Stop Sounds Overview American English Pronunciation | eJOY English
arrow next
Shape
listen
arrow next
quiz
arrow next
Combined Shape
write
arrow next
speak
Cut a part
Cut a part
play iconPause (Space)
sound iconMute (M)
Auto pause - Delay showing subtitle (Q)
slow iconSlow (S)
loop iconLoop 1 sub ( L )
1
    loop iconStart looping AB (Shift + 3)
    AB
  • Start Start loop (Shift + 1)0:0:0 End End loop (Shift + 2)0:0:0
ejoyIconAI Complete sub
Not happy with current sub? eJOY AI can help complete the subtitles.
setting iconSettings
medium screen iconTheater Mode (T)
full screen iconFull Screen (F)
Your browser doesn't support full screen mode.
icon mic
alt
0%
icon micNext
icon micTry Again
icon micCompare
play
Translation
Definition
Slang
Context
loading
Transcript
Auto Scroll
AI Transcript
SplitOverflowSaved phrases
Click here to download video transcript
Click here to copy video transcript
Subtitle Settings
×
Size
Aa
Aa
Aa
Aa
Aa
Preset
Aa
Aa
Aa
Aa
This is an example
tab icon Video info
tab icon Vocabulary

Stop Sounds Overview American English Pronunciation

Favorite
Like this video?
Sign in and save your favorites.
SIGN IN
Share
Report
Guide
3
Intermediate
|
English skills
80% of English words have at least one stop sound, so if you want to speak like an American, you need to pronounce them correctly. In this video, you can learn little-known aspects of the American stop sounds pronunciation, such as aspiration, flapping, glottal sound, and many others.
  • Unit 2: diphthongs
  • Unit 4: Consonant Sound (unvoiced)
  • Unit 3: Consonant Sound (Voiced)
  • Unit 5: Common mistake
  • Unit 1: monophthongs
0
Added to