EMAIL vs. EMAI-OH - How to make the Dark L - American English

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  • Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
  • Don't mispronounce words that end in the Dark L -- many non-native speakers incorrectly make an 'oh' ending. Learn how to make the Dark L and the dark sound instead of the OH.
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Комментарии •

  • @CarinaFragozo
    @CarinaFragozo 9 лет назад +123

    A similar process occurs in Brazilian Portuguese. EFL learners tend to say [braˈzɪʊ] instead of [brəˈzɪl], as we don't have the dark "l' in our language (except for some dialects in the countryside). I'm a big fan of your channel, Rachel! Congratulations!

    • @hadrielia
      @hadrielia 9 лет назад +12

      +Carina Fragozo
      For me it's sort of easy to make the dark L sound because my grandmother used to say some words, like "sal" and "cal" with the dark L sound LOL
      She was brazilian, but her parents were portuguese, that's why she had a little bit of a portuguese (from Portugal) accent =D

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад +18

      +Carina Fragozo Thank you, Carina! And thank you for your comments - it is great to have your input here! :)

    • @AndersonSilva-tg1dt
      @AndersonSilva-tg1dt 9 лет назад +4

      +Carina Fragozo Hi Carina, you around here, awesome! (I also follow your channel) Rachel is really fantastic. I'm a big fan too. My pronounce is a lot better because of her.

    • @vipexpresstrading8834
      @vipexpresstrading8834 7 лет назад +1

      ESL, Meal, metal.

    • @eds2gecilaine
      @eds2gecilaine 7 лет назад +4

      Carina Fragozo
      tu parece a filha do Zezé di Camargo e Luciano.
      Zezé di Camargo e Luciano. 😂😂😂

  • @shinyta11
    @shinyta11 6 лет назад +32

    Nobody ever told me there were two L pronunciations ;_;
    Until you mentioned them in a video. I was like, wait what?!
    Now I'll have to relearn all the words that have a dark L. xD
    Thank you! You are a very good teacher!

  • @yakiko567
    @yakiko567 4 года назад +9

    This video is amazing! I am Japanese, and we don't have the dark L sound.
    I'm always struggling to pronounce it, but finally I got something. Thank you very much!

  • @jorgeandrade20
    @jorgeandrade20 9 лет назад +5

    Hi Rachel, I find the dark 'L' to be one of the hardest sounds in American English, when I was training to reduce my accent, I felt the need to accentuate the 'L' sound by lifting the tip of my tongue to the alveolar ridge area of the mouth. Today, my dark 'L' is comprised of two movements: First, the back of the tongue pulls back, secondly, the tip of the tongue slightly lifts to mimic the regular 'L' sound, if I don't use that sequence, it makes me feel like I'm not pronouncing the word correctly, unless I'm speaking super fast, then there's no time to lift the tip of the tongue. What a pesky little sound!

  • @jellofel8138
    @jellofel8138 6 лет назад +10

    I’m from Shanghai, and we have the dark l sound in Shanghai dialect that stands for the oh sound in Mandarin, so my brain spontaneously treats both sounds as the same thing since I’m constantly switching back and forth. I have to force my brain to differentiate the dark l from the oh sound when I’m listening to English. I’m glad that you addressed this particular topic. I feel more comfortable to pronounce these two sounds now. Thank you!

  • @petit4489
    @petit4489 2 года назад +1

    This video is so fascinating to me. I’m a native American English speaker, but growing up I had speech therapy because I couldn’t pronounce a dark L

  • @tysonfitzgerald2235
    @tysonfitzgerald2235 4 года назад +1

    I'm a native English speaker but I still find your videos fascinating.

  • @angvanhoanh4418
    @angvanhoanh4418 2 года назад +1

    I'm Vietnamese. Thank you very much. I Love Rachel' English Channel

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  2 года назад

      You're very welcome Đặng and thanks for watching there!

  • @captainamerica6031
    @captainamerica6031 3 года назад +1

    I'm Vietnamese and dark L is really difficult not only for me but also many other Vietnamese. I'm grateful for your instruction.

  • @cctang72
    @cctang72 7 лет назад +1

    Thanks so much. I am Chinese, I cannot realize I got this problem until I watch your video! That's helpful!

  • @lourdespalacios6669
    @lourdespalacios6669 3 года назад

    First time I hear about the existence of two L! You're a wonderful teacher. I appreciate your help. God bless you!!

  • @ФЕЙСАЛСайдулаев
    @ФЕЙСАЛСайдулаев 8 лет назад +5

    Rachel you're such a kind person !!!Thank you so much for giving us the oportunity to improve our prounounciation!!!

  • @rafaelduarteaguilera9352
    @rafaelduarteaguilera9352 9 лет назад +1

    This video reminds a situation a lived in the U.S. when I was told to look for a person called "Beo" (an African name pronounced like bɪoʊ) and it sounded like "Bill" (bɪl) to me. So I asked for Bill to everybody, but no one could find him. After a couple of minutes they realized that the name was actually Beo and not Bill, and I found him.
    Thanks for your videos, Rachel!

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад

      +Rafael Duarte Aguilera Great story and example! Thank you for sharing!

  • @nguyenquang1318
    @nguyenquang1318 8 лет назад +5

    Big thanks from Vietnam Rachel, I have been thought they were the same thing.

  • @yuanxiangqi2519
    @yuanxiangqi2519 3 года назад +1

    I have been trying to figure out the difference for more than 10years, thanks a lot

  • @andreymendoza2122
    @andreymendoza2122 8 лет назад +1

    My three words with dark L: Retail, Bill and Hell. Thanks for your videos, it helps me so much to progress in my English learning.

  • @ertnara
    @ertnara 8 лет назад

    As a brazilian i must say it helped a lot Rachel, thanks

  • @runlearn
    @runlearn 5 лет назад

    So clear. I've seen some instructors tell students to say oh instead as a tip. This comparison was amazing and easy to understand. I'm a big fan of yours! Thanks a lot for great lessons!

  • @lucyhuynh8994
    @lucyhuynh8994 3 года назад +2

    Thank you so much Rachel! I’m one of the Vietnamese that struggles with this Dark L, I even have no idea about it until watching your video 😭😭😭

  • @KEN3359-i8f
    @KEN3359-i8f 2 года назад

    I like this kind of explanation for pronunciation of words. I also took many types of explanation by different coaches and/or instructors worldwide thru U-Tube videos. I appreciated my Japlish improvement getting closer to Native speakers.

  • @BarbaraBrasileiro
    @BarbaraBrasileiro 5 лет назад +2

    Thank you so much, Rachel. I always learn so much from your lessons!

  • @weirdam2574
    @weirdam2574 3 года назад

    Bright explanation! All the words that end in -all, including the very "all".

  • @mjuarez2099
    @mjuarez2099 7 лет назад +5

    Hi Rachel, you made me realized something really important with this video, we truly substitute new sounds with known sounds from our native language. so my question is, can you make a video of the basics or common sounds in the English that we have to get familiar with. so that when we hear them we can actually repeat them??

  • @galladiel
    @galladiel 3 года назад +2

    And here I was practicing "L" sound vocalization for London cockney accent. In cockney accent they do the opposite- replace dark L with "w" or "ou" sound. Vietnamese and Brasilians should have no problem with their "L" in London.

    • @kathybui1918
      @kathybui1918 3 года назад

      I think basically we have “ fe-u” Vietnamese would speak “ feuw”, English say “ feul” as FELL, so the difference is in between of the end of articulation lips “w” or tip of the tongue “l”.

  • @soniacao3726
    @soniacao3726 4 года назад +1

    explanation about the pronouncing part really helps!

  • @drogadepc
    @drogadepc 8 лет назад +4

    I'm brazilian and that's true story about the Dark L and OH. Nice vídeo

  • @nguyenphuongneu
    @nguyenphuongneu 7 лет назад

    I'm vietnamese. I live in Ha Noi . I have a trouble with Dark L like you show it in this video. THank you so much for made it .

  • @onelove4714
    @onelove4714 6 лет назад +1

    A million thanks Rachel. You're the best

  • @李若涵-l2w
    @李若涵-l2w 5 лет назад +2

    thank you so much.I am Chinese.I really think these two sounds are completely same.But I will practice.

  • @MondedeMon
    @MondedeMon 9 лет назад +10

    Thanks!
    I'm Vietnamese! I know how difficult to pronounce dark L!

  • @BobIshidaHere
    @BobIshidaHere 9 лет назад

    Rache! This is exactly what I needed to learn at this point of my progress. Thank you very much! Now I see my problem and can fix it with practice. People, ball, Rachel......People, ball, Rachel......People, ball, Rachel......People, ball, Rachel......

  • @tomtom3874
    @tomtom3874 4 года назад +2

    pull
    full
    wolf
    Those are the words that I struggle with. With the dark L sound, I am finally able to pronounce them right.

  • @AndersonSilva-tg1dt
    @AndersonSilva-tg1dt 9 лет назад

    Wow Rachel, fantastic. I think us, brazilians in general, really have a hard time to pronounce the dark L. Thank you so much!
    3 words: call, fail, bail.

  • @miaminmin
    @miaminmin 4 года назад +1

    WonderFUL lesson and I'm so thankFUL!

  • @misterio4439
    @misterio4439 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks for that! I finally learned how to pronounce the "dark L".

  • @陆河-q2n
    @陆河-q2n 6 лет назад +2

    It's quite helpful! Thank you! I need to add it to my practice list to practice every day!

  • @hungtrinhquoc2091
    @hungtrinhquoc2091 3 года назад +1

    Thanks so lot Rachel! It is so useful.

  • @icyzoneinfo
    @icyzoneinfo 6 лет назад +2

    Same thing occurs in Bulgarian. Younger people (born after 1990 or so) say a "w" sound instead of a dark l, because the dark l recently disappeared from the language, but nobody is aware of that, even those who speak with a dark l don't notice it when someone substitutes w for l

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  6 лет назад

      Thanks for sharing Yordan!

    • @LearnGermanWithVideos
      @LearnGermanWithVideos Год назад

      But the Bulgarian dark L is pronounced by moving the tip of your tongue behind your upper front teeth. It sounds dark only because you make it really thin and spiky. So it’s quite different than the American dark L, and this makes it even more difficult for Bulgarians to pronounce it the right way.

  • @wangmaggie6758
    @wangmaggie6758 6 лет назад +2

    Rachel, you are the best!

  •  9 лет назад

    I remember when you said that in a podcast for English Experts. It was great. You have no idea (you actually do haha) how many people in Brazil also make this substitution. This video couldn't be more helpful. :)

  • @phannkhuong
    @phannkhuong 2 года назад +1

    I'm Vietnamese and I always say EMAI-OH until I see this video, thank you! :)

  • @carolineliu4227
    @carolineliu4227 7 лет назад

    Thanks a lot. I cannot tell ou from dark L solely with listening. But with the help of lips, I get the difference now. Very nice teaching!

  • @mestuff5712
    @mestuff5712 2 года назад

    I like your videos very much. Your teaching is simple and easy to understand

  • @automekanicsshops8827
    @automekanicsshops8827 2 года назад

    Special Thanks to both of You !

  • @jontron6846
    @jontron6846 9 лет назад

    Another great video!!!
    Haha, Rachel's English is now my only source of english pronunciation input aside from American TV shows and movies and of course RUclips videos.
    I love American English and it's my goal to achieve perfect american-like pronunciation.
    I won't settle for less.
    With your help it seems attainable.
    Thanks, Rachel. :)

  • @camuflagehugo5137
    @camuflagehugo5137 3 года назад

    " Bowl" is the perfect word to know the difference between the dark L and OH sound. OW is OH and L is the dark L. Look at yourself in the mirror. Your lip should be rounded when you pronounce the OW, whereas your lip should be relaxed when you pronounce the L in the end.

  • @abdulmomin1250
    @abdulmomin1250 9 лет назад

    Hi Rachel, I'm your very poor Fan. when I saw and hear your channel then I try as you. But I can't but trying to pronounce as you as a American.what a excellent pronunciation of yours. I'm trying from Bangladesh to be like you. Thanks a lot. God bless you.

  • @deathkt1414
    @deathkt1414 9 лет назад

    I`m learning a lot from your book Rachel, thanks a lot , here are my 3 words:
    self, people, battle

  • @kaleege
    @kaleege 3 года назад

    Rachel, for real, y'all helped a hell lot!

  • @benchoi9474
    @benchoi9474 4 года назад

    dark l and light l sound has the same starting place in IPA diagram. They begin at the alveolar or the high and front of your mouse and but dark l ends in the low and back of your mouse as described in the video :)

  • @stevenvillamizar2121
    @stevenvillamizar2121 Год назад

    I'm from Colombia, and this sound is very difficult to do, however I'm practicing it, thank you.

  • @AlanaAylin19
    @AlanaAylin19 4 года назад

    I finally got that sound ! So difficult! Thank you for the lesson.

  • @halgaci
    @halgaci 2 года назад +2

    My mother language is Mandarin. There is no OH sound in Mandarin. OU in Mandarin is the same as the Dark L in English. I did take some time to practice the OH sound but I found what I made sounded more like U or W rather than OH. Finally, I gave up and have to substitute OH with the Dark L when I speak English.

  • @marianapeixoto3991
    @marianapeixoto3991 5 лет назад +1

    Fantastic video. Thank you so much!

  • @quinngong547
    @quinngong547 8 дней назад

    Thanks so much. I finally got it correctly after so many years.

  • @Jason-bx2rj
    @Jason-bx2rj 3 года назад

    Best explanation ever seen

  • @AngeloDeFlorio
    @AngeloDeFlorio 9 лет назад

    Hi rachel,
    I think a native italian speaker like me tends to make a different mistake, not changing dark L with OH but just with a light L. We tend to pronounce every letter the same way no matters where it is in the phrase.
    My three words ending with dark L are:
    drill
    bottle
    google :)
    Bye

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад +1

      +Angelo De Florio Awesome job on those words - and yes - a lot of people do make the Dark L into Light L, you are not alone. The nice thing about that switch is that it is usually still clear what word you are saying and so it does not create too much confusion! :)

    • @AngeloDeFlorio
      @AngeloDeFlorio 9 лет назад

      +Rachel's English Ok, but having an awesome pronunciation teacher like you, we must pronounce it the right way ;)
      By the way, also in Rachel we have a dark L, right?

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад +1

      +Angelo De Florio Yes! There is a Dark L in my name!

  • @starffgamer1258
    @starffgamer1258 3 года назад

    Hi, Rachel, I learned something new in this video awesome video you've made this one darl L ending OH I like a lot thanks.

  • @thanhhungphan3985
    @thanhhungphan3985 8 лет назад

    Dark L with OH is not that corect but is a great substitution. As I Know people in South Vietnam do the same for Foreign words with L ending. Thank you Rachel!!

  • @dattran1725
    @dattran1725 7 лет назад

    Thanks Rachel and chi Quyen.

  • @weisslin
    @weisslin Год назад

    Thank you, Rachel.

  • @احمدغالب-ث4ح
    @احمدغالب-ث4ح 4 года назад +2

    Well

  • @SimpleEnglishVideos
    @SimpleEnglishVideos 8 лет назад +7

    Terrific job!

  • @Bob-tu9jq
    @Bob-tu9jq 3 года назад +1

    Thank you, Racho. Opps, thanks Rachellllllll.

  • @misschaima3300
    @misschaima3300 9 лет назад

    Thank u Mrs Rachel ; From Morocco

  • @dabnysenglish110
    @dabnysenglish110 3 года назад +1

    I Love your vídeos! !!Thank for help my english. Iam from Brazil.
    L (él)

  • @jerstumc5033
    @jerstumc5033 3 года назад

    to make it correctly, you need to press the FLAT FRONT PART of your tounge against the roof of your mouth. So as the tip of your tounge touches the backside teeth while your front part of your tounge is flat. You don't just use your toungue tip to make the dark L. You need to use more part of your front toungue so the dark L comes out correctly. Don't focus on the sound coming in the back of the mouth because it's irrelevant, if you well-position your toungue to make the sound then the sound in the back of your mouth will come out correctly

  • @evermorevictorious2742
    @evermorevictorious2742 3 года назад +3

    The British dark L is a vocalised L. That means the L has become a vowel.
    The dark L is in 3 forms:
    1. "a schwa followed by a /u/", as in "vowel", "mail";
    2. a /u/, as in "bull"; or
    3. a /o/, as in "doll".
    (For 2 & 3, the vocalised dark L is turned into a vowel similar to the preceding vowel, usually pronounced without lip rounding.)
    For the dark L, the tongue tip doesn't touch the alveolar ridge. If it does, it is not a dark L but a light L.
    For the light L, the tongue tip touches the alveolar ridge.

  • @兼田義之
    @兼田義之 8 лет назад

    I learned that the ell sound is right back there at the end!

  • @叶渐师
    @叶渐师 7 лет назад +1

    My three words: fall, full, battle. Thanks from China.

  • @ramzy-6566
    @ramzy-6566 3 года назад +1

    awesome video for dark l

  • @metaliphuong
    @metaliphuong 8 лет назад +2

    A big thank from Viet Nam

  • @kozcan
    @kozcan 7 лет назад

    Thank you so much Rachel.

  • @killua99go28
    @killua99go28 4 года назад +1

    really helpful. Thanks!

  • @isabellac.8155
    @isabellac.8155 2 года назад +1

    Thank you!

  • @JayKobMusic
    @JayKobMusic 9 лет назад +1

    Thanks Rach! Great video ^^
    Here are my three Dark L words:
    whole, wall, possible

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад

      +JayKob Yes - all of those words use the Dark L! Nice!

  • @oscaroscar5315
    @oscaroscar5315 4 года назад

    Rachel you are great ,thank you very much for helping learning American English,,,,I want to say that dark L is unfamiliar to arabs too and difficult, I find it more difficult in words such as: help / Google/ exactly / people/ general / article .

  • @becky3422
    @becky3422 2 года назад +1

    Great! Enjoyed

  • @goldenmissiononlinecoachin7430
    @goldenmissiononlinecoachin7430 4 года назад +1

    Wall,walk , Bell,well,nail,hell.(Thank you ! Teacher.)

  • @crisrei
    @crisrei 9 лет назад +1

    My words for the challenge are: Trivial, Casual, Ball and Pull. Thank you Rachel.

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад

      +María Cristina Reina M Nice! Those are all Dark Ls - well done!

  • @andersonteixeira4584
    @andersonteixeira4584 7 лет назад

    Thank, Rachael.

  • @محمدأسامة-م8د
    @محمدأسامة-م8د 2 года назад +1

    Thanks a lot

  • @phongpt76
    @phongpt76 9 лет назад

    Tks a lot. I am a vietnamese

  • @laurauriostegui171
    @laurauriostegui171 8 лет назад +3

    THANK YOU

  • @USA_365
    @USA_365 5 лет назад +1

    Best of the best! 2 thumbs up.

  • @wonderingwhy6410
    @wonderingwhy6410 8 лет назад

    That was very useful. Thank you!

  • @hadrielia
    @hadrielia 9 лет назад +4

    Hi, Rachel.
    Can you make a video showing how to pronunce sentences using words ending in the Dark L followed by words starting in a vowel, like "I need to sell it"
    Thank you

    • @lucast7068
      @lucast7068 9 лет назад +2

      +Ana Luisa
      You just need to move the L to the next word. Instead of _"Sell it[Dark L]"_ you pronounce it as _"Se- Lit[Regular L]"_

    • @lucast7068
      @lucast7068 9 лет назад

      +Lucas T
      Words that connect. Rachel has several videos about this topic on her channel. Actually, her most seen video talks exactly about that

    • @rachelsenglish
      @rachelsenglish  9 лет назад +4

      +Ana Luisa Lucas T is right about linking the Dark L to the following word - however, don't change it to a Light L, it should stay a Dark L. This is a great suggestion for a specific linking video - I appreciate the comment!

    • @evermorevictorious2742
      @evermorevictorious2742 4 года назад

      @@rachelsenglish
      It should be changed into a light L!

  • @teodoropina8075
    @teodoropina8075 9 лет назад

    Im watching the video. Tanks a lot

  • @LeandroMachadoAmorim
    @LeandroMachadoAmorim 9 лет назад

    thanks

  • @hamidghorbani8465
    @hamidghorbani8465 7 лет назад

    Thanks. I enjoyed

  • @italoreyesdiaz3317
    @italoreyesdiaz3317 7 лет назад +1

    best teacher ever

  • @tianxia1081
    @tianxia1081 9 лет назад +1

    special thanks from a Chinese subscriber! Although i can still not tell the difference by listening

    • @jeffreyfugh7602
      @jeffreyfugh7602 8 лет назад +2

      +Tian Xia I am Chinese too and find saying emaioh much harder than it is to say email. Perhaps that was due to the fact that I started learning English at a very early age. The common ailment that many of my peers encounter is their tendency to speed up their speech while they are still in their early stages of building their pronunciation skills. Just practise saying words that contains the "L" slowly. Better slow than wrong! 寧慢勿錯!

    • @brokenchen3818
      @brokenchen3818 8 лет назад

      Thx Jeffrey

  • @ponpon_2712
    @ponpon_2712 3 года назад

    Love from Vietnam ❤

  • @kekkoutsutayaiku
    @kekkoutsutayaiku 9 лет назад +1

    This is a great lesson for Japanese speakers as well. We do the same substitution such as My-koh instead of Michael.

  • @robersonsoliveira
    @robersonsoliveira 9 лет назад

    Another great video from Rachel channel. I feel so confortable when Im learning english from Rachel channel. I want to buy your book. But, for now our currency is so devalued and the dollar is each more growing.

  • @balonh1052
    @balonh1052 Год назад

    Her accent is as good as native speakers

  • @nguyenliam6471
    @nguyenliam6471 3 года назад

    Giọng cười không lẫn đi đâu được chị đồng hương ạ. =))

  • @NguyenNguyen-pi9xk
    @NguyenNguyen-pi9xk 8 лет назад +10

    TIP for Vietnamese . Mình không biết nó có đúng không nhưng mà âm dark L nghe như " eo " của việt . Nhưng bạn để ý khi bạn nói từ "meo " thì bạn thả lỏng lưỡi, nhưng "email" thì bạn đẩy lưỡi lên cao hàm răng trên( đừng chạm vào vòm miệng trên ) , giữ ở vị trí đó, hơi gồng cứng .

    • @NguyenNguyen-pi9xk
      @NguyenNguyen-pi9xk 8 лет назад

      Bổ sung một tí : email /i-ma-l/ ( phiên âm AHD ) Tức là bạn sẽ phải phát âm đúng nguyên âm / a-/ trước khi phát âm tiếp theo /l/ - ( Bạn nào đã học qua cách phát âm chuẩn từng nguyên - phụ âm chắc sẽ thắc mắ điều này )

    • @vietchanchinh
      @vietchanchinh 2 года назад

      Dung vay. L nghe nhu eo-l, khong phai en(l). Vi vay ma bell nghe beo-l, alpha nghe ao(l)pha. Va bill nghe biu(l), Walmart nghe nhu wo(l)mart. Khong phai benl, anlpha, binl, Wonlmart.

  • @marukchozt6744
    @marukchozt6744 9 лет назад

    i found that roll up the tongue makes the L sound more clear,, (correct me if im wrong)
    about finding the familiar sounds, it brought me such a hard time changing my accent (still bothers me..), cuz even the sounds are possibly the same, it's still not actually the way that native speaker speaks that;; and when u try to fill in a sentence within that word, for tongue that it isn't easy to be continued moving the way that it feels comfortable. It's quite similar to the situation that u r counting down and randomly using both Roman numerals and Arabic numerals, they mean the same, but look different.

  • @juniortoronto
    @juniortoronto 8 лет назад

    Well done! Thanks a lot!