Connected speech

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Rachel Adams

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Hello

Why in the phrase ''nice to meet you!'' the 't' can hardly be heard? Is it an example of connected speech?
 

Rachel Adams

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The sound at the end of 'meet' varies considerably from speaker to speaker. In BrE:

some speakers have a very clear stopped /t/;
others may produce a more muted stopped /t/;
an increasing number of speakers produce a glottal stop rather than a /t/;
some will run the /t/ of meet and the /j/ of you together, producing anything between /tj/ and /tʃ/.
Thank you, Piscean. I heard the unusual (for me unusual) pronunciation in this video. It is from the book English File. It is at 1:06. When the girl says 'nice to meet you.'
 

GoesStation

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When I say Pleased to meet you, the last two words sound almost the same as me chew.
 

GoesStation

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