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American English Pronunciation Podcast (Pronuncian.com), #106: “Long u” stressed and reduced

#106: “Long u” stressed and reduced

The long u can be difficult to recognize in multi-syllable words, especially when it's reduced Hi everyone, and welcome back to Seattle Learning Academy's American English pronunciation podcast. My name is Mandy, and this is our 106th episode.

Transcript

Before I get to the long u sound, I would like to announce something new we are doing at Pronuncian: sponsorships! As our podcast and website have grown, so have our bandwidth costs. Instead of making fewer podcasts or putting less sounds online for you, we are now accepting sponsors to help cover those costs. If you or anyone you know might be interested in helping to sponsor our podcast, go to pronuncian.com/advertising to see more details.

We're particularly interested in helping other English teachers or tutors reach out to students. It's an affordable way to get your name and services out in front of people who need you! So again, check pronuncian.com/advertising if you are interested.

I am really excited to introduce you to our first sponsor, Audible.com! Lucky for you, Audible has asked us to offer you a free audio book. All you need to do is sign up at audiblepodcast.com/pronuncian, and choose your free book. I've used audiobooks in the classroom with my students a number of different times. They are a really great way to work on listening skills and learn new vocabulary. Plus, they offer huge opportunities for you to practice mimicking the speech patterns of the book reader. During the next few weeks I'm going to tell you some books you might enjoy. I actually just finished listening to an audio book from Audible that some of you might find interesting. It's called, The Adventure of English . If you really want to know why English is the way that it is, check out this book. It's written by Melvyn Bragg, and is narrated by British actor Robert Powell. Obviously, since the narrator is British, it is not read with an American accent. However, Powell does a brilliant job of speaking in a variety of English accents, both current and past, as he talks about the history of English. Because of the dialects you get to hear during the expert narration of The Adventure of English , it's one book that you can actually get much more out of by listening to than from reading yourself. If learning more about English is not for you, Audible has a huge selection of 75,000 titles, so there is certainly something there you'd enjoy. Plus, it's free, and you get to keep the book you choose, even if you immediately cancel your account, so you have nothing to lose! Just go to Audible.com/pronuncian. Your sign-ups directly support this show.

For today's show, I'm going to talk about a sound that really gets overlooked, the long u . The long u sounds like ( long u ), as in the word cute . Today, I'm going to talk about long u in multi-syllable words, and how to reduce the long u sound. When I say reduced long u sound, I'm talking about the long u when it occurs on an unstressed syllable of a multi-syllable word. A common long u substitution is the oo sound . This is because the sounds are so similar; the long u sound is just an oo sound with a y sound before it. The oo sound is pronounced as ( oo sound ), and the long u sounds like ( long u ). Can you hear the difference: oo sound ( oo sound ), long u ( long u )?

I often hear words like accumulate pronounced as *accoomoolate , or document pronounced *docooment . Don't get me wrong, these accidental substitutions will probably not cause miscommunication, they just enhance your accent, and you may want to be aware of them. The spellings for the long u sound in multi-syllable words can be difficult sound to grasp because, as words gain syllables, their phonetics often become considerably harder to see. In big, long words, the long u sound is often spelled with just the letter u somewhere in the middle of a word, and often the word has a suffix.

Before we look at longer words, let's find the patterns of short, single syllable words. The general pattern for the long u sound is that it can be spelled:

u-consonant-e, as in the word cute u-e, as in the word fuel e-w, as in the word few

The confusing part is that those spellings can all also be pronounced as the oo sound . There is a way to know if the pronunciation will be long u or oo sound , however. The long u sound is more likely when the consonant sound before the spelling is any of the following six consonant sounds:

m sound , as in the word amuse k sound , as in the word cute n sound, as in the word continue f sound , as in the word few b sound , as in the word distribute v sound , as in the word view

As I already mentioned, spelling patterns become less important in multi-syllable words because suffixes and other circumstances can affect and change spellings.

Here are some examples of words that have the long u sound spelled with just the letter u. In single-syllable words, the long u pronunciation is unlikely with just a single letter u; in multi-syllable words, however, it comes up more frequently.

fusion circulate contribution document stimulate communicate formula mutual accumulate

I want to focus on the word accumulate for a bit because it gives us an interesting comparison of a stressed long u sound and an unstressed long u sound in a single word. Because the word accumulate ends in the -ate suffix, we know that the word is stressed on the third from the last syllable. In the word accumulate , the stressed syllable falls on the c-u syllable, acCUmulate . The c-u syllable of the word accumulate sounds like ( k sound + long u ), accumulate .

Immediately after the c-u syllable in the word accumulate is the m-u syllable, which also has a long u sound. However, since the m-u syllable is next to a stressed syllable, the m-u syllable gets reduced. This is a common function of schwa, or reduced vowel sounds. Your dictionary shows schwa as an unside-down letter e . The m-u syllable of the word accumulate sounds like ( m sound + y sound +schwa), accumulate .

The important thing here is that the long u sound, which is pronounced as ( long u ) when it is stressed, is pronounced as ( y+schwa ) when it is unstressed. So, if I break the word accumulate into its individual syllables, it is pronounced a(c)-cu-mu-late.

Your American English dictionaries will probably show the c-u syllable in the word accumulate transcribed as a k sound , then a y sound , then an oo sound . That gives you ( k sound , y sound , oo sound ) It will then show the m-u syllable as an m sound , a y sound , and then a schwa, which gives you ( m sound , y sound , schwa), a(c)-cu-mu-late .

Let's compare some stressed long u sounds to some unstressed long u sounds. In the following words, the long u is stressed:

fusion communicate contribution mutual

And in the following words, the long u is reduced:

circulate document stimulate formula

I'm going to say all eight of those words again for you to repeat after me. Here is the stressed long u :

fusion communicate contribution mutual

And here is the reduced long u :

circulate document stimulate formula

That's all for today, everyone. If you have a pronunciation topic you'd like me to discuss in a podcast, let me know in our forums. I get a lot of ideas from the forums, and I like the opportunity to interact with all of you! So go check them out at www.pronuncian.com/forums. Forum accounts are always free.

This has been a Seattle Learning Academy digital publication. SLA is where the world comes to learn.

Bye-bye.


#106: “Long u” stressed and reduced

The long u can be difficult to recognize in multi-syllable words, especially when it's reduced Hi everyone, and welcome back to Seattle Learning Academy's American English pronunciation podcast. My name is Mandy, and this is our 106th episode.

Transcript

Before I get to the long u sound, I would like to announce something new we are doing at Pronuncian: sponsorships! As our podcast and website have grown, so have our bandwidth costs. Instead of making fewer podcasts or putting less sounds online for you, we are now accepting sponsors to help cover those costs. If you or anyone you know might be interested in helping to sponsor our podcast, go to pronuncian.com/advertising to see more details.

We're particularly interested in helping other English teachers or tutors reach out to students. It's an affordable way to get your name and services out in front of people who need you! So again, check pronuncian.com/advertising if you are interested.

I am really excited to introduce you to our first sponsor, Audible.com! Lucky for you, Audible has asked us to offer you a free audio book. All you need to do is sign up at audiblepodcast.com/pronuncian, and choose your free book. I've used audiobooks in the classroom with my students a number of different times. They are a really great way to work on listening skills and learn new vocabulary. Plus, they offer huge opportunities for you to practice mimicking the speech patterns of the book reader. During the next few weeks I'm going to tell you some books you might enjoy. I actually just finished listening to an audio book from Audible that some of you might find interesting. It's called, The Adventure of English . If you really want to know why English is the way that it is, check out this book. It's written by Melvyn Bragg, and is narrated by British actor Robert Powell. Obviously, since the narrator is British, it is not read with an American accent. However, Powell does a brilliant job of speaking in a variety of English accents, both current and past, as he talks about the history of English. Because of the dialects you get to hear during the expert narration of The Adventure of English , it's one book that you can actually get much more out of by listening to than from reading yourself. If learning more about English is not for you, Audible has a huge selection of 75,000 titles, so there is certainly something there you'd enjoy. Plus, it's free, and you get to keep the book you choose, even if you immediately cancel your account, so you have nothing to lose! Just go to Audible.com/pronuncian. Your sign-ups directly support this show.

For today's show, I'm going to talk about a sound that really gets overlooked, the long u . The long u sounds like ( long u ), as in the word cute . Today, I'm going to talk about long u in multi-syllable words, and how to reduce the long u sound. When I say reduced long u sound, I'm talking about the long u when it occurs on an unstressed syllable of a multi-syllable word. A common long u substitution is the oo sound . This is because the sounds are so similar; the long u sound is just an oo sound with a y sound before it. The oo sound is pronounced as ( oo sound ), and the long u sounds like ( long u ). Can you hear the difference: oo sound ( oo sound ), long u ( long u )?

I often hear words like accumulate pronounced as *accoomoolate , or document pronounced *docooment . Don't get me wrong, these accidental substitutions will probably not cause miscommunication, they just enhance your accent, and you may want to be aware of them. The spellings for the long u sound in multi-syllable words can be difficult sound to grasp because, as words gain syllables, their phonetics often become considerably harder to see. In big, long words, the long u sound is often spelled with just the letter u somewhere in the middle of a word, and often the word has a suffix.

Before we look at longer words, let's find the patterns of short, single syllable words. The general pattern for the long u sound is that it can be spelled:

u-consonant-e, as in the word cute u-e, as in the word fuel e-w, as in the word few

The confusing part is that those spellings can all also be pronounced as the oo sound . There is a way to know if the pronunciation will be long u or oo sound , however. The long u sound is more likely when the consonant sound before the spelling is any of the following six consonant sounds:

m sound , as in the word amuse k sound , as in the word cute n sound, as in the word continue f sound , as in the word few b sound , as in the word distribute v sound , as in the word view

As I already mentioned, spelling patterns become less important in multi-syllable words because suffixes and other circumstances can affect and change spellings.

Here are some examples of words that have the long u sound spelled with just the letter u. In single-syllable words, the long u pronunciation is unlikely with just a single letter u; in multi-syllable words, however, it comes up more frequently.

fusion circulate contribution document stimulate communicate formula mutual accumulate

I want to focus on the word accumulate for a bit because it gives us an interesting comparison of a stressed long u sound and an unstressed long u sound in a single word. Because the word accumulate ends in the -ate suffix, we know that the word is stressed on the third from the last syllable. In the word accumulate , the stressed syllable falls on the c-u syllable, acCUmulate . The c-u syllable of the word accumulate sounds like ( k sound + long u ), accumulate .

Immediately after the c-u syllable in the word accumulate is the m-u syllable, which also has a long u sound. However, since the m-u syllable is next to a stressed syllable, the m-u syllable gets reduced. This is a common function of schwa, or reduced vowel sounds. Your dictionary shows schwa as an unside-down letter e . The m-u syllable of the word accumulate sounds like ( m sound + y sound +schwa), accumulate .

The important thing here is that the long u sound, which is pronounced as ( long u ) when it is stressed, is pronounced as ( y+schwa ) when it is unstressed. So, if I break the word accumulate into its individual syllables, it is pronounced a(c)-cu-mu-late.

Your American English dictionaries will probably show the c-u syllable in the word accumulate transcribed as a k sound , then a y sound , then an oo sound . That gives you ( k sound , y sound , oo sound ) It will then show the m-u syllable as an m sound , a y sound , and then a schwa, which gives you ( m sound , y sound , schwa), a(c)-cu-mu-late .

Let's compare some stressed long u sounds to some unstressed long u sounds. In the following words, the long u is stressed:

fusion communicate contribution mutual

And in the following words, the long u is reduced:

circulate document stimulate formula

I'm going to say all eight of those words again for you to repeat after me. Here is the stressed long u :

fusion communicate contribution mutual

And here is the reduced long u :

circulate document stimulate formula

That's all for today, everyone. If you have a pronunciation topic you'd like me to discuss in a podcast, let me know in our forums. I get a lot of ideas from the forums, and I like the opportunity to interact with all of you! So go check them out at www.pronuncian.com/forums. Forum accounts are always free.

This has been a Seattle Learning Academy digital publication. SLA is where the world comes to learn.

Bye-bye.