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  • In this American English pronunciation video,

  • we're going to learn how to make the

  • UR as in BIRD sound.

  • I sometimes say this is the vowel version

  • of the R consonant. It's always followed by R,

  • and there's no distinction between the

  • sounds in American English. This sound

  • will always be written with two different

  • International Phonetic Alphabet, or IPA,

  • symbols, but will be pronounced

  • rrrrrr, just one sound, bird.

  • To make this sound, the corners of the

  • lips come in, pushing the lips away

  • from the face. The middle part of the

  • tongue lifts towards the roof of the mouth

  • in the middle. The front of the tongue hangs

  • down, but it's drawn back a bit. So, it's not

  • touching anything.

  • As the tongue lifts in the middle, it may be

  • close to the roof of the mouth without

  • touching it, or it may touch the sides of

  • the roof of the mouth, or the insides or

  • bottom of the top teeth, here, ur, ur.

  • This, along with the R consonant, is one

  • of the hardest sounds to make in American

  • English. It's especially hard because the

  • lip position hides the tongue position.

  • Let's take a look.

  • From the side, we can't even see the

  • tongue. The front view doesn't help

  • much either. This is because the

  • tongue goes back, but the lips flare

  • forward.

  • Here's the word 'hurt'. Watch the

  • tongue pull back and up

  • before coming forward for the T.

  • In a stressed syllable, the UR vowel curves

  • up then down. Hurt, ur. In an unstressed

  • syllable, it's lower in pitch, as well as

  • quieter and quicker, ur, ur. The vowel

  • is unstressed in the word 'research', ur.

  • Let's look at this word up close

  • and in slow motion.

  • The lips flare, but the jaw doesn't

  • drop as much.

  • Let's compare the stressed UR in

  • 'hurt', on the top, with the unstressed

  • vowel in 'research', on the bottom.

  • The lips flare for both, but in this case,

  • there was much more jaw drop for the

  • stressed version of this vowel.

  • This is typical. Unstressed vowels are

  • shorter, so there isn't as much time to

  • make the full mouth position.

  • The UR vowel, stressed: hurt, UR

  • Unstressed: research, ur

  • UR, ur, UR, ur

  • Example words. Repeat with me:

  • Earth, search, circle, thirteen, return, outburst.

  • I hope this video helps you understand

  • this sound. That's it, and thanks so much

  • for using Rachel's English.

In this American English pronunciation video,

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