Like the slogan of "121" read by the army, it is not in Chinese. Pay attention to distinguish it, and send an I at the end of the word.
Ei, similar to Chinese, is English? Pronunciation of I together (pay attention to e in English and e in American? The same) lake manufacturing.
Drag your tail when you send Chinese characters, which is similar to the pronunciation of the tail. Compared with /I/, you should open your mouth a little wider and pay attention to your feelings. Pen for bed
Unlike Pinyin 'an, I feel bad things more specifically.
Similar to Chinese characters, but the mouth is wider and heat locked.
This sound is very special in American English. R is the articulation, ι is between ι and O, and the pronunciation of the letter R/ιR/ is not al ~, but when ι is pronounced, the mouth is narrowed, and it is between ι o, which sounds like /Aoer/. Pay attention to efforts
Wow law is similar to Chinese characters. Note: when you see the L at the end of the letter, you can pronounce it like ou, and the tip of your tongue is tilted: hall /h? L/ hall, followed by ou ~ tongue.
Pronunciation? R, this r is similar to Orr ~ there must be a for warning for the tongue curl.
Note: when the sound is followed by l, l is pronounced ou ~ and the tongue is upturned, such as oily soil roll.
Similar to the ending of Ou Wu ~, you need a little Wu feeling to be the authentic coat soap.
Similar to vowels, but different, the air outlet of U pronunciation lips is flat, and vowels are too emotional and food is cold (there must be an Ou ~ sound at the end, as above).
It's difficult to distinguish between hunger and hunger, so practice distinguishing between good ones [? D] book [b? k] 32
Pronunciation is similar to er, with a rolled tongue. Your [j? r; j? R] poor travel
Similar to the Chinese character Hungry, Pinyin E, strong and short pronunciation, and/? /The pronunciation is basically the same. Bus fare
Pronunciation as above/? /,the difference is weak pronunciation, in some phonetic symbols, italics are used? This means that you can ignore not reading before.
When there is a t or p after s, student ['studnt] is pronounced as mixed d b, so the actual pronunciation is /sdudnt/
Yes/? The abbreviation of r/ is pronounced hungry ~ r, and the tongue is curled [l? n]
Yes/? R/ abbreviation, and above/? /Similarly, a slightly lighter letter ['l? t? ]
It's I, life [la? f]
And then what? Chorus, under [da? [n] how [huh? ] House [huh? s]
Mergence air [? Be careful of the backup? R] (here because there is a p after s, it is actually pronounced [sb? r])
Here [h? r]; Idea [a? di? ]; Really? l]; (Simple without narration) 5 1
Note that the P before the vowel is similar to the Pinyin P, except that the P after the vowel is pronounced as pu (pu ~) light tone peak [PIK]; Cup [k? P] (actual [k? Pu], pay attention to the feeling)
The exception is the same as above. The pronunciation after vowels is bu, but the voice is very weak, and mob [mɑb] thugs can hardly be heard. The actual pronunciation is [mɑbu~].
Pronunciation is normal at normal speech speed, but when the actual speech speed is fast, you don't pronounce it, just put it in your mouth. In practice, you can feel this feeling, such as: slow down [? d]; Normal speed is good [? /] 。 In addition, the past tense t+ed ending in T and D in English is also reserved in pronunciation, such as: slow wanted ['w? nt? d]; Want normal speed? nt? /]
G at the end of the letter, same as above, the voice is suppressed.
/v/ The pronunciation principle is roughly the same as F. When you pronounce this sound, your upper lip bites the inner side of your lower lip, and then you blow out the air in your lips, so you must bring it to [? V]
Similar to the silk of Chinese characters, but the tongue should be stretched out to pronounce two sounds [boθ]
Kind of like Z, you must really understand that [? Father? ] (tongue rolling)
Pronunciation is similar to Chinese characters ~
/z/ When appearing at the end of the sound, the pronunciation is so light that it is almost inaudible, and the eyes [aiz]
When /z/ is preceded by /d/, /dz/ should be considered as similar sounds ~
Bed; Kids [kidz] (reading phonons ~)
When /m/ or /n/ appears after vowels, pronounce it well ~
aim[em]; Comb [kom] comb (gently ~)
Dean [din] Dean of college (pronounced um ~)
Similar to the Chinese pinyin eng, it belongs to the nasal band [br? ]
Note that singer[s] is pronounced [s? + ? ]
Pronunciation is similar to pinyin l ~ like [la? k]
/l/ The vowel is followed by Ou ~, and the tip of the tongue must be tilted up against the upper gum.
All [? l]; Sell [s? L] (roll your tongue and look back at Europe ~)
/r/ right [ra? t]
/r/ After vowels, it sounds like a tongue curl in Pinyin er.
Ear [? r]; Poor [p? r; p? r]
Pronunciation is similar to the pronunciation between e and I in pinyin, and it is also similar to ~ you [ju]
English often has the pronunciation of /tju/ /nju/, but in American, all J's are omitted and become /tu/ /nu/
Such as: student English ['stju? d(? )nt]; Beauty ['beauty] n.
Relax/teki'tizi/