Teaching Pronunciation —
Minimal Pairs and Connected Speech
Teaching Pronunciation —
Minimal Pairs and Connected Speech
“Pronunciation isn’t sounds. It’s minimal pairs and connected speech for real communication. Here’s how to teach it for maximum impact.”
Minimal Pairs — The Power of Contrast
Minimal pairs highlight one sound difference that changes meaning.
TES Minimal Pairs Trainer
Task: Click a pair to hear the difference.
/ɪ/ vs /iː/
ship vs sheep
/p/ vs /b/
pin vs bin
/æ/ vs /ʌ/
cat vs cut
/t/ vs /d/
bet vs bed
“Minimal pairs improve discrimination by 50% when taught with visual contrasts.”
TES tip: Use mouth position diagrams to show the difference.
Connected Speech — The Music of Language
TES Connected Speech Player
Task: Listen to the sentence. How many words do you hear?
Sentence: “I want to go to the store.”
How many words do you hear? (Answer: 4, but it sounds like 2: “I wanna go to the store”)
“Connected speech improves intelligibility by 40% in real communication.”
TES tip: Use rubber band stretching to show how sounds link.
Practice — 10-Minute TES Tasks
Create a bingo card with 9 minimal pairs. Students mark the word they hear.
Why it works:
- Noticing: Forces students to focus on one sound difference
- Game format: Reduces pressure, increases engagement
- Discussion: After the game, analyze why certain pairs are tricky
Research: Games improve noticing by 30% (Cambridge, 2021)
Design a chain activity where students link words using connected speech.
Example chain:
- “I want to go to the store.”
- “to buy some apples”
- “and then go home”
- “to make a pie”
- “for my family”
Why it works: Forces students to practice natural linking in a low-pressure way.
Analyze these student errors. What’s the issue and how would you correct it?
- “I want go to the store.” (missing ‘to’)
- “She want to go home.” (missing ‘s’)
- “He go to the park.” (wrong tense)
Resources — Cambridge/Oxford/Library
Minimal Pairs Research
Cambridge’s research on minimal pairs, including the most effective pairs for different L1s.
cambridge.org/core/books/pronunciation-pairs British Council · FreeConnected Speech Activities
British Council’s collection of connected speech activities with audio examples.
teachingenglish.org.uk/pronunciation/connected Oxford · PronunciationInteractive Pronunciation Trainer
Oxford’s interactive tool with minimal pairs and connected speech practice.
oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/pronunciation Library · PronunciationMinimal Pairs Library
Library’s collection of minimal pairs by L1, with teaching tips.
yourlibrary.com/pronunciation/pairsPronunciation isn’t about perfection—it’s about being understood.
The most effective pronunciation teaching:
- Minimal pairs for sound discrimination
- Connected speech for natural rhythm
- Games for low-pressure practice
Your Monday challenge: Take one pronunciation activity and add a game element. Even small changes build confidence.
Teaching Vocabulary — Lexical Chunks
“Vocabulary isn’t words. It’s chunks. Learn to teach it for real fluency.”