How to pronounce I have meetings on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. in American English

Words 8 Difficulty Intermediate Featured sound Flap T
ahy i hav have MEE·duhngz meetings ahn on MUHN·day monday WEHNZ·day wednesday and and FRAHY·day friday
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Americans pronounce "I have meetings on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday" as "ahy hav MEE-duhngz ahn MUHN-day WEHNZ-day and FRAHY-day" in casual speech. Several things bend the textbook pronunciation. The headline is the Flap T — the T between vowels turns into a quick D-like flap. You'll hear it on meetings and again on friday — a small move that separates 'classroom' from 'native'. Keep stressed words long, unstressed words short, and link the consonants forward into the vowels.

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Common mistakes

Saying a hard "T" in the middle.

In "meetings", the "d" between vowels sounds like a quick "d" — the tongue briefly taps the ridge behind the upper teeth. /t/ or /d/ becomes a quick tap [ɾ] — sounds like a soft D. The tongue briefly taps the ridge behind the upper teeth.

Pronouncing the vowel before M/N too pure.

In "and", the "a" vowel before M or N raises and fronts toward [eə] — the tongue pulls up and forward, breaking the vowel into a tense glide as it anticipates the nasal. The "/æ/" vowel raises and fronts before M or N — tongue pulls up and forward, producing a tense [eə] glide (between /e/ and /ə/). Not a pure /æ/.

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The breakdown

What's happening in this sentence.

Small tricks that turn a textbook sentence into how an American actually says it.

→ə
Reduced Words (to, for, of) in "have""have" is a function word — in connected speech, the full vowel reduces to a quick "hav" sound and consonants may simplify.
h→∅
Silent H (in him, her, has) in "have"The "h" in "have" is dropped in connected speech — the preceding word's final consonant links directly to the remaining vowel — most natural in casual, rapid speech; in careful or formal speech, the H is typically kept.
t→ɾ
Flap T in "meetings"In "meetings", the "d" between vowels sounds like a quick "d" — the tongue briefly taps the ridge behind the upper teeth.
C–V
Consonant-to-Vowel Linking between "meetings" & "on"The "z" at the end of "meetings" flows directly into the vowel starting "on" — the consonant migrates to the next word with no pause between.
Silent T/D Across Words between "and" & "friday"The "d" at the end of "and" is dropped before the consonant starting "friday" — the surrounding consonants flow directly together — common in flowing natural speech; in careful or formal speech, the sound is often kept.
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Watch out

Common pronunciation mistakes in American English.

The textbook way isn't wrong — it's just not how anyone actually says it.

01

Saying a hard "T" in the middle.

In "meetings", the "d" between vowels sounds like a quick "d" — the tongue briefly taps the ridge behind the upper teeth. /t/ or /d/ becomes a quick tap [ɾ] — sounds like a soft D. The tongue briefly taps the ridge behind the upper teeth.

MEE-tuhngzMEE·duhngz
02

Pronouncing the vowel before M/N too pure.

In "and", the "a" vowel before M or N raises and fronts toward [eə] — the tongue pulls up and forward, breaking the vowel into a tense glide as it anticipates the nasal. The "/æ/" vowel raises and fronts before M or N — tongue pulls up and forward, producing a tense [eə] glide (between /e/ and /ə/). Not a pure /æ/.

andand
03

Pausing between the words.

The "z" at the end of "meetings" flows directly into the vowel starting "on" — the consonant migrates to the next word with no pause between. Final consonant "migrates" to next word — no pause between.

MEE-duhngzMEE·duhngz
04

Pronouncing every consonant in the cluster.

The "d" at the end of "and" is dropped before the consonant starting "friday" — the surrounding consonants flow directly together — common in flowing natural speech; in careful or formal speech, the sound is often kept. The /t/ or /d/ at the end is dropped — surrounding consonants flow directly.

andand
Questions

Questions people ask about this.

Why do the T sounds turn into D-like sounds in this sentence?
That's the flap-T rule: when /t/ sits between two vowels — inside a single word, or across the boundary between two words — Americans replace the crisp T with a quick D-like flap. It's one of the most distinctive sounds of casual American speech and one of the first things to copy if you want to sound less textbook.
Why is "have" said so quickly in this sentence?
Function words — articles, prepositions, auxiliaries, pronouns — reduce to short, unstressed schwa shapes in casual American speech. Pronouncing them fully like the dictionary entry is a dead giveaway of a textbook accent. Native speakers stress only the content words and let everything else collapse.
How are the words connected in casual American speech?
Americans don't pause between words. A consonant at the end of one word links forward into the vowel that starts the next; two vowels in a row get bridged by a tiny W or Y glide; an identical consonant repeated across a word boundary is held just once. The result is a continuous flow rather than a textbook word-by-word delivery.
Why does the H in "have" sound dropped here?
In casual speech, Americans drop the H from unstressed function words like "he", "her", "him", and "his" when they sit inside a sentence. So "tell him" sounds like "tell-im". The H stays only when the word is sentence-initial or carries emphasis.

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