Linking happens when the last sound of one word joins the first sound of the next word, so they sound like one long word.
Instead of:
I / am / happy
You often hear:
Iyamhappy
English is a rhythm language, and linking helps speech stay smooth and fast.
1️⃣ Consonant → Vowel Linking (Most Common)
When a word ends in a consonant sound and the next word begins with a vowel sound, they connect.
Structure:
Consonant + Vowel → Joined
| Written | Natural Sound |
|---|---|
| pick it up | pickitup |
| turn off | turnoff |
| help out | helpout |
| look at it | lookatit |
| stop it | stopit |
Example Sentence
“Pick it up.”
Sounds like → “Pi-ki-tup.”
The k sound moves to the next word.
2️⃣ Vowel → Vowel Linking
English doesn’t like two vowel sounds crashing together. So speakers add a small extra sound to connect them.
A. /y/ Sound Linking
If the first word ends in an ee / i / ay sound, a /y/ sound appears.
| Written | Natural Sound |
|---|---|
| I am | Iyam |
| he is | heyiz |
| we are | weyar |
| say it | sayyit |
Example:
“She is here.” → Sheyiz here
B. /w/ Sound Linking
If the first word ends in oo / u / o sounds, a /w/ sound appears.
| Written | Natural Sound |
|---|---|
| go out | gowout |
| do it | dowit |
| too easy | tooweesy |
| you are | youwar |
Example:
“Go out.” → Gowout
3️⃣ Consonant → Consonant Linking (Blending)
When two consonants meet, they often blend together or one disappears.
| Written | Natural Sound |
|---|---|
| next day | nexday |
| good boy | gooboy |
| want to | wanna |
| going to | gonna |
| don’t know | donno |
Example:
“I want to go.” → I wanna go
This happens because speaking fast makes pronunciation easier.
4️⃣ T, D, S, Z Linking
Some consonants connect very smoothly.
| Written | Spoken |
|---|---|
| get up | getup |
| read it | readit |
| this apple | thisapple |
| his eyes | hizeyes |
Example:
“Read it.” → Re-dit
The d sound links forward.
5️⃣ R Linking (British & Some Accents)
In British English, an r sound appears between vowels if spelling has “r”.
| Written | Spoken |
|---|---|
| far away | farraway |
| here it is | hererit is |
| more apples | morerapples |
American English usually pronounces the R anyway, so this is less noticeable.
6️⃣ Sound Disappearing (Elision)
Sometimes sounds vanish to make speech faster.
| Written | Spoken |
|---|---|
| next week | nex week |
| friend ship | frenship |
| acts | ax |
| months | mons |
Example:
“Next please.” → Nex please
🧠 Why Linking Is Important
Without linking:
I / want / to / eat / an / apple.
With linking:
I wanna eat anapple
If you listen word by word, you might miss meaning. But if you expect linking, listening gets MUCH easier.
🎯 How to Practice
- Shadowing
Listen to native audio and repeat immediately. - Mark the Links
Write:
Pick_it_up
Go_wout
I_yam_ready - Use Short Phrases
Practice chunks, not single words:
- Want to → wanna
- Got to → gotta
- Let me → lemme
- Slow → Fast
Say slowly first, then speed up.
🔑 Final Tip
Linking is not lazy speech — it’s normal English rhythm. Native speakers always connect words. If you don’t link, your English sounds robotic. When you do link, you suddenly sound more fluent.
Think of spoken English like a river, not separate stones. Words flow together.
