Is it possible to speak GOOD ENGLISH without GRAMMAR?

649,703 views ・ 2020-01-27

English Fluency Journey


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Hey guys! Welcome back to the English Fluency Journey. I'm Anna.
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And today I want to give you my take
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on such a hot topic. Which is
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Can you speak English without grammar?
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Can you speak good English without grammar?
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and without learning grammar rules intentionally?
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I’ll tell you right away this is not my case.
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I have learned grammar separately and intentionally.
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And I don’t have an intention to speculate on this topic but I do have some thoughts that I want to share.
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And I think that it is very much possible for non-native speakers to
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speak English and not to learn grammar rules.
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But when I say not learning grammar rules mean not to sit, memorize and
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drill them; I don’t mean ignore the rules.
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Here's the thing
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if you asked just some random native speakers about tenses
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all those grammar rules
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how to ask questions, auxiliary verbs, phrasal verbs and a word order in those.
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They would probably just tell you
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“Back off man! I’m simply speaking English. I don't know how explain these things and I don’t need to”.
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And that’s true they don’t need to unless they’re teachers.
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And you don’t need to know how to explain all these things and learn them by heart unless you’re a teacher.
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I think that you just have to understand them and be able to use them naturally without even thinking.
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Do native speakers speak perfectly, grammatically absolutely correct? No.
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Within every language there’s a literaly language that you can find only in books.
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There are rules for writing and formal writing.
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When you’re writing an essay for college
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you want to stick to the rules of formal writing,
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you have to know grammar.
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But when you’re texting someone or writing a post on Instagram, you don’t want it to be too formal. You want it to be casual.
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And that is an informal - spoken language. It’s the way that people communicate.
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And sometimes they use phrases that are grammatically incorrect. Because how many times have you heard from native speakers
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“This is the way we say this”? “This is the way people speak”
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“Yes, it is grammatically incorrect and when you say this phrase grammatilly correctly it sounds weird to us and too formal.”
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Now, think about yourself and your native language.
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I bet that you don't know how to explain a lot of grammar rules and I bet that you don’t even know a lot about them.
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And yet, still, you don’t have problems with expressing yourself.
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You may not even be grammatically correct sometimes, but I think that’s not a problem at all. Right?
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Yes, of course, we, and native speakers of English went to school and have learned all these things
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a long time ago. But let’s take a look at children, preschoolers.
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They haven’t learned grammar rules, but yet they can speak English and do speak English.
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And sometimes pretty good English for their age.
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Why?
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Because I think first they listen a lot.
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Second, they’re very attentive.
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And, third they actually speak.
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And they don’t give a damn about their mistakes they just want to express themselves.
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And, sometimes they speak non-stop. Like my son for example
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he can repeat a word like 30 times in a row and then another one.
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My fourth point is that they mimic adults all the time reaping
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the exact words they hear
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and using all that they’ve heard when they need or want to say something.
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And the most important thing is that they are exposed to language
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Yes they’re not always grammatically correct and neither are adults, even though they’ve learned all these grammar rules.
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And there’s actually scientific confirmation that spoken
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language differs from written language. And that has to do with the brain
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and the speed of processing information.
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When we write we have time to think about grammar
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and to find a way to express our thoughts in the best way possible.
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I’m not going to go into details because I’m not a scientist and you can find this information if you want.
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If you hate learning grammar then I think, you have to think of
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yourself as a child and do a couple of things.
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If you’re like me and you don’t live in an English speaking country
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then you have to create this environment to immerse yourself in the language.
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Like literally start listening and watching everything in English,
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follow someone on social media who posts in English, some native speakers.
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And this is the first thing that you want to do. You have to be surrounded by English,
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you have to be soaking it all up.
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Pay close attention to the way that people use English in different life situations.
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This is not passive listening. Children never passively listen.
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They always learn from the environment. But with children it happens
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subconsciously and automatically. It’s nature.
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And you’re just going have try a little bit more harder.
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And don’t forget why you’re doing this. Don’t forget your ultimate goal
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and that this is beneficial for you in every way.
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Then what else children do? They repeat everything all the time.
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Like little parrots. And it seems that they’re never tired of this.
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And this is extremely important to repeat what you’re hearing a lot,
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all the time and using what you’ve heard in your speech if you don’t want to dig into grammar rules.
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. And if you don’t have anyone available to ask how to say something you have to look it up.
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And it may be enough for you
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knowing that in this situation you have to say this like this
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and use this tense and not knowing why.
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Then you reapply this knowledge to another situation.
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But even if you don’t look up everything you
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will be able to grasp something and understand things from the context.
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This is the way our brain works - it builds connections and associations.
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And then of course speaking and using a language! You’re going have to do this all the time.
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No days off, no excuses. This is like crucial.
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If you do live in an English speaking country then it’s a lot easier for you.
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If you don’t then there are so many ways you can do this, I mean find people to talk to.
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And I’ve talked about this a lot a lot a lot in previous videos.
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I’ll give you the links somewhere above my head where you can find this information in the description boxes to those videos.
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So it is very much possible. I know so many examples
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when teenagers moved to an English speaking country
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and in a couple of years they picked up the language.
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And I asked “How did you do it?”
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the usual answer of these success stories
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because let’s face the truth not everyone is successful in this
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So the answer was
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“I just made friends, tried to be as social as possible and communicated.’
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So your main go-to things will be
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attentive listening, repeating, communicating and immersion.
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Listen carefully and a lot. There has to be a really massive input.
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And reproduce what you’ve heard and actually use a language.
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The point is in taking action.
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Now guys. I’m not encouraging anyone not to learn grammar.
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I am personally a curious person. I always want to know why and all the options.
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And I am willing to sit and to do my research.
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And it’s not like I learn grammar by heart. I try to understand it.
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Am I always correct? No.
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Do I know everything? I don’t think that it’s possible.
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I’m simply speaking from my experience. Because the more you use a language
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the more questions you have and you’re trying to find answers to those questions.
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And when you communicate with people, when you make mistakes, when you’re in those awkward situations,
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of course you want to know how to say what you’ve said correctly
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to avoid embarrassment the next time
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and you’re searching for information. And you’re starting to educate yourself.
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This is kind of inevitable.
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And at the beginning you do this a lot but less and less over time.
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Thanks guys for watching this video. I want you to leave
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