Speak English FAST, like a native speaker: 3 methods

127,124 views ・ 2019-01-02

English Jade


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:00
Hi, everyone. In this lesson we’re going to learn how to speak fast like a native speaker.
0
49
5761
00:05
When you’re learning English and you hear native speakers, why is it that they sound
1
5810
5100
00:10
so fast and it’s hard for them to understand? Are they really talking like: “Blub-blub-blub-blub-blub-blub-blub”,
2
10910
5760
00:16
or is it something that they’re doing when they pronounce sentences that makes it seem
3
16670
8439
00:25
fast, but it’s not really? Let’s look at some example sentences, and I’ll teach
4
25109
5810
00:30
you how to speak fast like a native English speaker.
5
30919
3521
00:34
All my question phrases are questions with “Do” or “Did”, and this is them written
6
34440
8100
00:42
out in the full sentence, then I have in this column what the sentence sounds like. If we
7
42540
10030
00:52
don’t know how to read IPA transcription, here, this is very useful for us. But the
8
52570
9801
01:02
problem, when we write out the pronunciation in this way, is we don’t have letters for
9
62371
8469
01:10
all the sounds. We don’t have letters from the English alphabet for all the sounds in
10
70840
6060
01:16
English, so it’s helpful, but we can still sound slightly wrong if this is all we know
11
76900
11170
01:28
about the pronunciation. That’s why I’m going to teach you little bits that we need
12
88070
6210
01:34
to know from here, so that you get the correct pronunciation. And this is what, altogether,
13
94280
5790
01:40
will help you speak fast like a native speaker. So, let’s start here, question phrase: “Do
14
100070
7870
01:47
you like it?” That’s really slow. If you’re a beginner in English, you can understand
15
107940
7490
01:55
it. “Do you like it?” But this is not how native speakers actually speak. It sounds
16
115430
8520
02:03
something like: “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit?” What happens is the “Do” and “you”
17
123950
10210
02:14
join: “D-you”, “Do you”, and the “like” and the “it” change. The “k” goes
18
134160
15170
02:29
to the second… The “k” joins “it”. “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit?” And we
19
149330
8470
02:37
can see this also in the IPA transcription. “Ii: kIt”, “də.ju: Ii: kIt”.
20
157800
10980
02:48
What’s also happening, here, in the IPA transcription, if you look here, this is “də.
21
168780
7700
02:56
ju”, “də. ju”. This is schwa. “də. ju”. When I write it here, we don’t have
22
176480
9910
03:06
any letter in English that can… In the English alphabet that can represent schwa, so that’s
23
186390
5770
03:12
why I just put the “d” consonant: “D-you”, “D-you”, “D-you”.
24
192160
6810
03:18
Another… Now, you have to listen really, really, really carefully to hear the difference.
25
198970
6340
03:25
“Do you like it?” can also sound like: “Jew lie-kit? Jew lie-kit?” I’m going
26
205310
9330
03:34
to say the first one, then the second one: “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit? Jew lie-kit?”
27
214640
8030
03:42
You have to listen really, really carefully. So, I suggest you watch this video a few times
28
222670
5850
03:48
so that you can start to hear the difference between very similar pronunciations. Here’s
29
228520
5880
03:54
the transcription: “dʒU: li: kIt”. The same thing is happening, here, in the two
30
234400
8309
04:02
examples: “li: kIt”, but the first part is different. “də.ju”, “dʒU”, “də.ju:”,
31
242709
7971
04:10
“dʒU”. “dʒU: li: kIt”. Let’s look at the next example: “Did you
32
250680
8929
04:19
see that?” That’s how a beginner would say it. “Did you see that?” What does
33
259609
7231
04:26
it sound like? “Did-yah see that? Did-yah see that?” Am I speaking fast now—“Did-yah
34
266840
7389
04:34
see that?”—or am I just joining up the words so that they flow? “Did-yah see that?”
35
274229
10840
04:45
If we look at the IPA transcription: “you” becomes “jə”. Although it’s… It looks
36
285069
10291
04:55
like the letter “j”, this is the sound for “yah”, together with the schwa. “jə”.
37
295360
6860
05:02
“did.jə si: đaet”. Don’t be scared by this; we don’t use this IPA symbol that
38
302220
8400
05:10
often, and this is the word “that”. “did.jə si: đaet”. “Did-yah see that?”
39
310620
11759
05:22
Can you hear the difference between the first example and the second example? “Di-jah
40
322379
5612
05:27
see that? Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah see that?”, “Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah
41
327991
5828
05:33
see that?”, “Di-jah see that?” “di.dʒə si: đaet”. “jə”, “dʒə”, “jə”,
42
333819
4611
05:38
“dʒə”. “Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah see that?”, “Di-jah see that?” You have
43
338430
11970
05:50
to listen really, really carefully. This is advanced-level hearing. If you don’t hear
44
350400
10840
06:01
it, you haven’t listened to enough native speaker pronunciation. What’s happening
45
361240
8479
06:09
here is we are losing the letter “d” and changing it to a “jah” sound instead.
46
369719
13570
06:23
“jah”. “Di-jah see that?” Next we’ve got a question and answer. -“I
47
383289
9011
06:32
saw Jack last night.” -“Did you?” -“I saw Jack last night.” -“Did you?” We’re
48
392300
7190
06:39
actually just looking at: “Did you?” “Did-yah? Did-yah? Did-yah?”, “did. jə”, “jə”.
49
399490
11699
06:51
“you” becomes “jə”. “did. jə”. Or I could also say… Here… Here, the emphasis
50
411189
14680
07:05
is on “did”. -“I saw Jack last night.” -“Did-yah? Did-yah?” “Did” is the
51
425869
8920
07:14
bigger word. “Did-yah?” I’m surprised. I can also answer the question like this:
52
434789
7340
07:22
-“I saw Jack last night. I saw Jack last night.” -“Di-jew? Di-jew?” There, “dʒu”
53
442129
10090
07:32
is the bigger word. What we’re doing here, when I underline this part, is I’m showing
54
452219
11070
07:43
where the main stress is. Here, “did” is the main stress: “did. jə”. Here,
55
463289
7410
07:50
“dʒu” is the main stress: “di. dʒu”. It gives us a different meaning when we change
56
470699
8280
07:58
the stress in a sentence. Another example: “Did you go?” Very slow:
57
478979
8881
08:07
“Did you go?” All the words are very clear and separate. “Did you go?”, “Did-yah
58
487860
10200
08:18
go? Did-yah go?”, “did… did. jə gəʊ, did. jə gəʊ”. “you” becomes “jə”:
59
498060
10309
08:28
“did. jə gəʊ”. Another example: “Di-jah go? Di-jah go?”, “di. dʒə gaʊ”. “dʒə”,
60
508369
11400
08:39
“di. dʒə gaʊ”. More examples coming up.
61
519769
4001
08:43
Let’s look now at: “Do you want to go?” I should have put a bit more space, there;
62
523770
7739
08:51
a separate word. “Do you want to go?” So slow, taking me forever to say it. Oh,
63
531509
7630
08:59
let’s count the syllables. “Do you want to go?” Five. “Jew wanna go? Jew wanna
64
539139
8111
09:07
go? Jew wanna go? Jew wanna go?” If I say this one really fast: “Jew wanna go? Jew
65
547250
9240
09:16
wanna go? Jew wanna go?” So, there’s four syllables here, but there’s five here, so
66
556490
8190
09:24
I’m losing one of the sounds. “Jew wanna go?”, “dʒu: wɒnnə gəʊ”. This symbol,
67
564680
10570
09:35
here, which is like a backwards “a”, is “ɒ”, “ɒ”. “wɒnnə, wɒnnə”.
68
575250
7650
09:42
“Jew wanna go?”, “dʒu: wɒnnə gəʊ”. Now, I can also say it a different way: “Juh-wanna
69
582900
10580
09:53
go? Juh-wanna go?”, “Jew wanna go?”, “Juh-wanna go?”, “Jew”, “Juh”,
70
593480
7159
10:00
“Jew”, “Juh”. “Jew wanna go?”, “Juh-wanna go?”, “dʒe wɒnnə gəʊ”.
71
600639
6890
10:07
This part is all the same. The only different was: “dʒu”, “dʒe”, “dʒu”, “dʒe”.
72
607529
9670
10:17
Another example, here: “Do you know her?” We’re talking about her. “Do you know
73
617199
9440
10:26
her?” “Da-jah knowa? Da-jah knowa? Da-jah knowa?” “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “Da-jah
74
626639
14640
10:41
knowa?” Schwa is here, here, and here. Here, I’ve spelt it with “a”: “Da-jah knowa”,
75
641279
12821
10:54
but if I wanted to, I could also spell it like “duh”: “Duh-jah knowa?” The thing
76
654100
12190
11:06
about schwa, although we have one symbol for it here, here, and here, it slightly changes
77
666290
8820
11:15
sound every time, depending on the letters next to it. So, it’s a bit… If you’ve
78
675110
6419
11:21
got a very sensitive ear, it can be really hard to learn, because it always slightly
79
681529
6411
11:27
changes. So, I spelt it with “a”, there, but I could also spell with “u”; depends
80
687940
7709
11:35
what you hear more. “Duh-jah knowa?”, “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “Duh-jah knowa?”
81
695649
7110
11:42
Or I could say: “Jew knowa? Jew knowa? Jew knowa?”, “dʒu: nəʊ. ə”. This part’s
82
702759
11580
11:54
the same again. Difference is here: “də.jə”, two syllables, “də.jə”; here, only one
83
714339
11921
12:06
syllable: “dʒu”, “dʒu: nəʊ. ə”. So, here I get three sounds: “dʒu: nəʊ.
84
726260
7809
12:14
ə”. Here, I have: “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, four sounds. “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “də.
85
734069
7971
12:22
jə nəʊ. ə”. So, this explains why when native speakers
86
742040
5870
12:27
are speaking, it seems like they’re talking so fast, but actually what’s happening is
87
747910
6979
12:34
the words are joining up in ways so that we can pronounce them smoothly, and so our sentences
88
754889
10260
12:45
can flow. And what this also shows you is that there are so many differences in pronunciation;
89
765149
8421
12:53
one person says this way, another person says something different, which is why we can take
90
773570
6050
12:59
one sentence: “Do you know her?” and we get something completely different. One says
91
779620
9139
13:08
this with four syllables, and the other says with three syllables. So, this explains also
92
788759
6330
13:15
why native speakers are so hard to understand sometimes.
93
795089
5321
13:20
What you can do now is the quiz on this lesson, and I’ll see you again soon. Thanks for
94
800410
5710
13:26
watching. Bye.
95
806120
1009
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7