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  • In this American English pronunciation video, were going to go over the pronunciation

  • of the wordimportant’.

  • This is a tough word, and I’ve gotten lots of requests for it. Thanks for putting in

  • your request, I’m glad to do it for you.

  • I’m going to give you two different ways to pronounce this word. Either one is okay,

  • one is more common. Neither of them are what youll find when you look in a dictionary.

  • If you look in a dictionary, it says the pronunciation is: important.

  • Important, with two fully pronounced True T’s. Dictionaries haven’t really caught

  • up when it comes to the habits of Americans and the pronunciation of the letter T. ‘Important

  • is way over-pronounced. Check out the series Tom and made where we only used True T, no

  • reductions, and no contractions by clicking here or in the description. Youll see how

  • unnatural it sounds. So the pronunciations well study today will involve Stop T’s.

  • The natural way to speak American English.

  • This is a three-syllable word with stress on the middle syllable: im-POR-nt, da-DA-da,

  • important. That means the middle syllable will have the up-down shape of stress and

  • will be the loudest, longest, clearest syllable.

  • The first T comes in the pattern T-schwa-N. If youve seen my video onmountain’,

  • then you know this is a Stop T. Mount-ain, stop the air. Import-ant, stop the air. Don’t

  • make a True T sound, important. The second T can either be a Stop T or a True T: important

  • or important. Let’s watch up close and in slow motion to see how these sounds are made.

  • The jaw drops just a little bit for the opening vowel, the IH as in SIT vowel. The tongue

  • tip is down and forward. Then the lips come together for the M sound. The lips are in

  • position for the P, closed. The next sound is the AW as in LAW sound.

  • But when AW is followed by the R consonant, it is not a pure AW anymore. Instead of AW,

  • it’s aw, aw. My lips are rounding a bit more, AW, aw, and my tongue pulls back a little

  • bit. That brings the sound further back in my mouth. –Po-, -po-, instead of aw, aw.

  • The reason is the R. The tongue pulls back and up for the R, so it’s influencing this

  • vowel. I’m blending the R position with the pure AW position to get impo-r-. Let’s

  • see what this R-influenced AW vowel looks like.

  • The lips release from the P into this modified AW. Notice how the lips are quite roundedmore

  • rounded than in a pure AW vowel. Also, see how the inside of the mouth is dark. We don’t

  • really see the tongue. This is because it’s pulling back. Impo-. As the AW moves into

  • the R consonant, the lips relax just a bit. The tip of the tongue is pulled back and up.

  • Remember that this is our stressed syllable, im-por-. –Por-. Make sure you give it some

  • length, and that the pitch falls off, up-down, impor-. This is the character of a stressed

  • syllable.

  • Now we have another unstressed syllable. The front, flat part of the tongue goes to the

  • roof of the mouth for the N. Don’t worry about making a clear schwa sound. Go from

  • the position of the R, with the tip pulled back and up, into the N, with the front of

  • the tongue against the roof of the mouth. Stop the air for just a second before you

  • make the N sound.

  • It’s notporant” [2x], smooth, butportant [2x] , with a Stop. Make this stop

  • once your tongue is in position for the N. Portant. To finish, you can either stop the

  • air at the end, important. Or, you can make a True T, important, tt, tt.

  • Important, important. Either way, we stop the first T. This word is tough, but watch

  • this video several times, practice out loud, slowly, and I think youll start to get

  • the hang of it. If there’s a word or phrase you’d like help pronouncing, put it in the

  • comments below.

  • Also, I’m happy to tell you my book, American English Pronunciation, is available for purchase.

  • If you want an organized, step-by-step resource to build your American accent, click here

  • to get the book, or see the description below. I think youre going to love it.

  • That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

In this American English pronunciation video, were going to go over the pronunciation

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