Americans pronounce "Yesterday was yummy" as "YEH-ster-day wuhz YUH-mee" in casual speech. Two things bend the textbook pronunciation. The headline is the Y-Merging (gotcha, didja) — the T/D/S/Z fuses with the following Y into CH or J. It lands on was, the way sentences stop sounding like a list and start sounding like speech. Keep stressed words long, unstressed words short, and link the consonants forward into the vowels.
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What's happening in this sentence.
Small tricks that turn a textbook sentence into how an American actually says it.
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Common pronunciation mistakes in American English.
The textbook way isn't wrong — it's just not how anyone actually says it.
Pronouncing the function word too fully.
"was" is a function word — in connected speech, the full vowel reduces to a quick "wuhz" sound and consonants may simplify. Full vowel reduces to schwa /ə/ or other weak vowel. Consonants may simplify.