Also, I love how you say "Good!" every once in a while. When I repeat what you say and you say "Good!", I feel like you're talking to me. Having lived in Canada for some time, I always want to say "Thank you!" 😂
I learned all of this during my "Sounds of English" class in my English Studies Bachelor, but it is great to fresh up my memory. We also learned it for British English. As a German who learned American English during my exchange year, I find it really helps to break down the vowels. I can never get British English right, but with this method I bet you can get close to any accent. Thank you! This was fun!!!
Amy, I've spoken American English for 83 years...I thought! After watching you for 15 minutes, I have no idea what dialect I do speak. I really do try to use all the letters in a word: awesome DOES have a "w" in it. Frinstuhns: "awsum, I don't say, ahsum". Aside: Back in '04, I played the butler, Frith, in a black and white "Rebecca" by du Maurier, and had to speak with a British dialect. I loved it and the process revealed many things about my speech. Great experience!!
As a Brazilian English learner, learning from your videos is way easier than learning from other English teachers on youtube because they complicate it so much and you make it so easy!
"Another whole" you mean, or "a whole other". This construct reminds me of the the "infix expletive" - i.e. "un·be-freaking-lievable". (I am not doubting your accent, btw!!)
I'm Australian... it's weird having about half of the stuff feel familiar, and half feel foreign. It's also weird just kind of copying along and not expecting to sound American, and then actually managing to.
There are many American features of Aussie English! More than people realize! So many people say rp is easier for Americans than oz English but Aussie feels more natural to me as an American 🤷🏼♀️
Following this with your PDF - amazing! And, thank you. Drama school training flooding back to me (all hail the diphthong!) so the clear way you go through each sound is invaluable x
Having such a beautiful teacher can be distracting, but I have to improve my accent so I guess I ll have to handle it. heheheh thanks for such a great video.
I think I just filled the cup in my own mind that is in the middle of a case of the ends of my energy cycle that is in the process of a second time in a psychiatric condition that is in the form of a case of cancer treatment's genetic material and you are a doctor for breaking up the holy trinity of the heart of all time.
You're a great pronunciation teacher the best here on TH-cam! Congratulations I've been reducing my accent so much since I started to watching ur videos, the method works fine. Thank you so much!!!!
You are amazing! I've been acting for 30 years and doing American accents, but this is so much more detailed! I'm really enjoying developing my accent with your incredible tutorials. :)
This is great. Even though i've been talking english for over 20 years i still don't notice certain details like the ones that you've just mentioned in your video. When i record my voice i notice that it doesn't sound american put it's very difficult to figure out why. I kept saying "today" incorrectly for example and i only notice such mistakes because of your video. Very helpfull, thank you!
Her accents are spot on. I wanted to say that first and foremost. Second, is she a model? She has the prettiest smile and eyes, and I adore her red speckled, chestnut brown hair.
18:25 slight English/Irish vernacular when saying “worried”. Is she originally English or Irish, or have some background from there? And again at 22:48 when she says “again “. Also at the end when she says “letter” at 23:27 Unless I’m hearing things, it seems to “peek out” when she’s fatigued 😊
Been trying to find good tutorials on the Welsh and Scottish accents, especially Welsh but there's not much out there. Are you planning on doing any videos for these accents or have you done any in the past? Cheers, thanks :-)
So, I'm from New Zealand and I'm having trouble with this -- I feel I'm doing more of a Canadian/Midwestern regional accent but I can't pinpoint where I'm going wrong
polymphus exactly how i feel im middle easter but basically grew up speaking english and my accent stuck with me neither a middle easter accent not american gosh!!
Rick apparently not very often. Haha it’s probably me picking it along when I watch movies and/or tv shows, I had some practices and somewhat got stuck with it. Can’t really change it. 😂
Native speaker here, from DC. Has the cot/caught distinction really gone away in standard American? To me, cot, wok, and nod all have the ah vowel and walk, caught, and gnawed all have the aw sound. The words on and off sound like ahn and awf, no?
I have worked with speech Synths, Vintage 80,s, English to Phonetics algorithms plus and a little Traditional Mandarin Chinese with 7 tones, more constantans and vowels Pretty much impossible to read traditional Chinese (Ornate) unless you learned it before you brain plasticized as a child. Great Job. Thanks.
I'm Literally a 100% American yet find this interesting cause I can hear what my accent sounds like. When I was little I used to think we didn't have an accent. Until I pronounced water with a D like Wader
In your standard American tutorial, I am so impressed by how polished and “clean” the pronunciation is. I’ve rarely heard such a clean accent. The majority of Americans that I have heard over the years have a much “dirtier” accent that incorporate subtle regionalisms from all over. I think very hard an distinct regional accents are fading, and what is evolving is this amalgam of softer regional characteristics that are becoming identified with “standard” American accent.
you say that you're giving the accent warm up for fee but i can't find it. On your site it just leads me to enroll and tries to charge me. Where do I find the "free" warm up?
I can't really work out what makes the kind buzzy nasal distortion that American accents have. That's the thing that stands out the most for me, not the slight differences in rhoticism or vowel sounds or anything else. It's like fry + bunched tongue + tightened cheeks + something else. When I say a phrase in my northern British accent and a (bad) American accent side by side, the American one just seems to have a lot more frequencies and formants in it. Would be interesting to see on a spectograph
Just tried pinching my nose and talking and it sounds basically the same, but then I try and do a "HEY VSAUCE MICHAEL HERE" kind of American accent and do the same and the whole tonality changes, so it's definitely the nasal property that affects it a lot
Because it can help you understand the specific features of your own accent better. Often the vowel and consonant sounds we intuitively assume we're saying isn't actually what we're objectively saying on a phonological level.
ʌ__2:01__ ɑː____4:19__ æ__ 6:36 eɪ__9:05 e__11:00 iː__12:32 ɪ__14:35 aɪ__16:29 ʊ__17:32 ʊ__18:56 dd oʊ__19:48 aʊ__41:41 u.ə__22:43
thanks
ei is 9:23
Me, an American: wow this is easy!
funny, I felt the same on a British accent tutorial video....im Indian.....f****
@@VedantNaik ya because we speak mixture of both the American and British accent but more of British accent
Where is your part 2
Where is your part 2
@@DeepakSharma-qn4lx - All you've got to do is enter the title of this video exactly with Part 2 in place of part one, the same thing for 3,4, and 5
As an Australian actress who needs help with American accents this was very helpful, thanks
OMG I bet you’re Margot Robby
@@jamespagous3954 Silence virgin! Dis queen is mine! >8]
@@picklewart5382 lol 😆😂
American don't have accents though.
/s
Also, I love how you say "Good!" every once in a while. When I repeat what you say and you say "Good!", I feel like you're talking to me. Having lived in Canada for some time, I always want to say "Thank you!" 😂
"Valley girl" aka california people say "guud" haha
Recently i hade a role in Elvis a musical revelation in Australia an the and the southern accent is so very different to thee northern
Her English accent is so flawless, the few times she flits into it I'm not able to say confidently whether she's English or American.
I've seen her videos before. I'm pretty sure she's from Seattle, which is a pretty accent-neutral place
accent neutral😂
You mean a general american accent*
As an American who has perused several How To Speak American videos, this approach seems more practical and effective than many of them.
you could say anything and I'd watch all day.
I learned all of this during my "Sounds of English" class in my English Studies Bachelor, but it is great to fresh up my memory. We also learned it for British English. As a German who learned American English during my exchange year, I find it really helps to break down the vowels. I can never get British English right, but with this method I bet you can get close to any accent. Thank you! This was fun!!!
I love the interactive feel to this! You're a lovely teacher!
I'm English and learnt something from your excellent tutorial!
Amy, I've spoken American English for 83 years...I thought! After watching you for 15 minutes, I have no idea what dialect I do speak. I really do try to use all the letters in a word: awesome DOES have a "w" in it. Frinstuhns: "awsum, I don't say, ahsum". Aside: Back in '04, I played the butler, Frith, in a black and white "Rebecca" by du Maurier, and had to speak with a British dialect. I loved it and the process revealed many things about my speech. Great experience!!
I'm American but you have this magical spell on me and I can't stop watching your videos :(
Amy's face could sink a thousand ships.
As a Brazilian English learner, learning from your videos is way easier than learning from other English teachers on youtube because they complicate it so much and you make it so easy!
I have a reeeally strong southern accent and this is like learning a whole nother language lol
"Another whole" you mean, or "a whole other". This construct reminds me of the the "infix expletive" - i.e. "un·be-freaking-lievable". (I am not doubting your accent, btw!!)
I love the Southern accents, I say don't change!
You are the best teacher of English i have ever seen. just i wanna say thank you so much about this video
I'm Australian... it's weird having about half of the stuff feel familiar, and half feel foreign. It's also weird just kind of copying along and not expecting to sound American, and then actually managing to.
Mira Tarnish my thoughts exactly ahah
There are many American features of Aussie English! More than people realize! So many people say rp is easier for Americans than oz English but Aussie feels more natural to me as an American 🤷🏼♀️
I’m from New Zealand and I found this tutorial the most helpful.
Following this with your PDF - amazing! And, thank you. Drama school training flooding back to me (all hail the diphthong!) so the clear way you go through each sound is invaluable x
Everytime I say the SCHWA, I would smile!!!
Thanks for the help and looking forward to the next episodes!!
Thank you Amy!! So helpful for an Australian wanting to learn American! You're also adorable! Thank you :)
Having such a beautiful teacher can be distracting, but I have to improve my accent so I guess I ll have to handle it. heheheh thanks for such a great video.
I think I just filled the cup in my own mind that is in the middle of a case of the ends of my energy cycle that is in the process of a second time in a psychiatric condition that is in the form of a case of cancer treatment's genetic material and you are a doctor for breaking up the holy trinity of the heart of all time.
You're a great pronunciation teacher the best here on TH-cam! Congratulations I've been reducing my accent so much since I started to watching ur videos, the method works fine. Thank you so much!!!!
I watched this years ago and it really helped. People mistake me for an American now because of how I speak.
She's so nice to look at and interesting to listen to. Lovely person.
Could you please give the link to the warm up video. Thanks a lot.
Hey guys found it up 21accents.com/vocalandbodywarmup/
You are amazing! I've been acting for 30 years and doing American accents, but this is so much more detailed! I'm really enjoying developing my accent with your incredible tutorials. :)
This is great. Even though i've been talking english for over 20 years i still don't notice certain details like the ones that you've just mentioned in your video. When i record my voice i notice that it doesn't sound american put it's very difficult to figure out why. I kept saying "today" incorrectly for example and i only notice such mistakes because of your video. Very helpfull, thank you!
Her accents are spot on. I wanted to say that first and foremost. Second, is she a model? She has the prettiest smile and eyes, and I adore her red speckled, chestnut brown hair.
Hello, I want to thank you for this beautiful video along to your extraodinary accent also.
so so amazing. the best teacher of the world!!!
This way is very useful.and your teaching style is awesome and very helpful.
Brilliant teacher - thank you.
Am Scottish an a love this channel.
Beautiful teacher !
I love her accent videos. This lady is amazing.
18:25 slight English/Irish vernacular when saying “worried”. Is she originally English or Irish, or have some background from there?
And again at 22:48 when she says “again “.
Also at the end when she says “letter” at 23:27
Unless I’m hearing things, it seems to “peek out” when she’s fatigued 😊
excellent lecturing mrs amy we love you as we are somali students frm east africa 👏👏👏
Thank you ma'am, and i have to say something, you are so great because i understand your all American accent .
I'm learning English but the accent was a problem for me cuz i wanna talk like Americans! but you make me love learning 🥰 thank you
I'm here for the same reason 🙂
Hi Amy ! Excellent explanations! I love your videos! Bye for now!
I am so happy i found this channel. You make studying fun!
Fantastic work, Amy! No more videos anymore?
Awesome video, thanks Amy. where can I find a tutorial like this but in Australian English? Does anyone know?
*Your level of replication is impeccable.
She has one of the teethiest smiles I've ever seen. But it looks nice
Justin W. *it just scares me....*
I'm litterally crushing bruh 🤣🤣
I love your efforts and yes eyes too.
Been trying to find good tutorials on the Welsh and Scottish accents, especially Welsh but there's not much out there. Are you planning on doing any videos for these accents or have you done any in the past? Cheers, thanks :-)
So, I'm from New Zealand and I'm having trouble with this -- I feel I'm doing more of a Canadian/Midwestern regional accent but I can't pinpoint where I'm going wrong
polymphus exactly how i feel im middle easter but basically grew up speaking english and my accent stuck with me neither a middle easter accent not american gosh!!
thx so much for this, very easy to follow and you´re a great teacher :)
Wow this is intense and feels so interactive :)
I dont see the warm up video your mentioning at the beginning, can you put in a link please?
Hey guys found it up 21accents.com/vocalandbodywarmup/
I already have an American accent before this video and I was raised in Perth Australia. I clicked on this video for no reason. Silly me 😅
Rick apparently not very often. Haha it’s probably me picking it along when I watch movies and/or tv shows, I had some practices and somewhat got stuck with it. Can’t really change it. 😂
Native speaker here, from DC. Has the cot/caught distinction really gone away in standard American? To me, cot, wok, and nod all have the ah vowel and walk, caught, and gnawed all have the aw sound. The words on and off sound like ahn and awf, no?
I have worked with speech Synths, Vintage 80,s, English to Phonetics algorithms plus and a little Traditional Mandarin Chinese with 7 tones, more constantans and vowels Pretty much impossible to read traditional Chinese (Ornate) unless you learned it before you brain plasticized as a child. Great Job. Thanks.
Saya senang menggunakan aksen Amerika. so, I learn a lot
this is really helpful,wish there are more videos
youre doing this so so amazing. thanks so much :-)
I can't get the worksheet paper any help pls!!!
I am an American and got through 8 and a half minutes before I questioned why I am watching this
It's her smile
I'm Literally a 100% American yet find this interesting cause I can hear what my accent sounds like. When I was little I used to think we didn't have an accent. Until I pronounced water with a D like Wader
😂😂😂 I want to rid myself of my northern accent.
Cant find the warmup video
In your standard American tutorial, I am so impressed by how polished and “clean” the pronunciation is. I’ve rarely heard such a clean accent. The majority of Americans that I have heard over the years have a much “dirtier” accent that incorporate subtle regionalisms from all over. I think very hard an distinct regional accents are fading, and what is evolving is this amalgam of softer regional characteristics that are becoming identified with “standard” American accent.
thanks a lot amy great teacher
hi .. pl can do you do the online classes for the accent training too? i wanna really learn the general flawless American accent .
You're so good at it. Too cute for it. Keep up the good work!🤝
you say that you're giving the accent warm up for fee but i can't find it. On your site it just leads me to enroll and tries to charge me. Where do I find the "free" warm up?
I entered the 21 accents page and is down :( does anyone has the link or the document?
Such amazing content, thank you 🙏
Вау,это очень информативно)
Спасибо, теперь на уроках английского никто не упадет в обморок от моего акцента :D.
Awesome lesson 🙏
As an American, I can proudly say I aced this video exercise.
I can't really work out what makes the kind buzzy nasal distortion that American accents have. That's the thing that stands out the most for me, not the slight differences in rhoticism or vowel sounds or anything else. It's like fry + bunched tongue + tightened cheeks + something else. When I say a phrase in my northern British accent and a (bad) American accent side by side, the American one just seems to have a lot more frequencies and formants in it. Would be interesting to see on a spectograph
Just tried pinching my nose and talking and it sounds basically the same, but then I try and do a "HEY VSAUCE MICHAEL HERE" kind of American accent and do the same and the whole tonality changes, so it's definitely the nasal property that affects it a lot
The website is not found 404 error
lm learning english with you♥️
You are absolutely fantastic!
I'm in love of this beautifull readhead
I have an American accent why am I here lol
LOL
Alisha Santiago same
wish i did !lol
Because it can help you understand the specific features of your own accent better. Often the vowel and consonant sounds we intuitively assume we're saying isn't actually what we're objectively saying on a phonological level.
***** k....lol
Awesome Amy Walker
You are great. Thank you.
England is one beautiful amazing country 🙌🏴🇬🇧❤️
Is the 3rd E in whenever actually a schwa? As in lOve, wAs, tOday? Whenever seems different.
Can't find the worksheet!!☹️
muy bien
nice post. v ery educational.
Thank you for this video!
Thank you
I find american accents terribly boring. maybe that's cause I'm american.
SniffyPoo Honestly, I really love all the southern accents. My favorite of them all.
same, I'm learning on how to do a British accent.
I think that explains why XD I find this stuff pretty interesting. Not American BTW
For me American accent is the best
@Blue eyed Eurasian Which country are you Non-Americans from?
Wow thank you so much, super helpful and easy to learn 👍🏼
I couldn’t find the list can anyone help me to get it ??
شكرا
What is Shwa?
This is a lot of fun.
Good vowel lessons!
Thank you for a very helpful video!
Standard American accent...
From which part of the United States?
im british and it just makes me sound like a brit even more
Same
And in America... we love that! ❤😊
Guys is there a worksheet or what
Super! Thanks! 👍
Good explanation! Perfect beauty
Not sure if you've already done it but you should try to do a English Yorkshire accent, that'll be a challenge for you.