Wednesday, October 27, 2010

U.S. English Pronunciation Lesson 14: the vowels /e/ and /ɛ/

U.S. English Pronunciation
Lesson 14: the vowels /e/ and /ɛ/

The vowel sound /e/ is commonly represented in English as the letter 'a' or the combination 'ai', but like all vowels in English, there are quite a few spelling variations. The sound /ɛ/ commonly appears as the letter 'e'.

Keep in mind as you learn English pronunciation that English spelling is rather unpredictable with a multitude of exceptions and variations. The rules sometimes seem to lack a predictable pattern. Fortunately there are only a limited number of 'phonemes', or sounds. That's why these pronunciation lessons focus on the phonemes and try to give only non-exceptional spelling examples. This should make it easier for you to master the individual sounds as you progress and start to encounter variations and exceptions. Individual phonemes are represented by their International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA) symbol between forward slashes: / /. To further simplify things, we will only cover vowel pronunciation in standard U.S. English. We will not cover the multitude of variations that exist in the different U.S. regions or in different countries.



/e/

Linguists call the vowel sound /e/ a close-mid front vowel. It is pronounced in the middle to upper front part of the mouth. Play the sound recording* below to get a better idea of its pronunciation.

Practice repeating this sound a few times. Then, practice the following words containing the /e/ sound:

lane
pane
pain
make
lake
take
rain
main
gain
rate



/ɛ/

The vowel sound /ɛ/ is like /e/ but it is pronounced a little lower in the mouth. Play the sound recording* below to get a better idea of its pronunciation.

Practice repeating this sound a few times. Then, practice the following words containing the /ɛ/ sound:

pen
pet
get
men
wreck
left
nest
wet
bet


The goal of this course is to help you learn English pronunciation in simple, easy-to-understand terms, while at the same time giving you enough familiarity with technical linguistic concepts to move on to other, more advanced topics. Try reviewing the previous pronunciation lessons (see links to the right).

Lesson 15: The vowels /æ/ and /ə/ -->


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*ESLPort.com is not the original author of the vowel sound recordings used herein. They are used with permission and licensed under the Creative Commons attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license. They were obtained from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vowel#Audio_samples. The original author does not endorse ESLPort.com or its use of this recording.