March 27, 2026

American English Pronunciation

American English Pronunciation Lessons:

AMERICAN ENGLISH PRONUNCIATION

A Comprehensive 4-Level Textbook

For English Language Learners

From Foundations to Fluency

How to Use This Book

Welcome to American English Pronunciation: A Comprehensive 4-Level Textbook. This book is designed for English Language Learners at all stages — from complete beginners to advanced speakers who want to refine their accent and communicate with confidence.

The Four Levels

LevelDescription
Level 1 — FoundationsLiteracy-level; letters, basic sounds, syllables, yes/no intonation
Level 2 — BeginningVowel & consonant sounds, syllable stress, question intonation
Level 3 — IntermediateConnected speech, rhythm, consonant clusters, reduction
Level 4 — AdvancedPhonemic precision, discourse intonation, linked speech, register

Icons Used in This Book

👂  LISTEN — Audio exercises. Listen carefully and repeat. 🗣️  SPEAK — Practice speaking aloud. Record yourself if possible. ✏️  WRITE — Written exercises to reinforce learning. 💬  DIALOGUE — Realistic conversations to practice in pairs.

IPA Symbols

This book uses International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbols shown in red between forward slashes: /symbol/. These symbols represent sounds, not letters. You will learn to read them gradually as you progress through the levels.

IPA Quick Reference Chart

American English Vowels

IPA SymbolSound ExampleKey WordHint
/iː/eesee, feet, meanSmile wide
/ɪ/ihsit, him, bigShort & relaxed
/eɪ/aysay, make, rainGlide e→i
/ɛ/ehbed, red, saidOpen & short
/æ/aacat, map, badJaw drops low
/ɑː/ahhot, car, fatherMouth wide open
/ɔː/awlaw, call, moreLips rounded
/oʊ/ohgo, home, boatGlide o→w
/ʊ/oo (short)book, put, footLips relaxed
/uː/oo (long)food, blue, moonLips fully rounded
/ʌ/uhcup, fun, loveNeutral, short
/ə/schwaabout, sofa, takenMost common vowel!
/aɪ/eyemy, time, nightGlide a→i
/aʊ/ownow, out, foundGlide a→w
/ɔɪ/oyboy, coin, noiseGlide o→i

American English Consonants

IPA SymbolSound ExampleKey WordVoiced?
/p/ppan, stop, happyNo
/b/bbag, cab, aboutYes
/t/ttop, butter, catNo
/d/ddog, add, readyYes
/k/k/ccat, back, coolNo
/ɡ/ggo, big, againYes
/f/f/phfan, phone, offNo
/v/vvan, live, overYes
/θ/th (thin)think, bath, threeNo
/ð/th (the)this, with, otherYes
/s/ssun, bus, cityNo
/z/z/szip, has, roseYes
/ʃ/shshoe, wish, nationNo
/ʒ/zhmeasure, visionYes
/tʃ/chchair, watch, chipNo
/dʒ/j/dgjump, age, justYes
/m/mman, come, swimYes
/n/nno, sun, funnyYes
/ŋ/ngsing, thing, longYes
/h/hhat, here, helloNo
/l/lleft, tell, fillYes
/r/rred, car, hurryYes
/w/wwin, away, twelveYes
/j/yyes, you, yellowYes

APPENDIX

Appendix A — Answer Key (Selected Exercises)

Exercise 1 — Vowels and Consonants

LetterAnswer
BC (Consonant)
AV (Vowel)
TC
EV
MC
IV
SC
OV
DC
UV

Exercise 4 — Syllable Count

WordSyllables
garden2 (gar•den)
book1
television4 (tel•e•vi•sion)
open2 (o•pen)
beautiful3 (beau•ti•ful)
bus1
important3 (im•por•tant)
dog1

Exercise 6 — IPA Matching

WordIPA
book/bʊk/
phone/foʊn/
this/ðɪs/
sheep/ʃiːp/
think/θɪŋk/
jump/dʒʌmp/

Appendix B — Pronunciation Self-Assessment Rubric

Skill AreaBeginner (1-2)Intermediate (3)Advanced (4-5)
Vowel AccuracyConfuses most vowel contrasts; sounds are often unclearProduces most vowels correctly with some confusion on similar pairsConsistently accurate on all 15 vowel contrasts including schwa
Consonant AccuracyOmits or substitutes many consonantsProduces most consonants; some cluster difficultyAccurate on all consonants including /θ/, /ð/, /r/, /l/, /v/
Syllable StressCannot identify stressed syllables; all syllables equalStresses most words correctly; difficulty with polysyllabic wordsAccurate syllable stress; uses stress for contrastive meaning
IntonationMonotone; no distinction between question typesRising ↑ and falling ↘ patterns mostly correctFull range of intonation; intonation conveys pragmatic meaning
Connected SpeechSpeaks word by word; no linking or reductionSome natural linking; occasional reduction in familiar phrasesSmooth connected speech; natural reduction and linking throughout
IntelligibilityListeners need frequent repetition or clarificationMostly understandable to sympathetic listenersEasily understood by any listener in real-world contexts

Appendix C — Supplemental Vocabulary by Level

Level 1 — High-Frequency Vocabulary for Pronunciation Practice

CategoryWords (with syllable dots)
Familymo•ther, fa•ther, sis•ter, bro•ther, fam•i•ly, par•ents, chil•dren, ba•by
Numbersone, two, three, four, five, six, sev•en, eight, nine, ten, e•lev•en, twelve
Colorsred, blue, green, yel•low, or•ange, pur•ple, black, white, brown, pink
Foodbread, milk, eggs, rice, chick•en, veg•e•ta•bles, fruit, wa•ter, cof•fee, tea
Schoolpen•cil, pa•per, book, teach•er, stu•dent, class•room, home•work, test, grade

Level 2-3 — Stress-Contrast Word Pairs

1st Syllable Stress2nd Syllable Stress1st Syllable Stress2nd Syllable Stress
TAbletoDAYWINdowreVIEW
TEAcherreLAXSTUdentexAM
BEAutybeGINPROBlemreSULT
HAPpyexCITEMOTHerdeCIDE

Appendix D — Phonetic Tongue Twisters by Sound

Target SoundTongue Twister
/θ/ (th)The thirty-three thieves thought that they thrilled the throne throughout Thursday.
/ð/ (th)This is the weather the shepherd shears his sheep. Whether the weather be cold or not.
/r/Red lorry, yellow lorry. Around the rough and rugged rocks the ragged rascal ran.
/l/Lovely lemon liniment. Lily livered Leo leapt lightly over lazy logs.
/s/ vs /z/Suzy sells sea shells. Buzzing bees zoom through zigzag zebra zones.
/p/Peter Piper picked a peck of pickled peppers. A peck of pickled peppers Peter Piper picked.
/b/Betty Botter bought some butter. But the butter Betty Botter bought was bitter.
/tʃ/ and /ʃ/She sells seashells by the seashore. Which witch switched the Swiss wristwatch?
/w/ and /r/Whether the weather is warm, whether the weather is hot. We have to put up with the weather, whether we like it or not.
/æ/ and /ɑ/Ann can’t answer back after class. The fat cat sat on the black mat.
Clusters /str/, /spr/Strange strong strings spring straight. Stretch and spread your strips of striped strap.
Connected SpeechHow much wood would a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood?

Appendix E — Glossary of Pronunciation Terms

TermDefinition
PhonemeThe smallest unit of sound that distinguishes meaning in a language. English has about 44 phonemes.
IPAInternational Phonetic Alphabet — a system of symbols, each representing one unique speech sound.
VowelA sound made with an open vocal tract; no obstruction of air. English has 15+ vowel sounds.
ConsonantA sound made by partially or fully obstructing air flow in the mouth, throat, or lips.
SyllableA unit of pronunciation with one vowel sound. Every syllable has a nucleus (vowel).
StressThe emphasis placed on one syllable, making it louder, longer, and higher in pitch.
SchwaThe most common English vowel /ə/ — a short, neutral, unstressed sound (‘uh’).
IntonationThe musical rise and fall of the voice over phrases and sentences.
PitchHow high or low the voice sounds, determined by vocal cord vibration speed.
Minimal PairTwo words that differ by only ONE phoneme: bit/beat, cat/cut, ship/chip.
VoicedA sound produced with vibrating vocal cords (e.g., /b/, /d/, /v/, /z/).
VoicelessA sound produced without vocal cord vibration (e.g., /p/, /t/, /f/, /s/).
AspirationA puff of air released after voiceless stops /p, t, k/ at the start of stressed syllables.
Flap-T (tap)The American English /t/ between vowels sounds like a quick /d/: water, butter, city.
ReductionThe shortening or changing of unstressed sounds in natural connected speech.
LinkingWhen the final sound of one word connects smoothly to the initial sound of the next.
AssimilationWhen a sound changes to become more like a neighboring sound: ‘meet you’ → /miːtʃuː/.
ElisionThe deletion of a sound or syllable in natural rapid speech.
ClusterA sequence of two or more consonants with no vowel between them: str-, -nd, -sts.
Discourse IntonationIntonation patterns that organize speech beyond the sentence level, signaling topic shifts, contrast, and pragmatic meaning.