What is the /tʃ/ Sound?
First, let's look at a few examples of words with the English /tʃ/ sound:
- chin
- child
- crunchy
- catcher
- much
- bench
According to Baruch College's Tools for Clear Speech, the /tʃ/ sound is made by doing the following:
"Place the tip of your tongue just behind the hard ridge at the front of the top of your mouth. Push air forward out of your mouth. Stop the air completely at first, and then release it. After release, the air should create friction between the tip of your tongue and the roof of your mouth. Do not vibrate your vocal cords when you make this sound; it’s voiceless."
If you need more help articulating the /tʃ/ sound, check out this video to learn the correct tongue and mouth placement.
Practicing the /tʃ/ Sound
Everything you need to pronounce the English /tʃ/ sound correctly is on this page. Just follow the instructions.
What do you have to do?
Practice for 5 minutes a day for 7 days.
That’s it.
Your goal is to pronounce the /tʃ/ sound clearly and easily by the end of day 7.
Let’s do it!
This guide to the American English /tʃ/ sound is full of useful information. Click the link below to jump to the part you are looking for:
- Day 1 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 2 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 3 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 4 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 5 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 6 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Day 7 of the /tʃ/ sound
- Additional /tʃ/ sound resources
- PDF download of the /tʃ/ sound
Day 1: The /tʃ/ Sound
If you are ready, let’s start with the practice for day one.
It’s pretty simple.
Watch the video and follow along.
Listen and repeat.
🔊 Click here to listen to the audio version
Minimal Pairs
Your Goal: To feel the difference between the /tʃ/ sound and similar sounds like /dʒ/ or /ʃ/.
- chin - gin
- rich - ridge
- watch - wash
- hatch - hash
Vowel Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also improving your pronunciation of the English vowel sounds.
- chip - chop - cheap - chirp
- beach - batch - botch
Syllable Stress Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also developing a better understanding of proper syllable stress.
- charity
- chamber
- structure
- eventually
Reduced Sounds Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also working on linking words and phrases together.
- Did you cheer when watching the match?
- Would he catch it or botch it up?
Tongue Twister Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while improving your speaking speed and enunciation.
- Chop shops stock chops.
- I saw a kitten eating chicken in the kitchen.
Day 2: The /tʃ/ Sound
Just like day one, except simpler.
Watch the video and follow along.
Listen and repeat.
🔊 Click here to listen to the audio version
Minimal Pairs
Your Goal: To feel the difference between the /tʃ/ sound and similar sounds like /dʒ/ or /ʃ/.
- chore - jaw
- chest - jest
- ditch - dish
- match - mash
Vowel Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also improving your pronunciation of the English vowel sounds.
- chat - cheat - chart - chit
- match - mooch - merch - much
Syllable Stress Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also developing a better understanding of proper syllable stress.
- actually
- century
- furniture
- achieve
Reduced Sounds Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also working on linking words and phrases together.
- You chat a lot at work, don’t you?
- I feel ready to pitch but the coach says not yet.
Tongue Twister Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while improving your speaking speed and enunciation.
- I’d like to change my schedule.
- Could you check my writing, please?
Day 3: The /tʃ/ Sound
Today will be the last day you only listen and repeat.
Tomorrow, you will have to start to speak.
But let’s focus on today.
Just like yesterday, watch the video and follow along.
Listen and repeat.
🔊 Click here to listen to the audio version
Minimal Pairs
Your Goal: To feel the difference between the /tʃ/ sound and similar sounds like /ʃ/ or /tʃi/.
- chew - shoe
- which - wish
- itch - itchy
- touch - touchy
Vowel Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also improving your pronunciation of the English vowel sounds.
- chew - chair - cheer - char
- itch - ouch - etch - arch
Syllable Stress Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also developing a better understanding of proper syllable stress.
- literature
- cultural
- temperature
- virtually
Reduced Sounds Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while also working on linking words and phrases together.
- We should not have had so much ketchup.
- In the kitchen, there’s a bunch of grapes or a batch of cookies.
Tongue Twister Collection
Your Goal: To practice the /tʃ/ sound while improving your speaking speed and enunciation.
- How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
Day 4: The /tʃ/ Sound
Time to speak.
You will notice that these are the words, phrases, and sentences you repeated on day one.
Today, your job is different.
Open up a Google Doc, enable voice typing and speak.
- chin - gin
- rich - ridge
- watch - wash
- hatch - hash
- cip - chop - cheap - chirp
- beach - batch - botch
- charity
- chamber
- structure
- eventually
- Did you cheer when watching the match?
- Would he catch it or botch it up?
- Chop shops stock chops.
- I saw a kitten eating chicken in the kitchen.
Day 5: The /tʃ/ Sound
Let’s revisit the words, phrases, and sentences you practiced on day two.
Just like yesterday, open up a Google Doc, enable voice typing, and get ready to speak.
Let’s do it!
- chore jaw
- chest - jest
- ditch - dish
- match - mash
- chat - cheat - chart - chit
- match - mooch - merch - much
- actually
- century
- furniture
- achieve
- You chat a lot at work, don’t you?
- I feel ready to pitch but the coach says not yet.
- I’d like to change my schedule.
- Could you check my writing, please?
TIP*** Are there some words that the computer does not understand no matter how many times you say them? No worries, just skip it and move on. No one is perfect.
Day 6: The /tʃ/ Sound
You are so close to day 7.
Be proud that you have made it this far :)
In today’s lesson, let’s circle back to the words, phrases, and sentences you repeated on day three and practice saying them aloud.
- chew - shoe
- which - wish
- itch - itchy
- touch - touchy
- chew - chair - cheer - char
- itch - ouch - etch - arch
- literature
- cultural
- temperature
- virtually
- We should not have had so much ketchup.
- In the kitchen, there’s a bunch of grapes or a batch of cookies.
- How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
Day 7: The /tʃ/ Sound
Congratulations!!!
You have made it to the very last day of this /tʃ/ sound practice course.
Do you feel like your pronunciation of this sound is improving?
Let’s finish with a simple, but challenging exercise.
Just like you did on days 4, 5, and 6, open up a Google Doc and enable voice typing.
This time, try to get the technology to recognize these five tongue twisters.
- Chop shops stock chops.
- I saw a kitten eating chicken in the kitchen.
- I’d like to change my schedule.
- Could you check my writing, please?
- How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
Now, turn voice typing off and try to say each tongue twister as fast as possible.
Watch the video to learn how to go through this exercise.
Additional Resources: The /tʃ/ Sound
Words with the /tʃ/ sound
Beginning | Middle | End |
chin | crunchy | such |
child | catcher | much |
chick | kitchen | bench |
cherry | teacher | watch |
chip | picture | lunch |
chat | furniture | witch |
cheap | literature | stretch |
chair | ketchup | switch |
chase | lunchbox | coach |
chose | touchy | match |
chief | actually | March |
charm | century | reach |
chop | nature | ranch |
check | future | glitch |
channel | structure | punch |
charter | eventually | pitch |
charity | achieve | bunch |
chamber | cultural | beach |
chapter | temperature | batch |
virtually | hatch |
Minimal Pair Collection
Minimal Pair /tʃ/ and /dʒ/ cheap jeep
- chin - gin
- rich - ridge
- chore jaw
- chest - jest
- chunk - junk
- cheap - jeep
- char - jar
- cherry - jerry
- catch - cadge
- batch - badge
Minimal Pair final /tʃ/ and /tʃi/ catch catchy
- itch - itchy
- touch - touchy
- glitch - glitchy
- punch - punchy
- preach - preachy
- patch - patchy
- catch - catchy
- stretch - stretchy
- scratch - scratchy
- raunch - raunchy
Minimal Pair /tʃ/ and /ʃ/ chair share
- watch - wash
- hatch - hash
- ditch - dish
- match - mash
- chew - shoe
- which - wish
- chair - share
- cheap - sheep
- catch - cash
- putsch - push
Vowel Collection
- chip - chop - cheap - chirp
- beach - batch - botch
- chat - cheat - chart - chit
- match - mooch - merch - much - march
- chew - chair - cheer - char
- itch - ouch - etch - arch
Syllable Stress Collection
- charity
- chamber
- structure
- eventually
- actually
- century
- furniture
- achieve
- literature
- cultural
- temperature
- virtually
Reduced Sounds Collection
- Did you cheer when watching the match?
- Would he catch it or botch it up?
- You chat a lot at work, don’t you?
- I feel ready to pitch but the coach says not yet.
- We should not have had so much ketchup.
- In the kitchen there’s a bunch of grapes or a batch of cookies.
Tongue Twister Collection
- Chop shops stock chops.
- I saw a kitten eating chicken in the kitchen.
- I’d like to change my schedule.
- Could you check my writing, please?
- How much wood would a woodchuck chuck if a woodchuck could chuck wood?
Additional Resources
- Tools for Clear Speech sound /tʃ/ profile
- Rachel’s English Video on the /tʃ/ sound
- TEFLpedia /tʃ/ sound
Additional Activities for All Sounds
Practice Three Words
Answer the following question:
What do you like to do in your free time?
Pick one, two, or three words from the word bank and include them in your response. If it helps, you may write out the example sentences with the word in context first.
Youglish Research
Visit the Youglish website. Pick a word or phrase you would like to practice. Enter it into the Youglish search bar. Find three examples of the word or phrase in context to shadow.
Teacher Time
During your next English speaking practice session with a teacher or conversation partner, have a list of three to five words you would like to use. Give yourself a point every time you use the word correctly in context and it is understood. Aim to score 5 points within the first 10 minutes (so the rest of the time you focus just on communicating).
Voice Typing
Write out three sentences with challenging words or phrases. Use Google Docs or any other software with the ability to turn speech to text. Read these sentences aloud and check to see if your pronunciation is correct.
***There are a ton of possibilities. These are just a few ideas. Use the word bank, tongue twisters, example sentences, and other resources on this page to continue to work on this sound.
If you have any suggestions, let me know in the comments below. I read and respond to all of them.
Download the PDF version of this 7-day mini-course.
Plus the PDF-version of every single English sound for free.