The Accent Journey Podcast

/u/ vs /ʊ/: “Pool” vs. “Pull” - A Small Vowel Difference Makes a Big Impact

9 min · Gisteren
aflevering /u/ vs /ʊ/: “Pool” vs. “Pull” - A Small Vowel Difference Makes a Big Impact artwork

Beschrijving

In this episode of The Accent Journey, we explore the important vowel contrast between /u/ as in food, blue, and shoe, and /ʊ/ as in foot, good, and book. These sounds are often confused by English learners because they are both produced with rounded lips. However, they differ in tongue position, muscle tension, and vowel length. Mastering this contrast can improve both pronunciation and listening comprehension. In this episode, you'll learn: * How to produce /u/ and /ʊ/ * The physical differences between the two vowels * How to hear the contrast more accurately * Strategies for improving vowel awareness The episode includes: * Minimal pair practice * Listening exercises * Sentence drills * Dialogue practice * A longer reading passage Key takeaway: /u/ is longer, tenser, and more strongly rounded, while /ʊ/ is shorter, more relaxed, and slightly lower in the mouth. This week's challenge: Practice minimal pairs such as food–foot, Luke–look, pool–pull, and fool–full. Record yourself and compare your pronunciation to native speakers, paying close attention to vowel length and tension. Practice Passage: “Last weekend, Luke visited a small bookstore near his school. He bought a good book about travel and spent the afternoon reading by the pool. The weather was beautiful, the food was excellent, and he enjoyed a quiet day away from his busy schedule.” Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation - one sound and pattern at a time. ------------------------------ The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

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aflevering /u/ vs /ʊ/: “Pool” vs. “Pull” - A Small Vowel Difference Makes a Big Impact artwork

/u/ vs /ʊ/: “Pool” vs. “Pull” - A Small Vowel Difference Makes a Big Impact

In this episode of The Accent Journey, we explore the important vowel contrast between /u/ as in food, blue, and shoe, and /ʊ/ as in foot, good, and book. These sounds are often confused by English learners because they are both produced with rounded lips. However, they differ in tongue position, muscle tension, and vowel length. Mastering this contrast can improve both pronunciation and listening comprehension. In this episode, you'll learn: * How to produce /u/ and /ʊ/ * The physical differences between the two vowels * How to hear the contrast more accurately * Strategies for improving vowel awareness The episode includes: * Minimal pair practice * Listening exercises * Sentence drills * Dialogue practice * A longer reading passage Key takeaway: /u/ is longer, tenser, and more strongly rounded, while /ʊ/ is shorter, more relaxed, and slightly lower in the mouth. This week's challenge: Practice minimal pairs such as food–foot, Luke–look, pool–pull, and fool–full. Record yourself and compare your pronunciation to native speakers, paying close attention to vowel length and tension. Practice Passage: “Last weekend, Luke visited a small bookstore near his school. He bought a good book about travel and spent the afternoon reading by the pool. The weather was beautiful, the food was excellent, and he enjoyed a quiet day away from his busy schedule.” Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation - one sound and pattern at a time. ------------------------------ The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

Gisteren9 min
aflevering Thought Groups: The Secret to Natural English Rhythm artwork

Thought Groups: The Secret to Natural English Rhythm

In this episode of The Accent Journey, we move beyond individual sounds and explore one of the most important features of natural spoken English: thought groups. Native speakers don't speak one word at a time. Instead, they organize their speech into meaningful chunks of information called thought groups. Learning how to group words together can help you sound more natural, improve your fluency, and make your speech easier for listeners to follow. In this episode, you'll learn: * What thought groups are and why they matter * How native speakers organize speech into ideas rather than individual words * Common places where thought groups occur, including clauses, additional information, and lists * How pauses and thought groups work together to improve clarity * Why the final word in a thought group often receives the most stress The episode includes guided practice with: * Thought-group listening exercises * Repetition drills * Sentence practice * Short dialogues * A longer reading passage designed to build awareness of natural rhythm and chunking Key takeaway: Native speakers organize speech into ideas, not individual words. Natural pauses occur between thought groups, not between every word. This week's challenge: Listen to a podcast, interview, or conversation and notice where speakers pause. Then take a short article or news story, mark the thought groups, and practice reading it aloud using natural chunks of meaning. Practice Passage: "Last Friday, our team finished an important project just before the deadline. After work, we went out for dinner and celebrated together. Everyone was tired but happy with the results. It was a long week, but it ended on a positive note." Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation—one sound and pattern at a time. ------------------------------ The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

7 jun 20269 min
aflevering "You Need to Pay Attention to How You Speak!" - How Marceli Marcinkowski Acquired an American Accent artwork

"You Need to Pay Attention to How You Speak!" - How Marceli Marcinkowski Acquired an American Accent

Today accent coach Steve is joined by English instructor Marceli Marcinkowski, known as "Pan Angielski [https://panangielski.com/]" in his native Poland, on a wide-ranging conversation about language acquisition and accent modification. In this conversation, Marceli shares with us: * how he got obsesssed with English and has devoted his life to teaching it to others * his methods and techniques on how to teach English to children * why the Polish education system does not succeed at teaching real-world English * how his children learned to speak English despite never having had a formal lesson * what he did to attain a natural-sounding American English accent * his advice to others on changing their own accents At the end of the episode, Marceli turns the tables on Steve and evaluates his accent and pronunciation in Polish! Make sure you don't miss a second of this fun and informational episode with a successful language learner. Connect with Marceli at his website: https://panangielski.com/ [https://panangielski.com/] And make sure to subscribe to his YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@panangielski] and TikTok [https://www.tiktok.com/@panangielski_] channels! ------------------------------ Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation—one sound and pattern at a time. The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

31 mei 202628 min
aflevering Linking Part 3: Consonant + Consonant Linking in Natural Speech artwork

Linking Part 3: Consonant + Consonant Linking in Natural Speech

In this episode of The Accent Journey, we continue our series on connected speech by exploring how consonants link to other consonants in natural American English. The episode focuses on two major patterns: 1. Stop consonants before consonants (such as big problem or hot coffee), where the final consonant sound is usually unreleased 2. Non-stop consonants before consonants (such as green park or real story), where sounds flow smoothly into one another You’ll learn: * How consonant-to-consonant linking works in connected speech * How airflow changes between stop and non-stop consonants * Practical strategies to create smoother, more natural pronunciation The episode includes extensive guided practice with phrases, sentences, dialogues, and a longer passage to help listeners improve both fluency and listening comprehension. Key takeaway: Natural English speech connects sounds smoothly instead of pronouncing every word separately. Practice challenge: Practice linking phrases like big problem, good boy, help me, and green park, focusing on smoother transitions and reduced pauses between words. Practice passage: “Last week, our team faced a big problem during an important project meeting. After a short discussion, everyone worked together to solve it quickly. Later, we drank hot coffee, talked about the next steps, and took the train back to the office before sunset.” Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation—one sound and pattern at a time. ------------------------------ The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

24 mei 20268 min
aflevering /eɪ/ vs /ɛ/: “late” vs “let” – One Sound or Two? artwork

/eɪ/ vs /ɛ/: “late” vs “let” – One Sound or Two?

In this episode of The Accent Journey, we explore the important vowel contrast between /eɪ/ as in late and /ɛ/ as in let. Although these sounds may seem similar, they are fundamentally different. The /eɪ/ sound is a diphthong, meaning the mouth moves during the vowel, while /ɛ/ is a short, stable vowel with little movement. Confusing these sounds can easily change the meaning of words and reduce clarity. You’ll learn: * How to physically produce /eɪ/ and /ɛ/ * Why /eɪ/ is considered a moving vowel * The key difference between gliding and stable vowel sounds * How to hear and produce the contrast more accurately The episode includes extensive minimal pair practice, as well as sentences, dialogues, and a longer practice passage designed to improve both pronunciation and listening comprehension. Key takeaway: /eɪ/ includes movement and glide, while /ɛ/ stays short and stable. Practice challenge: Practice minimal pairs like late–let, pain–pen, and wait–wet, focusing on adding clear movement to /eɪ/ while keeping /ɛ/ short and steady. Recording yourself can help you hear the difference more clearly. Practice passage: “Late yesterday evening, heavy rain fell across the city. Many people waited inside cafés and watched the weather change. A man at the next table said the train might be delayed again. Everyone stayed relaxed and hoped the rain would end before midnight.” Follow The Accent Journey, hosted by accent coach Steven Nelson, for weekly episodes designed to help non-native speakers build clearer, more confident American English pronunciation—one sound and pattern at a time. ------------------------------ The Accent Journey Podcast is brought to you by AccentFirst Speech Communication Services. Find us online at accentfirst.com [http://accentfirst.com]. We'd love to hear your feedback. Visit us and leave a message at accentfirst.com/contact [http://accentfirst.com/contact] Music: Vendredi - Hypnosis ( Free Download & Free Copyright ) by Vendredi [https://soundcloud.com/vendrediduo] is licensed under a Creative Commons License [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/].

17 mei 20268 min