Three different -ed sounds in English

Sarah McGee


There are three different -ed sounds in English

 For example, the -ed in "walked" sounds different than in "called".

 -ed can sound like /t/ or /d/ or /ed/

 

/t/ has a puff of air and sounds like this.

/d/ has no puff of air and sounds like this.

/ed/ sounds like you are pronouncing "ed" separately.

Put your hand in front of your mouth and try to pronounce /t/ and /d/

When you say /t/, you should feel air on your hand.

When you say /d/, there should be almost no air on your hand.

    

If the verb stem ends with a puff of air, you need the /t/ sound

Put your hand in front of your mouth and say “walk”.

Do you feel the puff of air?  You should. "walked" has the /t/ sound.

 

 If there is no puff of air, you need the /d/ sound

 Put your hand in front of your mouth and say “call”.

 You should not feel air on your hand.  "called" has the /d/ sound.

 

 If a word ends in "d" or "t", you need the /ed/ sound.

 "needed" has the /ed/ sound.  It sounds you are saying "need" and then "ed".

 

Please listen to the video to hear more pronunciation of -ed!

I hope this information has been useful for you to improve your pronunciation in English!

Please be sure to visit my profile. Thank you!  

Sarah

 

 

保存リストに追加済み

本コラムは、講師個人の立場で掲載されたものです。
コラムに記載されている意見は、講師個人のものであり、カフェトークを代表する見解ではありません。

コメント (0)

ログインして、コメント投稿 ログイン »

出身国:

居住国:

教えるカテゴリ

講師の言語

英語   ネイティブ
ドイツ語   ネイティブ級
スペイン語   日常会話程度

Sarah McGee講師の人気コラム

« 全講師コラム一覧へ戻る
お気軽にご質問ください!