Hey! 👋 Yesterday we reached Twitch affiliate! 🥳 Thank you to those who join me on there. If you didn’t know already, I use Twitch to teach English through video games. Come and join us! We have loads of fun and it’s such an immersive and innovative way to learn language! 😄 👉👉 www.twitch.tv/procrastinationwithemma
The very word GLOTTAL is a glottal stop. I love your explanation, dear! For us, brazilian people who speak English, is too tough to speak this sound. But you did it easier for us. Thanks a lot!!!
I really like your methodology and very clear technic in your teaching. Thank you very much! I prefer to pronounce the "T" it sounds more elegant and clear. Besides, it is easy to understand for me. I absolutely love a well spoken English or any language.
It was so amazing lesson, and this dialect or accent is my favourite in hole the English ❤ since my first visit to LONDON in 2012 i became a very big fan of the " cocny " and this is how i wanna sound like, as my many nephews in LONDON ❤
Helped me properly understand the glottal stop. Thank you so much, it's a feature in so many languages and now I can replicate how it's used in their speech.
You are the second person who makes me fall in love learning English(after Hermione/Emma Watson) Hopefully in one day i can meet you at least for saying "thanks for teaching me"
Great video, I was struggling to explain this “silent consonant” thing to my bf and after this he finally understood :) British English is so beautiful.
As an American, I do this a lot with words ending in t, te, k, or ke, but never with words like water or better (with the t in the middle). I’m from Minnesota :)
I can't express my Happiness because of your that kind of lesson makes me feel better about understanding fast native speech. Thank you so much. Bye the way, Your gesture is very fantastic ❤️
I love to learn new things and challenging lesson everyday. This is it. This lesson is fantastic highlighting different ways of pronunciation of certain words such as 'water', 'better ' etc. in the UK. We're really grateful to have you Emma. Keep it up your splendid lessons. 👍💪💖
as a Midwest in the US, we also replace our T with D and also use glottal stops. that being said it's very nice to see this channel as i came by it randomly.
"uh oh" is good example to understand. it's easy to understand but hard to practise now. following is just note to share voiceless plosive [p] [t] [k] [tʃ] have glottal stops. two situations: 1. pre-glottalization: followed by another consonant or when the consonant is in final position 2. glottal replacement: /t/ occurs between vowels
You sound as if you just got off the bus from Leeds ! As a Yorkshireman I’m used to hearing the glottal t. But Leodiensians have got it off to a fine art. 😊😊😊
Hello professor Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance i really appreciate your job. I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity. All the best Your follower from Algeria
Thank you mam for teaching me because I was weak in English then I subscribe your channel and then I learn English language. Thank you so much. I wish, I meet you soon mam.
I am an ESL Teacher and this is my fourth year teaching adults English. I student asked me about the glottal stop the other day and I had no idea what he was talking about so here I am now watching your video! I knew about this but didn’t know there was a name! We learn something new everyday! I hear an accent from your end so I am assuming your are British! I wonder if the pronunciation of the glottal stop is different in England compared to the English from United States? What is cockney? Thank you for your video! I am also a new subscriber! ❤
this is something i really have to keep an eye (well, an ear) on in a formal setting. in casual conversation i naturally use glottal t, but in, say, a job interview, i focus on pronouncing t. its interesting that with some people, their perception of things such as your class or level of intelligence will be affected by it. another thing ive noticed with the glottal t at the end of words, is people may opt to "properly" pronounce the t when they're angry or being firm. for example, a calm "please sit down" may have the glottal t, but an angry "SIT!" they may pronounce the t.
Today I'm having a phonetics class about glottal stops and so I wanted to investigate before. So I found your video, which explains so well this concept, thanks!
I come from the county of Sussex, however I have a rather ruralite accent. As such, even though everybody around me can, I just can't pronounce glottal stops without it hurting my throat! The video definitely helped more than most, but I think I'm quite far away from doing it seamlessly. Then again, I guess most would have difficultly with th-stopping!
Hola Emma. Muy bueno el vídeo. A mí por lo menos, me gusta más como se escucha cuando lo pronuncian con la "T". Encuentro que suena más bonito. Saludos desde Chille.
I am learning for my midterm in phonetics (english is not my first language but i chose it as my major) and rn im at english consonants where the glottal stop ? is mentioned. I didnt quite understand it just by the book so this video was really helpful . Thank you 💜
Emma, i registered to unknown twich, but cannot find the way to use it for my English learning strategy. A special lesson on it? No doubt about it, it is an adventure to join your classes. Even if the English sounds are not easy to learn for me, even if I am not able to catch the sounds during your lessons, there is a bit of advantage in listening to you from each and every meeting on TH-cam. You make your classes light like a feather. It is a great mistake to stop exercising pronunciation, especially if you are a lone wolf student of English in your mother country. As your lessons are not boring, I use them as a kind of starting warm up before other techniques of studies of English. Thank you.
Basically in this scenario, the glottal stop replaces the hard consonant sound of the 't', right? I always thought of the glottal stop as when you have to of the same sounds back-to-back. Frasier did an example with the name "Jack Crane" where Niles says you either have to say it fast to blend the two sounds together, or break out the 'dreaded glottal stop' to separate the sounds, which is uncomfortable for the throat.
Great lesson! Im from Britain and my accent is very much like this.. I was to start pronouncing my T's because I just sounds a lot nicer🤣 I think glottal words make me sound like a commoner
@@Pronunciationwithemma As a non British person, i get problem while understanding the way they pronounce words. 😂😂i swear, I feel that British people has habit to pronounce half word or i just hear it. I still don't understand how they pronounce "How are you?" Can you make a video on it. i hope you understand what I'm trying to say
I love hearing the tone of your voice. It is really relaxing and very good articulated, easy to cheat it. 👍😍 I was wondering if l could use the glottal stop in every word of my speech. ☺
Hi Emma thank you for the video! May I ask when we have the [t] both 1) after the vowel 2) before a consonant, then do we normally prioritise to glottalise it or omit it? like in 'Don't stay' (because in another video you talked about sometimes the [t] will drop off before the next consonant. Many thanks :)
Hey! 👋 Yesterday we reached Twitch affiliate! 🥳 Thank you to those who join me on there. If you didn’t know already, I use Twitch to teach English through video games. Come and join us! We have loads of fun and it’s such an immersive and innovative way to learn language! 😄
👉👉 www.twitch.tv/procrastinationwithemma
Hi!
Hi, I got you today as 💎.
And more thing you are supergorgeous, I m in love with the way you teach❤️
Thank you very much Emma. You're a great teacher, congrats. Bernardo, from Brazil 😊
As an English speaker, I am surprised at how many glottal stops there are in my everyday speak that I’ve never noticed!
@Amey Tiwari Haha, don't kill yourself over English! We're not worth worrying that much about :D
Can we drop the t of "noticed" too ?
As an American it’s easy to notice in the UK given its absent here in the states
@@pokemonhunter8418 yeah
How can water pronounces as wo ' er ???? I have checked in the online dictionary , it sounds wo der ???
Is that the british spelling you teach ??
It's the best channel for those who really want to improve their pronunciation
Really appreciate your work Emma 🙂
That’s so kind ☺️
The very word GLOTTAL is a glottal stop. I love your explanation, dear! For us, brazilian people who speak English, is too tough to speak this sound. But you did it easier for us. Thanks a lot!!!
That's quite useful to know, so I can understand the native speakers more easily.
I really like your methodology and very clear technic in your teaching. Thank you very much!
I prefer to pronounce the "T" it sounds more elegant and clear. Besides, it is easy to understand for me.
I absolutely love a well spoken English or any language.
Wow, thank you so much for the wonderful lesson. Watching this until Barcelona Vs Bayern Muenchen, this is definitely the best day for me.
Thank you 😄
It was so amazing lesson, and this dialect or accent is my favourite in hole the English ❤ since my first visit to LONDON in 2012 i became a very big fan of the " cocny " and this is how i wanna sound like, as my many nephews in LONDON ❤
Helped me properly understand the glottal stop. Thank you so much, it's a feature in so many languages and now I can replicate how it's used in their speech.
You are the second person who makes me fall in love learning English(after Hermione/Emma Watson)
Hopefully in one day i can meet you at least for saying "thanks for teaching me"
I’m proud that I can help :)
me too
me too
A huge respect for you from Yemen ,thanks teacher .
This made sense. Thank you. I'm learning a very odd new language, and this gave my ears a way to know what to tell my mouth to do!
Great video, I was struggling to explain this “silent consonant” thing to my bf and after this he finally understood :) British English is so beautiful.
I don’t understand why you would teach people to mispronounce words, thus making communicating far more difficult.
As an American, I do this a lot with words ending in t, te, k, or ke, but never with words like water or better (with the t in the middle). I’m from Minnesota :)
I can't express my Happiness because of your that kind of lesson makes me feel better about understanding fast native speech.
Thank you so much.
Bye the way,
Your gesture is very fantastic ❤️
Was looking for tips on how to teach the glottal T and found this helpful and very clear. Brava!
Thanks for everything teacher.
Useful lesson and useful time .
cool. good explanation. When there is no t at all you can tell the vowel is longer and it drops in pitch
I love to learn new things and challenging lesson everyday. This is it. This lesson is fantastic highlighting different ways of pronunciation of certain words such as 'water', 'better ' etc. in the UK. We're really grateful to have you Emma. Keep it up your splendid lessons. 👍💪💖
I love this lessons. You are a fantastic teacher!!!
Thank you for this video!! I’m a linguistics and languages student and this helped me understand it much better!! Keep up the good work💙
oh my God I've never seen a teacher like you, thanks for your channel
You are so beautiful as your teaching style.... I can't think anything without your classes...
She's the best ♥️
I'm from India and I'm learning British accent for Zayn!🧿❤️ You are slaying it! Thanks!❤️🌈
as a Midwest in the US, we also replace our T with D and also use glottal stops. that being said it's very nice to see this channel as i came by it randomly.
No we don't in the Midwest USA we replace the T and D with a alveolar flap
@@beasley1232 my apologies.
"uh oh" is good example to understand. it's easy to understand but hard to practise now.
following is just note to share
voiceless plosive [p] [t] [k] [tʃ] have glottal stops. two situations:
1. pre-glottalization: followed by another consonant or when the consonant is in final position
2. glottal replacement: /t/ occurs between vowels
Yup, it's exactly what I talked about in the video.
John Snow on Game of Thrones says to Ramsy Bolton, 'we don't need a battle.' and I remember that the /t/ in battle was glottalized.
4:40 When your partner finds out you cheated on them.
🤣
The best comment!
You're one visionary, Gabriel! I laughed quite hard on that one :D
@@leonixnn -- Sometimes I also get surprised by the things I come up with. Her serious expression helped it quite a lot too!
@@GabrielRodriguesYT The correct response (when discovered cheating) is to flag every glottal stop as each allegation is put to you.
I am learning much to you you're great teacher i come from india
You sound as if you just got off the bus from Leeds ! As a Yorkshireman I’m used to hearing the glottal t. But Leodiensians have got it off to a fine art. 😊😊😊
The english teacher who is so pretty and nice.
Emma: simply the best.
Hello professor
Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance i really appreciate your job.
I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity.
All the best
Your follower from Algeria
Best tutorial I’ve come across so far!
Thank you mam for teaching me because I was weak in English then I subscribe your channel and then I learn English language. Thank you so much. I wish, I meet you soon mam.
She should have more subscribers. Let's share her content
"Shut the door!" - love it!
Emma I like your accent
I'm trying to imitate it all the time
😥😥
But I'm doing great job
That’s great to hear! 😁
well thank you emma , you helped me to graduate. thank you , thank you and thank you
Thank you for this detailed class. I learn so much with your videos! 🇧🇷
Thank you :)
I am an ESL Teacher and this is my fourth year teaching adults English. I student asked me about the glottal stop the other day and I had no idea what he was talking about so here I am now watching your video! I knew about this but didn’t know there was a name! We learn something new everyday! I hear an accent from your end so I am assuming your are British! I wonder if the pronunciation of the glottal stop is different in England compared to the English from United States? What is cockney? Thank you for your video! I am also a new subscriber! ❤
this is something i really have to keep an eye (well, an ear) on in a formal setting. in casual conversation i naturally use glottal t, but in, say, a job interview, i focus on pronouncing t. its interesting that with some people, their perception of things such as your class or level of intelligence will be affected by it.
another thing ive noticed with the glottal t at the end of words, is people may opt to "properly" pronounce the t when they're angry or being firm. for example, a calm "please sit down" may have the glottal t, but an angry "SIT!" they may pronounce the t.
Love your teaching style.
Thanks for the video.
Very nice explaination maam., Thank you 😊😊😊
Best of days, From India.
I enjoy your learning style and I feel I improve my pronouncation think so much emma.
Water great explanation of the glottal stop/glottal T.
This one really helps me as I'm an BSED-English student🧡❤
Also known as: become british.
This actually explains just as much if not more than Tom Scott's phonetics lessons! Thanks.
not sure who Tom Scott is but glad this video helps.
I have an exam tomorrow and this was very helpful! Thanks alot ♡
Thank you Emma I enjoyed your video. You've done very helpful video .
Thanks you Emma
Love Your Classes So Much 🎈💯💕🎉🎈🎊♥️ Tons of Thanks from Brazil🇧🇷
I really appreciate the way you use to explain your lesson much love beautiful teacher
Until recently I never had any difficulty with pronunciation but saying "butt" the way the Brooklyn 99 cast says it for example was so hard for me :D
Thank you, this is very useful.
Love you teaching Emma
Today I'm having a phonetics class about glottal stops and so I wanted to investigate before. So I found your video, which explains so well this concept, thanks!
I come from the county of Sussex, however I have a rather ruralite accent.
As such, even though everybody around me can, I just can't pronounce glottal stops without it hurting my throat!
The video definitely helped more than most, but I think I'm quite far away from doing it seamlessly.
Then again, I guess most would have difficultly with th-stopping!
Then how do you pronounce “It occurred to me”
“Ito curred to me”?
this type of prononcuation is my fav ^w^
Those re helping me ...thank you so much . Now ... I know how to say British accent ...i love you
Hola Emma. Muy bueno el vídeo.
A mí por lo menos, me gusta más como se escucha cuando lo pronuncian con la "T". Encuentro que suena más bonito.
Saludos desde Chille.
Aaaah..... nice. I've found this video 'bout glottal T sound. I like this video because glottal T is actually used in American accent. 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸 🇺🇸
I am learning for my midterm in phonetics (english is not my first language but i chose it as my major) and rn im at english consonants where the glottal stop ? is mentioned. I didnt quite understand it just by the book so this video was really helpful . Thank you 💜
My pleasure! Best of luck with your studies:)
I've learned a lot from you, you've a sort of charm in your face.
Great job, Emma! Bravo
Great tips for the glottal "t", Emma. Thanks! Now you have me training that! 🙌🏻😉
Thank u so much for another beautiful videos and teaching Emma...🍾🥂🍾🍾🎊🎉🎈🙏🙏🙏👍👍👍
Your teaching style is so amazing keep it
What a wonderful explaination. Thank you!
Because of the way you teach us to pronounce, i have a hope that if i meet alan walker, he will understand my accent. Thank you❣️
Thank you
brilliant and vibrant Glottal T
Emma your video is very helpful with me. Thanks so much
Emma, i registered to unknown twich, but cannot find the way to use it for my English learning strategy. A special lesson on it?
No doubt about it, it is an adventure to join your classes. Even if the English sounds are not easy to learn for me, even if I am not able to catch the sounds during your lessons, there is a bit of advantage in listening to you from each and every meeting on TH-cam. You make your classes light like a feather. It is a great mistake to stop exercising pronunciation, especially if you are a lone wolf student of English in your mother country. As your lessons are not boring, I use them as a kind of starting warm up before other techniques of studies of English.
Thank you.
Come and join my live streams on twitch and you’ll see how you can learn language that way :) I stream every Wednesday at 4pm!
I love your channel, I think you are a great teacher . Your lessons help me to talk right. ♥️♥️♥️
this is very useful, thanks for sharing your time and your knowledge...
Fantastic.....you are a star...I watch your video without a pause..
Basically in this scenario, the glottal stop replaces the hard consonant sound of the 't', right?
I always thought of the glottal stop as when you have to of the same sounds back-to-back. Frasier did an example with the name "Jack Crane" where Niles says you either have to say it fast to blend the two sounds together, or break out the 'dreaded glottal stop' to separate the sounds, which is uncomfortable for the throat.
awesome lesson Thanks Ma'am 👌
Great lesson! Im from Britain and my accent is very much like this.. I was to start pronouncing my T's because I just sounds a lot nicer🤣 I think glottal words make me sound like a commoner
@rickalta2770 its neither, its just a way of speaking. I just prefer a bit more RP sounding
I love y so much my beautiful 😍 teacher my respect my love 😘😘😘😘 to y amazing 😍❤️💞😍😘 lesson ❣️❣️ million thanks 😊☺️😘
Thank youuuu!! 😁
I love me some debuchalization of the unvoiced alveolar plosive!
Emma thanks a bunch for teaching us❤❤❤
Very good 😊
Many thanks
Thanks Emma! Good video 👍
that`s the best video on the topic i`ve ever seen!!!!
I am very much indebted you, dear Emma. Your service is invaluable 👌👌👌
i really want a second part of this video. Its so fun to learn.
What would be in the second part?
@@Pronunciationwithemma As a non British person, i get problem while understanding the way they pronounce words. 😂😂i swear, I feel that British people has habit to pronounce half word or i just hear it. I still don't understand how they pronounce "How are you?" Can you make a video on it. i hope you understand what I'm trying to say
I have watched and learned from you, so I hope I will be successful in the future
Thanks, teacher.
I found it both interesting and useful.
Very nice ❤ Emma mam.
Thank you so much Goddess of English, I am so glad I found and subscribed to your channel❤
Thank you 😄
@@Pronunciationwithemma ur welcome 😍
I appreciate your lesson, it's useful. Thank you so much. From Nigeria
You’re very kind :) thank you
I love the glottal stop!
Thank you for this!
Really useful thanks a lot Emma
I love ❤ british accent
Love you so much Emma. 😊
I love hearing the tone of your voice. It is really relaxing and very good articulated, easy to cheat it.
👍😍
I was wondering if l could use the glottal stop in every word of my speech. ☺
Hi Emma thank you for the video! May I ask when we have the [t] both 1) after the vowel 2) before a consonant, then do we normally prioritise to glottalise it or omit it? like in 'Don't stay' (because in another video you talked about sometimes the [t] will drop off before the next consonant. Many thanks :)