Wow that's impressive. Actually my finals start tomorrow and it's my first year in college and I've been suffering a lot with linguistics😅 but thankfully I've found your channel! Thank you!! Love from Egypt.
As a speaker of British English I don't think i would say 'tree' like that, at least not all the time. That is a point actually, are these representing sounds as they happen in a flow of speech at normal speed, or as said individually, because that makes a difference.
Are you sure "tree" is officially transcribed like that? I can only find phonemic transcriptions of the word, but I don't think native speakers actually pronounce it with [tʃ]. I tried myself pronouncing the word, and my tongue is not in the palato-alveolar area of my mouth, but the alveolar area. However, I'm not a native person. I can't be 100% sure... Any thoughts anyone? Thanks for the videos by the way. Really useful and interesting!!
Some native speakers (most probably Americans) would indeed use a palato-alveolar affricate in these words. Another way (more British, and a much more intresting one, in my opinion), is a phonetic affricate [tɹ̠̝̊], where [ɹ̠̝̊] stands for a voiceless postalveolar non-sibilant fricative. There's also a voiced counterpart, like in "drain" [dɹ̠̝eɪn].
You are absolutely right, if /tr/ were to pronounce like/tʃ/, no foreigners would struggle with it at the first place, and everyone would sound native when pronouncing dry and try.
Thanks. I am in April 2020. The World is suffering Coronavirus. Your explanation is useful to me. Because I am going to teach Contrastive Linguistics this semester, and my students should remember about this basis of language.
HELLO HELLO its the middle of night and i am watching your video in 2023 and really i want to think you ! u did a great job , i hope you're doing well 🥰
Thank you a lot for your efforts due to is really interesting and helpful to us like a students in English department at university specially linguistics major thank you again.
These are excellent videos. The way that you pronounce “tree” is interesting, especially because you said that it is likely the way that most native English speakers pronounce it. I’m from the northeast of the United States, and I’ve been repeating the word and cannot, for the life of me, find a “ch” sound in there. I definitely enunciate the “t” without the “ch” sound. I don’t know if this is regional or particular to me, though.
The way you write æ is confusing. I had to look through my dictionary if there was an IPA symbol I had missed. æ is made with a lowercase a and e combined, ae=æ, but the way you write it makes it look like 2 and e. Also there is some visual errors on the video. Some fram stuttering with green frame inbetween. Other than that, great videos. Very helpful!
Yes, I tend to vary from pronouncing 'tree' with a [tr] and [tʃ], but whereas the latter is an affricate (and could therefore serve as a phoneme), the former consists of two sounds, so [tr] couldn't in and of itself be a phoneme.
Hi Mostapha. I only have a 3 part series on phonetics here on CZcams, but you might also check out the videos on phonetics on the UBC Visible Speech channel. They're all Free!
Hi Abatne. Articulatory phonetics involves the study of how sounds are produced in the vocal tract (these are what my videos address). Auditory phonetics involves the study of the perception of speech sounds, and acoustic phonetics involves the study of the properties of speech sounds themselves (e.g., amplitudes, frequencies).
Excellent video (with some technical problems). So, we want more. All of them are useful and very good explained. Please keep on.
Excellent teacher
It jus amazin.
I really really enjoyed ths lecture
You saved me from failing in lingusitic a sincere thanks
A smart way of teaching thank you so much
And thanks to people in comments to make clarification
It all helps non native english speakers
Wonderful: the explanation and the accent!Thank you.
You are the best professor
لك كل التقدير و الاحترام على اسلوبك الراقي و الرائع و اليسير❤
I hope to give us more practice like this
I wish I would have seen this video earlier. Thank you.
Thanks to you I actually understood Phonetics. Thank you so much
thank you so much , i really found your lessons helpful
Your videos are excellent!
Thank you for amazing video. Mr. Evan.
Muito bom. Parabéns, Professor. Apredi bastante.
I wrote in portuguese, my mother tongue.
Thank you so much Mr.Evan your videos are so useful **
Thank you. This video was very helpful!
Fantastic and academic guy .. shout out to you 💪
Wow that's impressive.
Actually my finals start tomorrow and it's my first year in college and I've been suffering a lot with linguistics😅 but thankfully I've found your channel! Thank you!! Love from Egypt.
That's so amazing
As a speaker of British English I don't think i would say 'tree' like that, at least not all the time. That is a point actually, are these representing sounds as they happen in a flow of speech at normal speed, or as said individually, because that makes a difference.
Brilliant video, thank you
You are a good teacher.
Thanks! Learned a lot!
Are you sure "tree" is officially transcribed like that? I can only find phonemic transcriptions of the word, but I don't think native speakers actually pronounce it with [tʃ]. I tried myself pronouncing the word, and my tongue is not in the palato-alveolar area of my mouth, but the alveolar area. However, I'm not a native person. I can't be 100% sure... Any thoughts anyone? Thanks for the videos by the way. Really useful and interesting!!
Some native speakers (most probably Americans) would indeed use a palato-alveolar affricate in these words. Another way (more British, and a much more intresting one, in my opinion), is a phonetic affricate [tɹ̠̝̊], where [ɹ̠̝̊] stands for a voiceless postalveolar non-sibilant fricative. There's also a voiced counterpart, like in "drain" [dɹ̠̝eɪn].
depends on which country you're from.. Britains wouldn't do that! Americans would i guess..
You are absolutely right, if /tr/ were to pronounce like/tʃ/, no foreigners would struggle with it at the first place, and everyone would sound native when pronouncing dry and try.
Thankfully for your wonderful explanation
we willbe pretty happy if you make some drfferent videos about different topics
Thanks. I am in April 2020. The World is suffering Coronavirus. Your explanation is useful to me. Because I am going to teach Contrastive Linguistics this semester, and my students should remember about this basis of language.
HELLO HELLO its the middle of night and i am watching your video in 2023 and really i want to think you ! u did a great job , i hope you're doing well 🥰
That was really useful
Thank you very much.
Thank you so much professor
Awesome 👌
Thank you a lot for your efforts due to is really interesting and helpful to us like a students in English department at university specially linguistics major thank you again.
عربية ؟
V.clear😍
THANK YOU!!
These are excellent videos. The way that you pronounce “tree” is interesting, especially because you said that it is likely the way that most native English speakers pronounce it. I’m from the northeast of the United States, and I’ve been repeating the word and cannot, for the life of me, find a “ch” sound in there. I definitely enunciate the “t” without the “ch” sound. I don’t know if this is regional or particular to me, though.
Hello! Yes, I suppose this will vary from speaker to speaker, and to further complicate matters, [tʃ] and [tɹ] sound very similar to one another!
very useful!
Thanks Evan.
3:31 Not Kāf ? Skip... m in love with your videos
You should add : in /i/ at the end of 'tree' there
awesome
very nice video for english learner
Courage Sir I like your teaching..... Very simple and understandable.
The way you write æ is confusing. I had to look through my dictionary if there was an IPA symbol I had missed. æ is made with a lowercase a and e combined, ae=æ, but the way you write it makes it look like 2 and e. Also there is some visual errors on the video. Some fram stuttering with green frame inbetween.
Other than that, great videos. Very helpful!
Anton Skarpås
It's possibly an older style of writing
great
what's the different between when we put / and [ ?
/ / - phoneme and [ ] allophones or phones
This just relived a lot of my stress
I'm sorry that my video made you relive stress in your life!
@@evanashworth490 oh sorry I meant relieve 😂
[tʃ] or [tr]? I myself pronounce it differently, and all dictionaries list [tr] as a different phoneme or IPA letter than [tʃ].
Yes, I tend to vary from pronouncing 'tree' with a [tr] and [tʃ], but whereas the latter is an affricate (and could therefore serve as a phoneme), the former consists of two sounds, so [tr] couldn't in and of itself be a phoneme.
Now I'm watching in 2020
❤❤ 0:03
Can I buy the whole series?
Hi Mostapha. I only have a 3 part series on phonetics here on CZcams, but you might also check out the videos on phonetics on the UBC Visible Speech channel. They're all Free!
@@evanashworth490 thnks alot mr Evan.
I learned that /e/ is a single vowel sound, not a diphthong...It is a mid fron tense vowel. the same thing happens with /o/
You are correct that /e/ and /o/ are monopthongs/single vowels; as the diphthongs using those vowels are written /eɪ/ and /oʊ/, respectively.
@@evanashworth490 but they're not part of a diphthong when you say "go". Therefore, the transcription must be /go/
@@josecarrizo4778 Actually, native English speakers will most likely say [goʊ], but, for example, L2 English speakers often say [go].
Tree is lik that in my dictionary
Tri:
Can u explain how they r different?
British English speaker?
This video is the same. Horrible flickering green flashes. Maybe you could correct them and re upload ithem? They really make it unpleasant to watch.
Hello My best teacher teacher con you please help me to explain me the different between articulatory auditory and acoustic phonetic
Hi Abatne. Articulatory phonetics involves the study of how sounds are produced in the vocal tract (these are what my videos address). Auditory phonetics involves the study of the perception of speech sounds, and acoustic phonetics involves the study of the properties of speech sounds themselves (e.g., amplitudes, frequencies).
Thank you si much My best teacher
what up next..
aʊt ɔv ɪntɹɘst iʊ kæn daʊnləʊd æn ap tu: ju:z ɐn jɔ: fəʊn
Here--> play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=kl.ime.oh&hl=en
Tree /tri:/
or [ʧɹi]
i have followed macmillan dictionary