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6.4.1 GA /aɪ/ and /aʊ/

For both /aɪ/ and /aʊ/ you begin with an open, mid-front, unrounded vowel.

GA /aɪ/ ends in a half-close, centralized front, unrounded vowel.

GA /aʊ/ ends in a half-close, centralized back, rounded vowel.

 

Advice for Dutch learners
The problem for Dutch students is that they usually don’t begin with the first vowel open enough (as is the problem with /ɑː/ and /æ/ as well).

 

Some words containing /aɪ/:
• island, sign, bicycle’
• side, quite, guide
• my, cycle
• high, night
• lie, tie

 

Some words containing /aʊ/:
• how, shower, towel, crowd, sow
• out, shout, pronounce, fountain, announce, boundary

 

In Southern American dialects /aɪ/ is often monophthongized to /aː/, i.e. there is no centering glide. In some dialects /aʊ/ is fronted, so that the words now and loud would be pronounced: [næʊ] and [læʊd], with the tongue positioned as for /æ/.

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An Introduction to American English Phonetics Copyright © by Ton Broeders and Carlos Gussenhoven is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.