"Liaison"

Practising “liaison” for every word connection

Practising “liaison” for every word connection

The Myth of Liaison

Main article: The Myth of Liaison.

First of all, “liaison” doesn’t exist in English.

Definition of "Liaison":

Phonetics

(in French and other languages) the sounding of a consonant that is normally silent at the end of a word, because the next word begins with a vowel.

You can see that this does not exist in English, because the final sounds of words are always pronounced. Even if the final T is “dropped”, it is actually dropped downwards into the glottis, producing the glottal stop /ʔ/.

If the final T were completely unpronounced — removed — a word would sound wrong: cat would become cahh, but would become buhh, fit would become fihh. This is not the case.

  • Practise every single word connection that you can think of.

  • Even practise ones which you don't know if they exist!

  • Learn to pronounce each phoneme alone, any vowel sound before or after it.

Read through this list of word connections to practise the ways of connecting various pairs & sets of phonemes.

make dinner = /kd/

brush my = /ʃm/

have breakfast = /vbr/

have lunch = /vl/

walk to = /lkt/

finish work = /ʃw/

dog for = /ɡf/

sleep for = /pf/

of the = /vð/

behind the = /ndð/

among the = /ŋð/

next to = /kst͜ t/

across the = /sð/

on the = /nð/

twelfth /lfθ/

-teenth /nθ/

"what's the" = /tsð/

is the = /zð/

it's the = /tsð/

with my = /ðm/

can't sleep = /tsl/

was lovely = /zl/

the end = /iːjɛ/

is studying = /zst/

is she = /zʃ/

next Monday = /kstm/

sounds good = /ndzg/

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