Hello everyone,
I am not a native English speaker.
Can anybody tell me the differences in pronouncing /əl/ and /əʊ/?
To me, it seems that they sound the same.
It's quite confusing.:-(
Thank you in advance for your help!
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Hello everyone,
I am not a native English speaker.
Can anybody tell me the differences in pronouncing /əl/ and /əʊ/?
To me, it seems that they sound the same.
It's quite confusing.:-(
Thank you in advance for your help!
To be more specific:
For example, according to dictionary, "financial" is pronounced as /faɪˈnænʃəl/If I pronounce it as
/faɪˈnænʃəʊ/, is there any difference?
If yes, what is the major differences in the position of tongue, roundedness of lips etc.?
Thank you very much!
Sometimes the /l/ is subject to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Labialisation; in this case //əl/ approaches [əʊ].
My phonetics teacher (early '70s) had been a teacher of German. He told us that when he was teaching in the East End of London, he got his students to pronounce the German /o/ (very close to the cardinal [o]) by telling them to copy the vowel sound that they used at the end of the word 'people'.
b
Bobk:
Thank you very much for your reply.
Do you mean that there is lip-rounding in /l/ of /əl/, so that /əl/ resembles /əʊ/?
If it is the case, do I need to move my tongue to the alveolar ridge when approaching /l/ in /əl/, or just simply use a /əʊ/ sound to replace?
Thanks!:-)
Yes, that's what happens (lip-rounding) in some cases (some /l/s in some phonetic contexts, more so in some accents than in others). But note that the Wikipedia article refers to it as a feature of 'secondary articulation'. It's never essential, and it's often wrong. Don't do it.
b
Yes, that's what happens (lip-rounding) in some cases (some /l/s in some phonetic contexts, more so in some accents than in others). But note that the Wikipedia article refers to it as a feature of 'secondary articulation'. It's never essential, and it's often wrong. Don't do it.
b
The first is made with the tongue touching the palate, the second is produced with the lips closing into a small opening.