How to pronounce Nine new names. in American English

Words 3 Difficulty Beginner Featured sound Same-Consonant Linking
NAHYN nine noo new NAYMZ names
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In casual American English, "Nine new names" sounds like "NAHYN noo NAYMZ". One thing happen here, and the headline one is the Same-Consonant Linking: the doubled consonant is held once, not pronounced twice. Keep stressed words long, unstressed words short, and link the consonants forward into the vowels.

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Common mistakes

Pronouncing the identical consonant twice.

The "" shared between "" and "" is held once, slightly longer, and released once instead of stopping and starting twice. Consonant is held slightly longer and released once (not said twice).

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Why it sounds different

What makes this sentence sound American.

The "" shared between "nine" and "new" is held once, slightly longer, and released once instead of stopping and starting twice. This is called the Same-Consonant Linking, how Americans glue words together so they sound like one phrase. It comes out as NAHYN.

The breakdown

What's happening in this sentence.

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

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Same-Consonant Linking between "nine" & "new"Consonant is held slightly longer and released once (not said twice).
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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

Pronouncing the identical consonant twice.

The "" shared between "" and "" is held once, slightly longer, and released once instead of stopping and starting twice. Consonant is held slightly longer and released once (not said twice).

NAHYNNAHYN
Questions

Questions people ask about this.

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.
Is this how the sentence is taught in textbooks?
Textbooks usually teach the citation form — every word pronounced fully, every consonant crisp, every vowel pure. Americans actually flap their Ts, drop function-word H's, link consonants forward into vowels, and reduce unstressed syllables to schwa. The respell on this page shows the casual form you'll hear in real conversations rather than the textbook version.

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