Connected Speech in British English - Improve your Fluency & Pronunciation - Vowel to Vowel with /w/

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Connected Speech in British English is a fast way to improve your Fluency and Pronunciation.
In this lesson, Liz explains how to link vowel to vowel with the /w/ sound.

#fluency #britishenglish #/w/

As with all her lessons, they are fun and interesting, which will upgrade your British English Language skills far more quickly than standard lessons. The more fun the lesson is, the faster you learn!

Do you have a question?? Please write it in the comments section below and I will do my best to answer or I may publish another lesson explaining the answer just for you.

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It's very useful .... Thank you Liz.

cromlechs
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Hi! Thanks a lot Mr’s. Liz! The lesson was such a brilliant and I really learnt a lot from you . God bless you !

salaheldin
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Thanks Liz! Before the dialogue practice, I suggest close up and different speeds of your mouth speaking phrases as examples, then giving pauses for students to practice might help more.

Additionally, including the intonation marks would definitely helps because it’s hard to guess and mimic when I or other students haven’t learnt the intonation series already.

It takes much time to listen and guess then to really practice the connected speech part.

Thanks

perryloud
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Thank you!!! In the other video about J linking sound, you gave an isolated example using THE; which similar example can you offer for this video? I see you jumped straight to the reading, and I could not detect the W sound as I did with the other video on the J linking sound. Thank you!!!

mikei
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It was very hard to pronounce this text. I'm sure I'll fail this question again. But I try to do everything!

olgayaresko
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Dear Liz, thank you for sharing this great lesson. I have a question about linking the word TO with other words starting with a vowel sound: In the book American Accent Training, Ann Cook transcribes the expression "access to individuals" as <akses t' indvidjuals>. I asked my private English teacher about this linking and she confirmed that this pronunciation is correct and there should be no smooth linking, however, she was not able to explain why. Now I am quite confused: is this an exception from the rule or are there more situations when TO should not be linked smoothly with the next word... I would be grateful if you could shed some light on this. Kamil

piotrkrawczyk