🔁 Reductions in English: D+Y→/j/ & D+T→/ch/
In spoken English, sounds often blend together to make speech faster and smoother. This is called reduction. In this lesson, you’ll learn how D + Y and T + Y combine to create new sounds like “j” and “ch.” Mastering these patterns will help you understand native speakers and sound more natural. Let’s get started.
🎯 Level: Intermediate ⏱ Time: 6 minutes 📘 Category: Pronunciation
🎧 Listening
Listen and read.
This lesson begins with a listening activity. Play the audio file and follow along. If you’d like to read while you listen, click or tap “Audio Script” to read the transcript.
🔍 Examples
👉 Tip for students:
In fast, natural speech, these sounds blend together, so you often hear “ju”- “chu”-“chur” instead of separate t/d + y sounds.
🔍 More Examples
“What you…” is a common form in natural spoken English for “What are you…?”
When people speak quickly, the word “are” is often reduced or dropped, and the sounds blend together.
For example:
What are you doing? → What you doing? → /whatchu doing?/
The T in what and the Y sound in you combine to make a /ch/ sound.
So in natural speech:
👉 What are you doing?
👉 What you doing?
👉 /whatchu doing?/
This reduction is very common in casual spoken English.
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Free Download: Reductions in English
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Horario de atención: Lunes a viernes, 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Reductions in English: D+Y→/j/ & D+T→/ch/ © 2026 by Joe Ehman is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International
