Italian Pronunciation - How to Pronounce G, GHE, GI, and GE in Italian
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 11 июл 2014
- Italian Pronunciation - How to Pronounce G, GHE, GI, and GE in Italian //// Do you want to take your Italian to the next level? Click here: www.italymadeeasy.com/
#learnitalian #speakitalian #italian
Click here to watch our most popular videos: rcl.ink/cC6
Welcome back to another video about Italian pronunciation! In today's video, we'll be going over how to pronounce G, GHE, GI, and GE in Italian! Pronouncing the sounds of these consonants properly is important, as this will allow you to improve your Italian pronunciation and speak the Italian language more fluently. Watch this video and learn how to pronounce G, GHE, GI, and GE in Italian!
Thanks for watching today's video! If you enjoyed, be sure to leave a like rating (thumbs up) and a comment below! Also, be sure to subscribe to Italy Made Easy by clicking the red subscribe button below this video, and turn on our post notifications by clicking the bell icon after you subscribe!
Instagram: / italymadeeasy
Facebook: / italymadeeasy
Access all our free Italian resources ► rcl.ink/3Fd
Enroll in our structured Italian courses ► rcl.ink/RguxP
Listen to our Podcast 100% in Slow Italian ► rcl.ink/J1LBb
Get our free email Digest of Italian resources ► rcl.ink/F99gJ ► rcl.ink/3Fd
About Italy Made Easy and Manu Venditti:
Italy Made Easy is the channel and brand that helps English speakers learn, practice, improve and master the Italian language. Learn Italian, master Italian pronunciation, practice Italian listening and comprehension and learn more about the Italian culture.
Manu Venditti, 100% born and bred Italian, polyglot is a real Italian teacher with over 20 years of experience teaching Italian to English speakers. With students from all parts of the world, Manu has developed a method to learn Italian that works and that is not focused on Italian grammar and exercise, but rather on communication. With videos in slow Italian with subtitles and Italian lessons in English, you are guaranteed to “get it”. Learning Italian has never been easier!
Grazie mille,
A presto,
Manu
@italymadeeasy
Need to brush up my Italian today. Haven’t spoken a bit in 10 years, never knew I forgot the basics so much. Grazie for this! ❤️
Grazie a te e buon ripasso di italiano! 😊
invaluable lessons... Grazie!
In Vietnamese those rules are quite similar to Italian,
/g/ in ga, go, gu and ghi, ghe
/z/ in gi, gia, giu, gio, gie
super helpful, grazie
Grazie! +RhondaOnline72
Always happy to help!
Thankyou!
😘
this is an old video but thank you so much! This really helped me bro
😊
Hey Emanuele quick question. I speak both English and Spanish which is a huge advantage for me because Italian is almost similar to the Spanish language but I'm not familiar with ( gli ) I read that it makes it makes yee sound is that true? And also does
( GN ) make ( ñ ) sound like in Spanish?
+SerWizzy Spanish ñ does sound the same as Italian GN. And Italian GLI sounds like the Spanish LL (as in paella, llamar). When I say Spanish I mean standard Real Academia Española. Hope this helps!
I’m not sure if you still respond to comment but, do you have a lesson to explain how to pronunciation a double g? I came across the word aggiungere and I just want to make sure I’m pronouncing it correctly since I don’t have any relatives of friends who speak italian.
ruclips.net/video/nbm9jJmK_7Q/видео.html Maybe you'll find it helpful 😊
Hello, mister! I am from china and now living in Perth Australia. I've watched most of your videos and I've to say you are a really really good professore! But I've been confused by several problems about the pronuncia for so long and they're very annoying. They are below( I have no problem of voiced consonant and voiceless consonant):
1.Is letter p pronounced like that in sport or in paint?
2.Is letter t pronounced like that in extend or in tend?
3.When letter c is behind a,u,o, is it pronounced like the that in scott or like in candle?
4.Is letter z pronounced like ts in blankets or like ds in tends? And what about zz?
Hope for your answers! I would be very kind of you.
1. 2. 3. 4. there can be both cases...for ex we use the word "sport"
very good video!
😊
@@italymadeeasy 🙏🏼🙏🏼
Is there a word for a single-syllable being formed from a combination of three letters, such as "gia" and "gio"? I thought the word was "tripthong" yet that apparently only refers to all-vowel groupings. Of interest is the word "formaggio" (En. "cheese"; Sp. "queso"); the "gg," to this one, indicates a glottal stop before the syllable "gio" is pronounced. Is this correct (two syllables) or is it one syllable, rightly, of four letters? "Grazie per tutto quello che fai!"
for-màg-gio 😉
Is your online course new? There were no reviews, so I was curious...
Hi deena, we have open our new Academy on academy.italymadeeasy.com
- Italy Made Easy Staff -
The name of the car designer Giorgetto Giugiaro is a good example of all those 'j' sounds put together.
HAND GESTURES.....ITALIANS HAVE SUCH A BEAUTIFUL BODY LANGUAGE. I WOULD LOVE IF YOU UPLOAD A VIDEO ON THE DIFFERENT HAND GESTURES THAT ITALIANS USE ACTUALLY USE....
GRAZIE MANU❤❤❤❤.
Cute cute idea! 😍 Grazie!
@@italymadeeasy I am waiting for it .......😊😊😊
😍
Are there any example with "gl" sounding words?
If you means GI (like in this video), you could say: Giro (tour).
If instead you means GL , for example you could say : Coniglio (rabbit)
- Italy Made Easy Staff -
Hi, Im having trouble with the word famiglia. It is not J nor G. What is the sound?
Up till now I also pronounced GI IO VA NI and not GO VA NI.
what about GLI and GN please !!!!
Ciao! You can find the entire Italian pronunciation course at www.italymadeeasy.com/pronunciation. Un saluto!
One sound for one syllable. What gets me is when the g is silent.
What about ‘maglione’ and ‘maglia’
We use "maglione" referring to a woollen garment (as a jumper), while "maglia" to mean every kind of sweater, regardless of the composition
Where are lessons 7, 8, 9 etc This jumps straight to lesson 20 :(
The full course is available italymadeeasy.thrivecart.com/pronunciation/. Only some lectures are on RUclips.
Why is the name Gia not pronounced like the English „Ja“, but JIA?
When you are explaining the GHE and GHI, you say that the G is silent. Don't you mean that the H is silent?
+Fisherman Guy Yes! Sorry, must have gotten confused with my words, but yes, the H is silent
Thx