How to pronounce batch in American English
BACH
Start here
Americans pronounce batch as BACH (/bætʃ/).
Now you try.
Record yourself saying "batch" and play it back. The mic stays on your device — nothing's uploaded.
Why it sounds different
Why "batch" sounds like BACH.
The "" at the end of "" flows directly into the vowel starting "" — the consonant migrates to the next word with no pause between. This is called the Consonant-to-Vowel Linking, how Americans glue words together so they sound like one phrase. It comes out as BACH.
In real conversation
Hear "batch" in the wild.
Click any sentence to see the full breakdown — every link, every reduction, every flap-T.
Questions
Questions people ask about this.
Is the American pronunciation of "batch" different from British English?
American English uses different vowel shapes, a relaxed retroflex R, and connected-speech tricks like flap-T and glottal-stop T that British Received Pronunciation generally avoids. The respell "BACH" reflects the casual American form; British dictionaries typically print a citation form with crisper consonants and different vowel choices.