Welcome to Day 19 of our English learning journey! 🎉 Today, we’ll focus on mastering weak forms—an essential aspect of English pronunciation that can make your speech sound more natural and fluent.
Here’s what we’ll cover:
to: /tə/ (e.g., 'I want to go.')
for: /fə/ (e.g., 'This is for you.')
a: /ə/ (e.g., 'She has a dog.')
an: /ən/ (e.g., 'I saw an elephant.')
of: /əv/ (e.g., 'A lot of people.')
and: /ənd/ (e.g., 'Bread and butter.')
can: /kən/ (e.g., 'I can do it.')
the: /ðə/ (e.g., 'The cat.')
have: /həv/ (e.g., 'I have gone.')
📌 Why Learn Weak Forms?
Weak forms are used in natural, connected speech and help you sound like a native speaker. In this lesson, I’ll provide examples, tips, and practice sentences to boost your fluency.
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