What Is Connected Speech?
Connected speech is how native speakers blend words together in natural conversation. Instead of pronouncing each word separately ("I. am. going. to. eat."), native speakers link words smoothly ("I'm gonna eat").
Understanding connected speech is the key to both sounding natural and understanding fast native speech.
The Main Features of Connected Speech
1. Linking
Connecting the final sound of one word to the beginning of the next.
Consonant-to-Vowel Linking
When a word ends in a consonant and the next begins with a vowel:
- "an apple" → /ən_apple/
- "turn it off" → /turn_it_off/
- "wake up" → /wak_ʌp/
Vowel-to-Vowel Linking
Adding /w/, /j/, or /r/ sounds between vowels:
- "go away" → /gowaway/
- "I am" → /Ijam/
- "far away" → /far_əway/ (in rhotic accents)
2. Assimilation
Sounds changing to become more like neighboring sounds.
Common Assimilations
- "in person" → /im person/ (n→m before p)
- "ten people" → /tem people/ (n→m before p)
- "good boy" → /goob boy/ (d→b before b)
- "white bread" → /whip bread/ (t→p before b)
3. Elision
Dropping sounds completely in rapid speech.
Common Elisions
- "next door" → /nek door/ (t dropped)
- "just because" → /jus because/ (t dropped)
- "and" → /ən/ or /n/ (d dropped)
- "probably" → /probly/ (first b dropped)
4. Weak Forms
Function words reducing in unstressed positions.
Common Weak Forms
- "and" → /ən/ or /n/
- "to" → /tə/
- "of" → /əv/
- "can" → /kən/
- "have" → /əv/ or /həv/
- "the" → /ðə/
Real Examples in Sentences
Example 1: "I'm going to go"
Slow/Clear: /aɪ æm ɡoʊɪŋ tuː ɡoʊ/
Natural Connected: /aɪm ɡənə ɡoʊ/ or /aɪm ɡʌnə ɡoʊ/
Changes:
- "I am" → contraction + linking
- "going to" → reduction to "gonna"
Example 2: "Did you eat yet?"
Slow/Clear: /dɪd juː iːt jet/
Natural Connected: /dɪdʒu iːt jet/ or /dɪdʒə iːt jet/
Changes:
- "did you" → sounds like "didju" or "didja"
- Linking between all words
Example 3: "Want to go out tonight?"
Slow/Clear: /wɑːnt tuː ɡoʊ aʊt təˈnaɪt/
Natural Connected: /wɑːnə ɡoʊ aʊt tənaɪt/ or /wʌnə ɡoʊ aʊt tənaɪt/
Changes:
- "want to" → "wanna"
- "go out" → linking
- "tonight" → weak form of "to"
Common Reductions in Casual Speech
Contractions
- "I am" → "I'm" /aɪm/
- "you are" → "you're" /jʊr/ or /jər/
- "it is" → "it's" /ɪts/
- "cannot" → "can't" /kænt/
- "will not" → "won't" /woʊnt/
Informal Reductions
- "going to" → "gonna" /ɡənə/
- "want to" → "wanna" /wɑːnə/
- "got to" → "gotta" /ɡɑːtə/
- "out of" → "outta" /aʊtə/
- "kind of" → "kinda" /kaɪndə/
- "don't know" → "dunno" /dənoʊ/
Practice Exercises
Exercise 1: Linking Practice
Mark where words link, then practice saying smoothly:
- "turn_it_on"
- "check_it_out"
- "look_at_it"
- "pick_it_up"
Exercise 2: Weak Form Substitution
Rewrite using weak forms:
- "I am going to the store" → "I'm goin' tə thə store"
- "What do you want?" → "Whadda yə want?"
- "I do not know" → "I dunno"
Exercise 3: Natural Conversation
Practice these common phrases with natural reductions:
- "I'm gonna go" (not "I am going to go")
- "Wanna come?" (not "Do you want to come?")
- "Lemme see" (not "Let me see")
- "I gotta go" (not "I have got to go")
Listening for Connected Speech
To train your ear:
- Watch movies/TV with English subtitles
- Notice what you hear vs what's written
- Listen specifically for reductions and linking
- Shadow native speakers to feel the natural flow
Should You Use Connected Speech?
For listening: Absolutely essential. You must understand it to comprehend natural English.
For speaking:
- Formal situations: Use less connected speech, clearer pronunciation
- Casual conversation: Use more connected speech to sound natural
- Public speaking: Use moderate connected speech—natural but clear
Common Mistakes
Over-Reduction
Don't eliminate so many sounds that you become unclear. "I'm gonna go ta tha store" might be too much.
Unnatural Precision
"I. am. going. to. the. store" sounds robotic. Allow some natural blending.
Wrong Context
"Gonna," "wanna" are too casual for job interviews or formal presentations.
Conclusion
Connected speech is what makes English sound like English. Master linking, assimilation, elision, and weak forms to understand native speakers and sound more natural yourself. Start by listening actively, then gradually incorporate these features into your own speech. The key is balance—natural flow without sacrificing clarity.