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Eva Easton's American English Pronunciation

Eva Easton's American English Pronunciation

American English Pronunciation

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R: walk work

Thursday, November 2, 2017 by Eva Easton 3 Comments


walk … work
/wɔk/ … /wɚk/

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-walk-work.mp3

 

is king of the consonants .
It can make vowels disappear.

That’s what it does here.
wor at the beginning of a word = /wɚ/

work
/wɚk/

[Wonder Word Link]

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-work-R.mp3

 

1.  To make the vowel sound /ɔ/,
your mouth makes the shape of a ball /bɔl/.

2.  The letter L is pretty,
but we don’t pronounce it in the word “walk.”

walk
/wɔk/

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-L-ball.mp3

 

walking … work
/ˈwɔ–kɪŋ/ … /wɚk/

They’re walking to work.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-walk-to-work.mp3

 

work … walkers
/wɚk/ … /ˈwɔ–kɚz/

In the city people work as dog walkers.
They walk dogs while the owners are at work.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-dog-walkers.mp3

 


walking … work
/ˈwɔ
–kɪŋ/ … /wɚk/

He is walking home from work or school.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-walking-home.mp3

 

walk
/wɔk/

They’re taking the children for a walk.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-children-for-a-walk.mp3

 

work … walk
/wɚk/ … /wɔk/

When people have a day off from work,
sometimes they go for a walk or a bike ride in the park.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-go-for-a-walk.mp3

 

workers … crosswalk
/ˈwɚ–kɚz/ …. /ˈkrɔs–wɔk/

The workers are painting a new crosswalk.
We should cross the street only at the crosswalk.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-paint-crosswalk.mp3

 

/ˈwɔ–kɚ/

The elderly man is using a walker.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-elderly-walker.mp3

 

walking
/ˈwɔ–kɪŋ/

Click on the picture to watch the coyote move.
He’s not walking.
He’s tip-toeing…trying to sneak up on someone.

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-coyote.mp3


Note

other words with silent l = /ɔk/

balk … caulk … chalk … talk … walk
/bɔk/ … /kɔk/ … /t͡ʃɔk/ … /tɔk/ … /wɔk/

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-more-silent-l-words.mp3

 

More Words with Silent L

could … should … would
/kʊd/ … /ʃʊd/ … /wʊd/
[Wonder Word Link]

colonel
/ˈkɚ-nəl/
[Wonder Word Link]

calf … half … salve
/kæf/ … /hæf/ … /sæv/

balm … calm … palm … psalm … qualm
/bɑm/ … /kɑm/ … /pɑm/ … /sɑm/ … /kwɑm/

folks … Lincoln … almond … salmon
/fowks/ … /ˈlɪn-kɪn/ … /ˈɑ-mɪnd/ … /ˈsæ-mɪn/

https://www.evaeaston.com/wp-content/uploads/walk-even-more-silent-l.mp3

The Secret of R:

  1. 1-syllable words
  2. unstressed r = /ɚ/ (part 1)
  3. unstressed r = /ɚ/ (part 2)
  4. consonant clusters
  5. disappearing vowels
  6. my classroom worksheets at the bottom of this page
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ji Youn Lee says

    Monday, November 6, 2017 at 12:26 am

    Walk, Salmon, Folks, and Calf !
    I never know that we don’t pronounce the pretty ‘L’ in these words. Most of the Korean students must be confused about this. Simply amazing to know it… *.*

    Thank you, my professor!

    Reply
  2. jose says

    Wednesday, October 21, 2020 at 10:31 am

    thanks

    Reply
  3. Eva Easton says

    Wednesday, October 21, 2020 at 12:06 pm

    Howdy Jose,
    These are tough words. Glad you found a way to learn how to pronounce them.
    Eva

    Reply

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