrusive r, I reckon you missed out on 2 vowels, firstly the a: sound, like in spa and bra, I assume you said " spa-ren-bra" reading this right? It also happens in the ie or e sound in idea, which can also be categorised as a linking r feature as its the same vowel found in words such as clear, peer, or tear which all end with an r, which also seems to be the case for the a: vowel, where most words with that vowel have an r at the back, like star, spar or even just the word "r" itself.

  • @SR-er6hx
    @SR-er6hx 2 года назад

    Can you do some tutorial on devoicing consonants such as Z and V since it's common in many Accents?

  • @andreask3218
    @andreask3218 8 месяцев назад

    What about the pronunciation of 'colonel'? Some speakers pronounce it as 'ker-nell'.

  • @caro4486
    @caro4486 2 года назад

    Nice, but one question remains: when do I tap the r like in posh and scottish accents and when do I not?

  • @JeanHenshall
    @JeanHenshall 5 месяцев назад

    Finally after nearly 79 years I’ve learned how to say/r/.

  • @benlange7124
    @benlange7124 2 года назад

    Hi teacher Tom, first of all, thanks for the wonderful content you give us. I have a question about accents, I've seen many old movies and I've noticed a distinctive thing in their accents, it kinda sounds like more nasal than nowadays just like kurtwood Smith talks, and I've heard it in both American and British English, I thought it was due to the audio quality but I don't think so. So, it would be great if you can explain that to us.

    • @barneylaurance1865
      @barneylaurance1865 2 года назад

      I don't know what old movies you were watching, but you might have heard the "Mid-Atlantic Accent". This was an artificial prestigious accent that was taught to many actors in early 20th century Hollywood. Called mid-atlantic because it sounds like something in between British and American.

  • @hashcosmos2181
    @hashcosmos2181 2 года назад

    Is intrusive R also found in the MLE accent?

  • @watchmakerful
    @watchmakerful 2 года назад +1

    Why is "r" at the beginning heard with a slight "w"-like sound?

    • @caro4486
      @caro4486 2 года назад

      They are just very similar sounds and functioning similar in the mouth concerning the "there is something in the way of the breath, but there is no actual closure or friction-sound (like a "f") and neither it's a vocal but you activate your vocal cords" -way if you understand what I mean :D
      Interesting ad: that's actually the main difference between a German w and the English pronunciation: in Germany we say the letter w like a "f" with activated vocal cords, so it is actually a friction-sound in German, that's one of the reasons why most Germans are sounding a bit creepy speaking English.

  • @timothytinashenhapi9511
    @timothytinashenhapi9511 2 года назад

    what about words like drawing which sound like 'drawering', what's the rule here?

  • @atsuko1422
    @atsuko1422 2 года назад

    As a Japanese speaker, it is a nightmare to make distinguish between L and R clearly. Especially, the R sound in a British accent is just a horrendous disaster. Thank you for breaking it down for us.😀

  • @madhurp986
    @madhurp986 2 года назад

    We have learned British English in our schools across India.

  • @eladiocofresi5202
    @eladiocofresi5202 2 года назад

    What is known as the typical New Yorker accent tends to drop the R as well.

    • @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260
      @jannuzijannuzicharlescharl3260 2 года назад +1

      NYC, Boston, coastal New England, Rhode Island, and Yat accent of New Orleans. Simple non-rhotic of the South (although diminishing in numbers) is a bit different. They wouldn't use a linking r in the cases he explains in his video for British English(es).

  • @khandakararraf2012
    @khandakararraf2012 2 года назад

    Linking R and intrusive R sounds very similar to me.

  • @BillGraper
    @BillGraper Год назад

    I don't understand why Brits don't pronounce their R's. For over 2 decades, I thought the chorus for "Creep" by Radiohead was "I'm a creep. I'm a widow." There is an R in "weirdo," but you don't hear it. It clearly sounds like "widow."

  • @1981stonemonkey
    @1981stonemonkey Год назад

    To understand the intrusive R most easily:
    > You´re in a forest, hiding from a dinosaur.
    > Your friend asks, "What kind of dinosaur are we hiding from?"
    > You answer, "It´s a Do-you-think-he-saw-R-us..!"

  • @ChrisDMReloaded
    @ChrisDMReloaded Год назад

    Faiah
    Teachah
    Watah

  • @bouhabiba80
    @bouhabiba80 2 года назад

    Like the video 🔥

  • @soniamayrink3295
    @soniamayrink3295 2 года назад

    " RL as in girl, world".....would you be so kind as to explain how get the right pronunciation?🎄🎄✨✨

    • @caro4486
      @caro4486 2 года назад

      In British English you don't speak it because L is a consonant, so it's "göl" "wöld"

  • @rafaelprimo5766
    @rafaelprimo5766 2 года назад +1

    gorgeous

  • @mosku66
    @mosku66 2 года назад +1

    First!

  • @mikelaa1930
    @mikelaa1930 10 месяцев назад

    what about "there's or "there are" or "are you" in Brittish English? There's no "r" there, why is that?