Advanced English Listening And Vocabulary Practice - Conversational American English - Camping

121,662 views ・ 2019-03-12

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00:02
Well, hello, and welcome to this month's Phrase Builder lesson.
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It is a pleasure to welcome you back if you've been with us for a while, and hello if you
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are new.
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This month I have another exciting lesson, something different that we haven't really
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talked about before.
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But I thought it would be a lot of fun to sit down with my younger sister, Emily, who
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has joined us on the program before.
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And just talk about camping, which she and I both enjoy doing, though I haven't really
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done so much of it lately.
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Anyway, so we'll be talking about not only just some interesting camping things, and
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you'll see that in the conversation.
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Uh, but in this lesson, we'll be talking as usual, uh, just about some of the shorter
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words and even longer words and then phrases and expressions that you'll find in the conversation
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that are not specifically related to camping.
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But it will prepare you for the conversation.
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Then, in the Fluency Corner lesson coming up next, we will talk more about that, and
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I'll explain more about the specific things, uh, related to camping and outdoors and other
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things like that.
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So, let's get into the lesson.
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First, we have upstage.
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To upstage someone.
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Now, this is a phrase, or actually a word, excuse me, from the theater.
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Uh, so if you think about being on a stage, like, being upstage or downstage, how close
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you are to the audience.
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So, when you're upstaging someone, you don't have to be in an actual play or some theater
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thing to do this.
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This just means to take attention away from someone else because your performance is better
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in some way.
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Now again, this idea just comes from the theater.
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But let's say you're in a conversation, or even if you're at some kind of business meeting
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and you're talking with other people around you.
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Uh, but your boss maybe is supposed to give a presentation, but you, maybe you're, like,
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just an employee or, uh, working under your boss in some way.
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But you give a really good presentation or explain something that your boss couldn't
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explain.
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So, you upstage him.
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So, you're taking attention away from him and, usually, doing something better.
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Uh, although he might be mad at you for doing that or she might be mad at you for doing
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that, uh, but this is to upstage someone.
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To take attention away from someone else just like in a conversation.
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Uh, but typically, it's when maybe you're not expected to be doing that.
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To upstage someone.
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Next, to enlighten someone.
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To enlighten someone.
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To bring light to someone just means to help them understand something.
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So, if you want to sound more intelligent, and it's still a conversational thing you
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can say as I do use it in an everyday conversation with my sister.
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Uh, but it's a more intelligent way of saying, “Oh please, tell me how to do something,”
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or, “Please explain to me something.”
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So, instead of doing that, you replace that with the more intelligent sounding enlighten.
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So, please enlighten me.
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So, give me light.
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Kind of, if you think about when you're not knowing something, you are in the darkness.
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Like, you are in a cave, and you can't see.
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So, you need understanding or light.
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So, enlighten me.
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Please enlighten me.
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Tell me what I'm doing wrong.
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Enlighten me.
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Next, related to this, we have retain.
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To retain something.
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Now, the typical thing you can use in a conversation is remember, and this is perfectly fine.
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But if you want to sound a bit more educated, you can say retain.
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So, you can say, “I don't remember much of what I learned in college.”
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Or, you can sound a bit more educated and say, “I don't retain much of that.”
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So, I don't remember much of that.
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I don't really retain that information, or I haven't retained that information that I
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learned in college.
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Again, it's the same meaning, just to remember something.
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Retain also means, in a basic sense, to hold something.
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So, you might have, uh, like, a river, uh, and you put a dam there.
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So, that dam might be called a retaining wall.
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So, you’re stopping the water, and the water starts to pool up and make a little lake.
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So, when you're trying to make a dam, that's what you do.
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You have a retaining wall to stop something from moving, so you hold that information.
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To retain.
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Next, one of my favorite words, stickler.
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A stickler.
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Now, this is a perfect example.
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I'll give you one from real life that just happened to me.
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So, when I come here for my recording studio time, uh, I come here almost every week because
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I record lots of videos.
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And when I come here, I have to sign in every time.
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So, I show the staff, and they know who I am, almost everybody.
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Uh, but some people they don't, they don't make me show my little receipt that says,
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yes, I have a reservation for today because they have a record of it, and I'm really the
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only foreigner that's coming here to do this anyway.
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So, most people know who I am, but one guy, in particular, he was saying, “Hey, can
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you please, you know, show me your receipt.”
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And I said, “Really, you guys are pretty strict today.”
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And he’s like, “Well, you know, it's a rule.”
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So, I showed him the receipt, and it's not a big deal to show the receipt.
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But I was just saying, “Well, you guys know who I am, right?”
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I mean, I'm, I'm the same guy coming every week.
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There's no confusion here.
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Uh, and just like at a restaurant or something, you would expect maybe they know you, and
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they give you maybe slightly better treatment.
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Or, you know, they don't make you follow the rules as closely.
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Anyway, a person who is a stickler is someone that always follows the rules even if they
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don't really have to.
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So, this guy is a stickler.
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A stickler.
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So, he's sticking to the rules in that way.
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A stickler.
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A stickler.
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Next, solitude, another ‘s’ word.
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Solitude.
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You've probably heard this before, but listen carefully for it in the conversation.
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The solitude of nature and solitude just means you are alone like solo.
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Solitude.
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So, solo, meaning by itself, and we have solitude from this same idea.
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So, solitude.
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I like to enjoy solitude.
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Right now, in my recording studio, I have solitude.
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So, I have, uh, it's very peaceful.
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No one else is here.
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I can just enjoy having a conversation with you and enjoy my solitude.
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Solitude.
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Next, accessible.
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Accessible.
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Now, you probably know this word already.
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To access something means to enter it or to get it in some way.
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So, you might have access to a building, or I might have, uh, access to certain information
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on a computer.
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If I'm working at a company, you might have different levels of access like top-level
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access or something.
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But you can say something is X accessible like wheelchair accessible if you're talking
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about you're able to use a wheelchair for this.
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So, there might be a ramp to get into some buildings.
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So, that building becomes wheelchair accessible.
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So, listen for this, accessible, in the conversation.
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So, Emily is talking about when we go into a park, there are some places that are not
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accessible for, for people driving in cars.
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So, it's not car accessible.
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It's only accessible by walking.
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Next, dedicated.
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Dedicated.
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Listen carefully to the pronunciation.
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Dedicated.
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Dedicated.
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Dedicated just means you care a lot about doing something, and you're very focused on
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that, and you want to make sure you complete that object.
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So, I'm very dedicated to helping people learn.
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That's why we've been doing this for over six years now.
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We have over, I can't believe it, over six years of lesson sets that we've been producing.
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So, I’m very dedicated.
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Every month I'm continuing to help you improve.
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And the learners that follow the lessons each month as well, those dedicated learners, the
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people dedicated to improving their English are the ones who get fluent.
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Dedicated.
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Next, we have a couple of words related to each other.
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In the conversation, I'm speaking with my sister about what I think is the quality of
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camping equipment that is maybe different from what we had when I was a kid.
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So, we're talking about, uh, the ways we describe different materials.
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And so, we talk about durable, sturdy and flimsy.
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Durable, sturdy and flimsy.
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So, we'll talk about all three of these things.
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Durable means it lasts for a long time.
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So, if I buy something, like a new car, it's going to last me, you know, many, many years.
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Now, a lot of companies are producing things that are not very durable.
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And this means that they're producing something with the hope that it breaks or breaks down
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quickly, so that you have to buy a new version of that thing.
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So, it becomes, uh, less, uh, well, it's basically just less, less valuable and less durable.
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So, you can't use it as long over time.
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And the business term for that, although you don't need to remember this, is planned obsolescence.
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Planned obsolescence.
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So, it just means businesses are intentionally trying to produce something that's not very
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good quality, so that it breaks and then you have to get a new version of that thing.
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To keep spending, keep buying more things.
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So, next, we are talking about flimsy.
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So, we have durable, and now flimsy.
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Flimsy means it's kind of bendable.
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It doesn't really, um, kind of stay in the same shape that it should be.
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You can move it easily or bend it or flex it.
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And typically, when something is flimsy, we talk about that as being not very good quality.
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So, if we want something sturdy, which is the opposite of that, we want something strong
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like this.
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I have a sturdy chair, and not, like, a flimsy one that can bend like this.
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So, if you take a credit card, you can bend it.
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Uh, if that card is really thin, then it's usually very flimsy like a piece of paper.
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It can move around easily, and it's not very sturdy.
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So, durable, sturdy and flimsy.
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Next, you'll hear Emily talking about specialized gear.
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Now, gear is just a term for any tools or equipment that you might be using.
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But this is one of those things where you sound much more native if you're asking about
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instead of equipment, you talk about gear.
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So, you can say, “Hey, I bought some new camping gear.”
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Or, “I bought some new gear for my band,” you know, maybe some microphones or electronic
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cables or something like that.
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But it's, it, it's the exact same thing as tools or equipment, but you're just talking
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about it in a more casual and conversational way.
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Gear, gear.
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Next, massive.
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Massive.
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If you think about mass as maybe having some kind of space or size.
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We're talking about the weight of something.
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How much pressure there is to that thing.
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Lots of different ideas connected with mass.
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Uh, but if you want to talk about massive, it just means something that's really big.
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So, I might have a big problem, but I can sound even more native and conversational,
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or I just wanted to say the problem is really big by just saying it's massive.
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We have a massive problem at the office.
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We're losing sales, and customers are really angry at us because we did something stupid.
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And so now it's a big problem.
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Massive, massive.
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Next, another word you’ve probably heard before, but I recommend you use it, is spectacular.
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Spectacular.
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There are really interesting ways of improving your language and very small ways.
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You can do this just by changing a few words.
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And instead of using something like good or great, you can start using a bit more interesting
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language like wonderful.
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Or, something that's not as frequently used, spectacular.
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So, something that's wow, it's amazing.
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You’ll often see this for movies or a Broadway musical.
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Something that has a lot of dancing, and it's just an amazing thing to see.
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So, more than great or amazing, you can say spectacular.
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That's just an amazing thing that you saw.
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Wow, that thing was spectacular.
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And my sister is talking about this as the great views she sees when she goes camping
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and is in places like Yosemite National Park.
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And so, this is a place, wow, it's just spectacular views and beautiful mountains and flowers
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and all of those things.
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Spectacular.
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Next, to startle something.
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To startle something.
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If you just think of the idea of start like moving very quickly.
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So, you're beginning something, you're starting something.
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So, to startle something is to get that thing moving quickly.
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So, if I'm walking in the woods, and I startle a bear.
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So, a bear is maybe sleeping next to the path I'm walking on, and the bear wakes up.
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I startled the bear.
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Or, if I walk into an office, uh, and someone is standing there, and I don't notice them
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and then they say, “Hello.”
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I say, “Oh, you startled me.”
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You startled someone.
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So, you, to startle someone, again, just means to maybe get them excited.
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They notice, and usually, they move in almost a fearful way.
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To startle someone.
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Next, impenetrable.
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Impenetrable.
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Now, this is another longer word that you can look at the pieces of it.
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So, ‘im’ meaning the opposite of being able to do something.
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And then we have ‘penetrate,’ to go into something.
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So, the opposite of being able to enter something.
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Something is impenetrable.
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Impenetrable.
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So, you cannot penetrate that thing.
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You cannot enter that thing in some way.
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So, you might have a castle that has, uh, like, the, the walls are really well protected,
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and no army can get into that castle.
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So, that castle is impenetrable.
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Impenetrable.
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And you'll hear my sister talking about this as maybe a bit more…
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She's using this as an exaggeration.
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So, she's saying, “Well, some of the parts of a forest are impenetrable.”
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Now, you probably could get in there if you had, you know, some saws and knives and other
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things to cut through the plants.
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Uh, but in general, we can just describe this as impenetrable.
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Impenetrable.
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Next, an enthusiast.
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Enthusiast.
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Now, to be enthusiastic about something just means to be excited about it.
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I'm very enthusiastic about teaching.
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So, I'm always excited when I get into the studio and can record these lessons.
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So, I am a teaching enthusiast.
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And an, an enthusiast, enthusiast.
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So, you can be a baseball enthusiast or a soccer enthusiast or a jazz music enthusiast.
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It just means someone who appreciates or likes or really likes even a particular thing.
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Enthusiast.
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Enthusiast.
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Next, to activate.
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To activate something.
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This is another word you've probably heard before, but again, it's a way of making you
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sound a bit more…
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Well, it’s, it helps you sound more native and natural but also more educated.
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So, instead of saying to turn on something, you can talk about activating it.
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But, just be careful.
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Activate was usually used for more technical kind of things, like, you have to activate
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a machine.
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Uh, but in a casual conversational way, you can just say turn on the machine.
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So, we don't say for the lights in a room, we don't activate the lights.
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Uh, you might activate lights if you're working at a studio.
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Like, if you have, uh, some equipment or you're at a theatre, and you have lots of different
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lights and there's more power.
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We might call that activating.
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But really, you're still just turning something on.
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To activate something.
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Activate.
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Next, your itinerary.
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Itinerary.
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And itinerary is what you have, it's just a more complicated way of saying a schedule
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or a list of things you have to do.
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So, we're on a trip, and I say, “What's our itinerary?”
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So, what are the things we're planning to do today?
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I'm going on a trip to Brazil, and our itinerary is we are going to go to Rio de Janeiro.
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And we're going to go to Sao Paolo and, like, other places like that.
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Uh, and I don't really know much about Brazil.
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I've actually never been there, but that's why I need an itinerary.
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So, I need someone to explain to me what exactly we're doing.
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Itinerary.
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15:15
Itinerary.
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15:16
Next, a temptation.
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Temptation.
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Now, listen carefully because the ‘p’ is in this word.
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We can say temptation.
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Temptation.
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But people typically know what this word is, so we just say temtation.
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Temtation.
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The ‘p’ is basically silent.
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Temptation.
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A temptation is something that is pulling you towards it.
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It is tempting you.
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Like, maybe you have a, uh, love of chocolate or other sweet things, and you see something.
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Wow, that looks really delicious.
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It is tempting you.
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So, it's pulling you here.
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It's trying to get your attention and say, “Please eat me.
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Please eat me.”
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And, in this way, this becomes a temptation.
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So, a temptation.
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Anything, maybe you're on a diet, and you've got some delicious food at your house.
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But oh, I don't want to eat that.
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I, I know I shouldn't, but I really want to.
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That food is a temptation.
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So, if you're on a diet, it's best to remove those temptations from your house.
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Temptation.
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Next, admirable.
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Admirable.
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Admirable means you can admire something about someone.
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So, if I say, “Wow, that person is a really brave soldier.”
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Or, “That's a, like, a really smart businessman that's very hard working.”
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These are all admirable qualities.
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So, things you can admire about someone.
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That's admirable.
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Or, you can also talk about when someone does something good, and you'll see this in the
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16:37
conversation.
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Like, maybe it's not perfect, but it's admirable.
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So, you appreciate what they're trying to do even if they don't succeed at something.
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Or, you just want to support someone or encourage someone.
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Yeah, that's very admirable.
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16:50
So, maybe you, uh, like, you do something bad.
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You lied about something, but then you confessed, and you told the truth.
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So, you're still in trouble, but you still confessed.
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So, that's admirable.
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Admirable.
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And the last of our individual words is metaphorical.
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Metaphorical.
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17:07
Now, listen carefully.
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17:08
Again, the pronunciation of this, we don't say metaphorical, at least not in American
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English.
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17:14
We say medaphorical.
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The ‘t’ becomes more of a ‘d’ sound.
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Medaphorical, medaphorical.
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17:19
Now, a metaphor is just a comparison between two things.
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You're trying to say that one thing is like something else.
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17:27
And in the conversation, I'm talking about, uh, having Emily climb a physical mountain.
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17:32
So, the metaphor of that is the mountains that she might climb in her career.
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17:36
So, you might have, like, instead of a physical mountain, you might want to, like, if you're
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a professional athlete.
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The mountain you're trying to climb is winning the championship for your sport, whatever
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17:47
that is.
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So, that's a, uh, metaphorical mountain.
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It's a metaphor.
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17:52
Now, another word that's connected with this that you don't hear in the conversation is
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simile.
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17:56
Simile.
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17:57
Now, a simile is a connection with something, again in the same way, but using the words
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‘like’ or ‘as’.
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18:03
So, if I say, “He was as fast as lightning.”
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18:06
I'm making a connection, a comparison, between saying, “Wow, that person was really fast
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18:11
like lightning.”
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Or, “He was as big as a tree.”
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18:14
So, this is a simile.
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18:15
I’m connecting something.
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It's like a metaphor, but I'm just specifically using the words ‘like’ or ‘as’.
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Now, let's move onto the longer phrases and expressions for this month.
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There are quite a lot of them, so I hope you enjoy this part of the lesson.
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The first one is camera shy.
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18:32
Camera shy.
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Now, I am not camera shy right now.
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I really enjoy being in front of the camera, and it's a lot of fun, uh, in the same way
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that I enjoy teaching people live when I actually have some students I can work with personally.
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18:44
But when I began, I was quite camera shy.
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18:47
And if you go back to the YouTube videos I created a few years ago, uh, the original
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18:52
YouTube videos did not have me in them.
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18:54
It was just information on a screen because I was camera shy.
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18:59
Camera shy.
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19:00
Next, nothing wrong with that.
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19:02
Now, listen to this pronunciation and the way I’m, the, the intonation I use for this.
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19:06
Nothing wrong with that.
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19:08
Nothing wrong with that.
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19:09
You can also say there's nothing wrong with that.
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19:12
There's nothing wrong with that.
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19:13
Now, this is a way of almost agreeing with someone, or yeah, it's, it’s basically agreeing
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19:18
with someone.
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19:19
Uh, or you're saying maybe a person is describing something.
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19:22
They're saying, yeah, I, I, like, I went and, you know, got a job doing this thing.
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19:27
And maybe it's not as great as I wanted it to be, but you're like, yeah, that's, that’s,
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19:31
that sounds, that sounds good.
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19:32
There's nothing wrong with that.
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19:34
So, I'm saying it's okay that you can do something.
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19:36
I'm agreeing with that person, or I'm just giving my support for that person.
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19:40
So, wow, there's nothing wrong with that.
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19:42
And again, there's nothing wrong with that is typically used for something that's average
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19:46
and okay.
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19:47
So, in the example I just gave about a person, maybe they're 50 years old and they think,
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19:52
wow, I wish I had a better career.
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19:55
But they had a pretty good one.
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19:56
I can say, wow, there's nothing wrong with that.
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19:58
Or, I can use that as almost a joking way for maybe a friend of mine says, “Hey, I
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20:03
just married a model.”
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20:04
Like, a famous model, and I say, “Wow, there’s nothing wrong with that.”
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20:08
So, I’m, he knows I mean, like, wow, that was an amazing thing.
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20:11
But I'm almost using it in a joking way.
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20:13
There's nothing wrong with that because it's so obvious that, wow, he, he made a good decision
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20:18
because he married a model or, you know, did something else that was amazing.
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20:22
There's nothing wrong with that.
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20:24
Next, on occasion.
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20:26
On occasion.
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20:27
Now, this is a more intelligent and educated way of saying sometimes.
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20:31
Now, you could use the word sometimes, and that's perfectly fine for conversations.
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20:36
But if you want to take your language to the next level, it's all these little things.
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20:40
Again, you're changing one word here, one word there, and that, wow.
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20:44
Not only does it make you sound more native, but it also makes you just sound more intelligent.
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20:48
And really, that's going to be more impressive to other people you're speaking with.
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20:52
So, on occasion, I like to go to the zoo.
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20:55
Or, on occasion, at work, I will be doing something.
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20:58
So, occasionally is the same thing, but it's, uh, on occasion is a little bit more, maybe
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21:04
a little bit more educated, a little bit more advanced than just saying occasionally.
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21:08
So, again it's basically the same thing as sometimes, or occasionally, but it just sounds
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21:13
a bit stronger, a bit more impressive when you're speaking.
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21:16
On occasion.
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21:17
On occasion.
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21:19
Next, that's an exaggeration.
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21:22
That's an exaggeration.
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21:23
Now, I mentioned the word exaggerate earlier.
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21:25
I'm talking about to exaggerate something.
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21:28
Meaning, like, wow, like, he was as big as a house.
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21:31
Now, I don't actually mean the person was as big as a house.
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21:34
So, I'm exaggerating, but I'm saying that, you know, the guy was pretty big, and I'm
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21:38
trying to paint a more interesting picture for you.
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21:42
So, if you're talking about exaggerating or you can say, “Well, that's an exaggeration.”
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21:46
You'll hear this in the conversation, and you will hear this often maybe in movies or
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21:50
raver, uh, regular, everyday conversations when people are speaking.
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3980
21:54
And they'll say, they'll explain something, and they'll say, “Wow, it was, like, we…
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21:58
There was so much rain, and there was almost a flood.”
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22:01
And then they say, “Well, that's an exaggeration, but…” something.
446
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22:05
And typically we use this if we, if we actually want to communicate some important information
447
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22:10
or, or want people to know the truth.
448
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22:12
So, I begin, I'm excited telling a story.
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22:15
Say, “Wow, there was so much rain.
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22:16
There was almost a flood.”
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22:18
And people are listening, like, “Wow.
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22:20
Is everyone okay?”
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22:21
I say, “Well that, that's an exaggeration, but there was still a lot of rain.”
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22:24
So, this is a phrase you can use if you begin, you kind of get people interested in a story.
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22:29
But maybe you get excited, you get carried away.
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22:32
This is another great phrasal verb where you're talking about being pulled by a story.
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22:37
Like, wow, I'm getting carried away.
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22:38
I'm telling this story about this amazing thing that happened.
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22:41
But, I think I'm getting it, I'm getting excited.
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22:44
I'm exaggerating.
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1000
22:45
So, that's an exaggeration, but…
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22:47
And then you begin explaining maybe a more kind of simple, or the accurate thing, what
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22:52
really happened.
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22:54
That's an exaggeration.
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22:55
Next, every something counts.
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22:58
Now, this is a really great thing you can use in conversations, or you're talking about
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23:03
in a professional setting where, uh, as an example I could say, “Every, like, every
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23:08
dollar we earn counts.”
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1630
23:10
So, we shouldn't be thinking about, like, it's, it’s important to focus only on sales
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23:15
from over here.
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1000
23:16
We don't really care about sales from this department or something.
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23:19
Every sale counts.
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23:20
So, to count means it's important.
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23:22
It matters.
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23:23
There's a reason for it, and because of that, like, it's a thing that we should be thinking
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23:28
about.
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23:29
So, every little bit counts or every little bit helps or every little bit makes a difference.
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4950
23:34
So, if I'm going out and I'm getting, maybe, money from some people.
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3760
23:37
If I'm asking for donations, you'll hear this a lot.
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23:40
Um, so if, if, if people are coming to me and they say, “I'm sorry.
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3620
23:44
I only have 25 cents,” or something which is not very much money.
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23:49
And they say, “I only have 25 cents.”
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23:51
I say, “That's fantastic.
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23:53
Every little bit counts.”
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So, every little bit helps.
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23:56
Every little bit is important.
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23:57
It doesn't matter if it's $10,000 or 25 cents.
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24:00
We want all of that, so we can help, you know, for our cause or whatever we're getting donations
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4420
24:05
for.
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1000
24:06
Every little bit helps.
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1000
24:07
So, every X helps, or every X counts.
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3650
24:10
Next, here's a really fantastic phrase, in my X days.
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24:15
So, in my camping days, in my baseball playing days, in my, my youth, uh, but you're talking
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24:21
about specific days as when I was doing a particular thing.
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24:25
So, when I was in college, like, in my college days or in my college years.
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24:29
You can use that as well.
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24:31
Uh, but this sounds a bit more interesting and educated and really just more poetic.
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24:35
And this is what I'm trying to help you do.
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24:37
Not only learn to communicate fluently as basic speech, but how you can sound more interesting
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24:42
and colorful and impressive when you speak, so that you can really just, again, you're
501
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24:47
impressing people.
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24:48
And you're actually communicating in a more interesting way, uh, that really captures
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24:53
people's attention.
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24:54
So, when you're just saying, “I went to the store yesterday.”
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24:56
That's perfectly fine, but if you can say, uh, like, “I went to this really interesting
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25:01
thing.”
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25:02
And you can describe it in detail and use similes and metaphors and all of that.
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4290
25:06
So, that's why you could say, “When I was in school.”
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25:10
That's perfectly fine in a conversation.
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1600
25:11
But you sound more educated and impressive and you can say, “In my school days.”
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3970
25:15
Or, in my baseball playing days, or in the conversation you'll hear, “In my camping
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25:20
days,” like, when I was camping.
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25:22
So, that's something again you do.
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25:23
Uh, you maybe don't do now, but you did, uh, many years ago, uh, or just some time in the
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6150
25:29
past.
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25:30
But you're describing that as in my working days or my camping days.
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25:34
Or, you can say days or years even.
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25:37
Next, I want to explain something that's important for casual conversational speech, but maybe
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25:42
you shouldn't use it very often, but again, it's better than using, uh, something in your
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25:47
native language.
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25:48
Like, a filler word, like, ‘um’ or ‘uh’ in English is better than using a filler word
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25:53
in your native language.
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25:54
Uh, so this is if I'm trying to explain something, you’ll often hear native speakers, especially
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25:59
Americans, use the word ‘like’.
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26:01
And they're saying, like, when I did this.
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26:04
And they're not using it as the actual formal definition of like.
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26:08
It's a filler word.
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26:09
It's a placeholder.
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26:10
So, I'm, I can't think of something.
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2100
26:12
So, when I was, like, in school, you don't really want to speak like that.
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26:17
But again, it's better than using filler words in your native language.
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26:19
If you can stop using yourself like that, uh, or stop, uh, using that in your conversations,
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26:25
then that's ideal.
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26:27
But you will hear it a lot, and so I want to prepare you for that in conversations because
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26:31
a lot of people do speak like that.
536
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1900
26:32
And you will hear me, and my sister as well, uh, using the word like in this way.
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4530
26:37
So, you can say, like, how when something.
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3040
26:40
So, people will hear, you'll hear a couple different words like this.
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26:44
Listen for this in the conversation.
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If I'm explaining something, uh, you can use it correctly when you say, “You know how
541
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26:50
when you do something.”
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26:52
You know how, like, when, or you know how, like, how.
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4680
26:57
You'll hear people use these different combinations of, you know.
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3190
27:00
Uh, so, ya know, or you know how when I'm trying to explain someone.
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27:04
Like, you know, like, you know what I'm talking about because I can't quite explain it well.
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27:08
I'm looking for a connection with someone, like, “Ah!
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27:11
I can't quite explain it, but you know what I'm talking about.”
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3140
27:14
You know what I'm talking about.
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27:16
And you'll see this in conversations when people are, they’re trying to make a connection
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27:19
with someone.
551
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1000
27:20
They're trying to explain something but can't quite find the words.
552
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2740
27:23
And I know this is a problem for a lot of learners, but it's something that happens
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3420
27:26
in native speakers all the time.
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1380
27:28
So, you can say, you know how when you're doing something.
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27:30
So, I give an example.
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27:31
You know how when you’re, you’re out riding your bike, and, uh, maybe you're not paying
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27:36
attention and a car almost hits you.
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27:39
So, you, you give an example of that.
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1979
27:41
You'll see this in standup comedy in America and other countries as well when people say,
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4631
27:45
“You know how when you're doing something?”
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27:47
They're, they’re trying to get you to connect with, uh, a particular experience without
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27:51
really having to explain that.
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1640
27:53
So, you know how when or you know how, like, you're doing something.
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27:58
Next, a close call.
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28:00
A close call.
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28:02
You can also call this a close encounter, or a close shave.
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28:05
So, if I'm shaving really close, it just means I get the hair as close as possible to my
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28:11
skin.
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1000
28:12
It's a close shave or a close call.
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28:14
Now, this is something and related to this we also have in a more serious way, a life
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5250
28:19
or death experience.
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It was a life or death experience.
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28:22
Like, uh, like, almost, uh, like a life-changing experience because I almost died.
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28:28
Like, a near-death experience.
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28:30
A near-death experience.
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28:32
And in these ways, all of these things are describing where maybe something almost happened
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5320
28:38
to you.
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1000
28:39
There was almost some problem.
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1440
28:40
You almost got attacked by a bear or bit by a snake or something, but you were saved.
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6330
28:47
So, maybe, uh, some lightning struck, like, three feet from me.
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4740
28:51
And I thought, wow!
582
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1000
28:52
I was almost struck by lightning, but I actually wasn't.
583
1732740
3090
28:55
So, I was safe, but almost.
584
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1380
28:57
So, it was a, it was a close shave.
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1910
28:59
It was, uh, uh, almost, uh, a near-death experience.
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3390
29:02
So, I thought I was going to die, or I thought there was going to be some problem, but I
587
1742510
4710
29:07
was safe.
588
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1000
29:08
Next, a great phrasal verb, to go down.
589
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3150
29:11
And to go down is a more conversational way of saying that something happens.
590
1751370
4020
29:15
So, if I ask someone, “Hey, what happened at the party?”
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3370
29:18
I could say in a more casual and conversational way, “What went down at the party?”
592
1758760
5060
29:23
Or “What went down at the office?”
593
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1690
29:25
Now, typically this is not a professional way of describing this, but even at an office
594
1765510
4450
29:29
when you're talking with someone in a casual conversational way, you can say, “Oh, what
595
1769960
4480
29:34
went down at the meeting yesterday?”
596
1774440
1630
29:36
So, I'm talking with a friend of mine, he's a colleague at work, and we can communicate
597
1776070
4280
29:40
in a casual conversational way.
598
1780350
1790
29:42
But maybe my boss, I wouldn't talk about that.
599
1782140
2190
29:44
Or, if I'm giving a presentation or selling something, unless it's a casual situation,
600
1784330
4760
29:49
I probably wouldn't do that.
601
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1670
29:50
But it's a great way of de, describing something happening in a casual way.
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1790760
4310
29:55
What went down, or what's going down tomorrow.
603
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2980
29:58
Next, to have your wits about you.
604
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30:01
Now, we, you can talk about something being around you or about you.
605
1801550
3850
30:05
It just means near you in some way, uh, and this just means we're taking a physical idea
606
1805400
5080
30:10
of having something near you or about you or around you.
607
1810480
3930
30:14
But we're talking about your wits.
608
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2000
30:16
And having your wits about you just means you're, you’re smart and you're ready to,
609
1816410
4000
30:20
to think and to react to something if there is a problem.
610
1820410
2600
30:23
So, if I'm camping and I'm walking around, I'm listening to music.
611
1823010
3620
30:26
Uh, I'm maybe going out traveling in the woods, and I, I, I'm not really paying attention.
612
1826630
5630
30:32
I'm not paying attention to what's happening around me.
613
1832260
2260
30:34
I don't have my wits about me.
614
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2040
30:36
So, maybe a bear can jump and grab me, and then, oh no!
615
1836560
2870
30:39
I, I, I had no idea because I wasn't listening for the bear.
616
1839430
3840
30:43
To have your wits about you.
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2090
30:45
To have your wits about you.
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2260
30:47
Next, who can say?
619
1847620
1990
30:49
Who can say?
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1000
30:50
Now, who can say is a great response you can give someone when they say, “Well…”
621
1850610
4520
30:55
Maybe something happened, or we don't really know or we’re guessing about something.
622
1855130
4770
30:59
Like, which do you think would better?
623
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1520
31:01
Like, we’re, like, who would win in a fight?
624
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2410
31:03
Like, Superman, or, you know, some other superhero or something.
625
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3370
31:07
And maybe you don't really know.
626
1867200
1630
31:08
You know, their powers are pretty similar, and there really is no answer for it.
627
1868830
3541
31:12
You could say, “Well, who can say?”
628
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1629
31:14
It just means, well, I don't know, or maybe we can guess about something.
629
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3170
31:17
But we don't really know.
630
1877170
1710
31:18
Who can say?
631
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1030
31:19
Who can say?
632
1879910
1200
31:21
Next, when you're talking about groups of people, especially when you're camping or
633
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4160
31:25
you're going to a restaurant, you can talk about a party of something.
634
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3870
31:29
So, a party of two, a party of three, a party of four, and again, it just means a group,
635
1889140
5330
31:34
but it's a more elegant way, a more advanced way of describing that group.
636
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3370
31:37
So, when you go to a restaurant, uh, usually at a, at maybe, like, you know, like, an,
637
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5830
31:43
an everyday restaurant that's not very expensive, they would just say, “How many people in
638
1903670
3990
31:47
your group?” or “How many people?”
639
1907660
1580
31:49
“How many?” even.
640
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31:50
You walk in, they say, “How many?”
641
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1840
31:52
And they, they’re meaning how many people are in your group.
642
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2260
31:54
And you say, “Oh, you know, just me.”
643
1914720
1740
31:56
Or, you know, there's two of us or something.
644
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2100
31:58
But at a more fancy restaurant, so a nicer place, a fancier restaurant they would say,
645
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4770
32:03
“How many in your party?”
646
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1880
32:05
How many in your party?
647
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1160
32:06
And again, it just means, like, you're not having an actual party.
648
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2980
32:09
They just mean how many in your group.
649
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1770
32:11
And it's the same thing with camping.
650
1931120
1570
32:12
So, there's a party of 20 people traveling, you know, somewhere.
651
1932690
3870
32:16
So, on the news, you'll see this sometimes if people are, are camping somewhere and there's
652
1936560
5960
32:22
a disaster.
653
1942520
1000
32:23
Like, uh, there's an avalanche, and all the snow falls down and covers the people and
654
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3250
32:26
they need to rescue them.
655
1946770
1550
32:28
On the news, you'll hear there was a party of 20 people, and they were doing something.
656
1948320
4030
32:32
So, there was a party of people, but it means the same thing as a group.
657
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4500
32:36
Next, to turn up.
658
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2030
32:38
To turn up.
659
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1000
32:39
Now, this is the exact same thing as just to appear, uh, but you'll hear this as a phrasal
660
1959880
5240
32:45
verb in a more casual and conversational way.
661
1965120
2260
32:47
If you think about a card, like, right now I have, maybe this is a table in front of
662
1967380
4150
32:51
me, and I turn the card over like this.
663
1971530
2670
32:54
You can also call this turning a card up.
664
1974200
2370
32:56
So, you're showing the face of the card and not the back of the card.
665
1976570
3260
32:59
So, I'm turning the card up, and you can say, “What turned up?”
666
1979830
3340
33:03
So, it just means you found something or something appeared, or you could see something that
667
1983170
4710
33:07
you could not see before.
668
1987880
1060
33:08
So, when something turns up.
669
1988940
1690
33:10
So, I was out looking for my keys, or maybe I lost something and a friend of mine says,
670
1990630
4940
33:15
“Hey, did your keys turn up?”
671
1995570
1560
33:17
Did your keys turn up, or did something turn up?
672
1997130
2510
33:19
It just means were they visible.
673
1999640
1680
33:21
And it just means could you find that thing.
674
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2160
33:23
To turn up.
675
2003480
1520
33:25
To turn up.
676
2005000
1170
33:26
Next, legit.
677
2006170
1660
33:27
Legit.
678
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1000
33:28
This is something I've covered on the conversation before, but it does appear a lot in conversations,
679
2008830
4030
33:32
and it's quite casual.
680
2012860
1360
33:34
So, you wouldn't really use it at an office.
681
2014220
2390
33:36
But legit just means it's legitimate.
682
2016610
1870
33:38
So, that's the longer word.
683
2018480
2110
33:40
So, legit is the shorter version, and this just means if it's accurate or true or real.
684
2020590
5280
33:45
Maybe if I go out to a store and I don't really know is this a real Rolex watch?
685
2025870
5930
33:51
Is this watch legit, or is this a fake?
686
2031800
2270
33:54
So, I can't really tell.
687
2034070
1210
33:55
So, I'm asking someone is this a legit watch.
688
2035280
2730
33:58
Is this a real one or a fake?
689
2038010
3140
34:01
Legit.
690
2041150
1000
34:02
Legit.
691
2042150
1000
34:03
Next, no joke.
692
2043150
1430
34:04
No joke.
693
2044580
1000
34:05
Now, this is another one where you're saying you're not messing around with something.
694
2045580
4200
34:09
And to mess around, that's another great phrasal verb, where you're joking in some way or you're
695
2049780
3950
34:13
not being serious.
696
2053730
1419
34:15
You're not doing what you should be doing, so you're messing around or you're playing
697
2055149
3741
34:18
around.
698
2058890
1180
34:20
And I say, well, something is no joke.
699
2060070
1660
34:21
It just means you have to treat that thing with care and respect.
700
2061730
3650
34:25
Like, if I am maybe carrying some expensive vase for some reason, and a friend of mine
701
2065380
5190
34:30
says, “Hey, don't drop that.
702
2070570
1000
34:31
That's no joke.”
703
2071570
1000
34:32
If you drop that thing, there's going to be, you'll have to pay a lot of money or something.
704
2072570
3500
34:36
So, I'm, okay, I'm very serious.
705
2076070
2320
34:38
And I want to make sure I don't drop that thing.
706
2078390
2180
34:40
No joke.
707
2080570
1190
34:41
No joke.
708
2081760
1980
34:43
And the last of our words and expressions for today is multifaceted.
709
2083740
3850
34:47
You also hear this as multifaceted.
710
2087590
2940
34:50
When you hear the word multi, multi means many.
711
2090530
2460
34:52
Like, you have a multiple, or you want to multiply something.
712
2092990
3810
34:56
But you can hear it as multi or multi.
713
2096800
3000
34:59
It doesn't really matter, but you will hear that as both.
714
2099800
2550
35:02
So, having a facet, a facet just means, like, a face of something.
715
2102350
4510
35:06
So, maybe you look at the facets of a diamond, what the different faces are on that diamond.
716
2106860
4150
35:11
Uh, but the facets of something, it could mean the physical faces of that thing or the,
717
2111010
4640
35:15
the different sides of it in a more metaphorical kind of way.
718
2115650
4260
35:19
So, you could describe a person as being multifaceted or multifaceted, or an experience as being
719
2119910
6720
35:26
multifaceted.
720
2126630
1000
35:27
Like, you can go camping, but you learn lots of different skills like survival skills and
721
2127630
5050
35:32
physical fitness things and mental training.
722
2132680
2980
35:35
And you learn lots of whatever, but, like, the training is multifaceted.
723
2135660
3810
35:39
Or, a person is multifaceted, so that person has maybe some interesting hobbies, or they
724
2139470
5990
35:45
like doing lots of things.
725
2145460
1450
35:46
Maybe they do business, but they also maybe they do children's birthday parties as a clown
726
2146910
5160
35:52
or something, you know, whatever.
727
2152070
1300
35:53
Uh, but you're talking about someone being multifaceted like they have many faces.
728
2153370
5470
35:58
And that just means, again, they can do many different things, or they have an interesting
729
2158840
3340
36:02
collection of different par, personality traits or something like that.
730
2162180
5160
36:07
Multifaceted or multifaceted.
731
2167340
1420
36:08
Well, that's it for the Phrase Builder lesson.
732
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2450
36:11
I hope you have enjoyed it.
733
2171210
1420
36:12
Do go back, as always, and remember there are a lot of lessons in each lesson set.
734
2172630
4560
36:17
So, you can focus on just a few things if you like.
735
2177190
3310
36:20
Maybe you prefer the Phrase Builder to something else, and you can get through the Grammar
736
2180500
3390
36:23
Focus lesson very quickly.
737
2183890
1880
36:25
That's perfectly fine.
738
2185770
1000
36:26
You don't have to go through the, the schedule strictly.
739
2186770
2570
36:29
You don't have to be a stickler.
740
2189340
1340
36:30
I know a lot of people like to.
741
2190680
1750
36:32
They want to follow the system, but really, I want you to design the system, so it works
742
2192430
3960
36:36
for you.
743
2196390
1000
36:37
So, we give you as many lessons as you need.
744
2197390
2070
36:39
But again, if you can go through something and you master a grammar point very quickly,
745
2199460
3740
36:43
then move on to the next thing.
746
2203200
1500
36:44
And focus on things that you need more time with, especially this vocabulary.
747
2204700
3660
36:48
So, that way you can prepare yourself for the Master Class lesson.
748
2208360
3700
36:52
Well, I will see you in the Fluency Corner lesson coming up next.
749
2212060
2480
36:54
I hope you have a fantastic day.
750
2214540
1760
36:56
Go back and practice, and I'll see you then.
751
2216300
37160
37:33
Bye bye.
752
2253460
850
About this website

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