Great question from Attila at
The Challenge of Learning English: “I have a question about two phrasal verbs: settle on and settle down.Is there any difference into the pronunciation of these:settled on settle downsettled downOr move on – move down:moved onmove downmoved downBut I guess, the difference can be very slight, hardly recognisable so only the context can help. Is it true?”The big difference in phrasal verbs is the stress. Stress the SECOND word (in compound nouns, stress the FIRST). Also keep in mind that these words must be linked with no pause between them.
There are sound differences in the words, of course. The hardest to hear would be with the -ED ending. The reason for that is because of the word DOWN. The last D in the -ED ending links to the D in DOWN. There is a slightly longer D in settled down and moved down. A native speaker can hear this subtle difference.
In the ON example, the vowel is very different than in DOWN.
settle on: s-e-d-l-o-n
settle down: s-e-d-l-d-ow-n
settled down: s-e-d-l-d-d-ow-n
So, no context is not needed for a native speaker.
You can check out my
free class on word stress on YouTube for more information.
Published on August 25, 2015 16:24