Speak English FAST, like a native speaker: 3 methods

126,035 views ・ 2019-01-02

English Jade


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

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Hi, everyone. In this lesson we’re going to learn how to speak fast like a native speaker.
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When you’re learning English and you hear native speakers, why is it that they sound
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so fast and it’s hard for them to understand? Are they really talking like: “Blub-blub-blub-blub-blub-blub-blub”,
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or is it something that they’re doing when they pronounce sentences that makes it seem
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fast, but it’s not really? Let’s look at some example sentences, and I’ll teach
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you how to speak fast like a native English speaker.
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All my question phrases are questions with “Do” or “Did”, and this is them written
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out in the full sentence, then I have in this column what the sentence sounds like. If we
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don’t know how to read IPA transcription, here, this is very useful for us. But the
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problem, when we write out the pronunciation in this way, is we don’t have letters for
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all the sounds. We don’t have letters from the English alphabet for all the sounds in
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English, so it’s helpful, but we can still sound slightly wrong if this is all we know
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about the pronunciation. That’s why I’m going to teach you little bits that we need
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to know from here, so that you get the correct pronunciation. And this is what, altogether,
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will help you speak fast like a native speaker. So, let’s start here, question phrase: “Do
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you like it?” That’s really slow. If you’re a beginner in English, you can understand
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it. “Do you like it?” But this is not how native speakers actually speak. It sounds
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something like: “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit?” What happens is the “Do” and “you”
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join: “D-you”, “Do you”, and the “like” and the “it” change. The “k” goes
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to the second… The “k” joins “it”. “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit?” And we
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can see this also in the IPA transcription. “Ii: kIt”, “də.ju: Ii: kIt”.
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What’s also happening, here, in the IPA transcription, if you look here, this is “də.
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ju”, “də. ju”. This is schwa. “də. ju”. When I write it here, we don’t have
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any letter in English that can… In the English alphabet that can represent schwa, so that’s
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why I just put the “d” consonant: “D-you”, “D-you”, “D-you”.
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Another… Now, you have to listen really, really, really carefully to hear the difference.
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“Do you like it?” can also sound like: “Jew lie-kit? Jew lie-kit?” I’m going
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to say the first one, then the second one: “D-you lie-kit? D-you lie-kit? Jew lie-kit?”
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You have to listen really, really carefully. So, I suggest you watch this video a few times
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so that you can start to hear the difference between very similar pronunciations. Here’s
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the transcription: “dʒU: li: kIt”. The same thing is happening, here, in the two
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examples: “li: kIt”, but the first part is different. “də.ju”, “dʒU”, “də.ju:”,
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“dʒU”. “dʒU: li: kIt”. Let’s look at the next example: “Did you
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see that?” That’s how a beginner would say it. “Did you see that?” What does
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it sound like? “Did-yah see that? Did-yah see that?” Am I speaking fast now—“Did-yah
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see that?”—or am I just joining up the words so that they flow? “Did-yah see that?”
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If we look at the IPA transcription: “you” becomes “jə”. Although it’s… It looks
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like the letter “j”, this is the sound for “yah”, together with the schwa. “jə”.
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“did.jə si: đaet”. Don’t be scared by this; we don’t use this IPA symbol that
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often, and this is the word “that”. “did.jə si: đaet”. “Did-yah see that?”
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Can you hear the difference between the first example and the second example? “Di-jah
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see that? Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah see that?”, “Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah
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see that?”, “Di-jah see that?” “di.dʒə si: đaet”. “jə”, “dʒə”, “jə”,
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“dʒə”. “Di-jah see that?”, “Did-yah see that?”, “Di-jah see that?” You have
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to listen really, really carefully. This is advanced-level hearing. If you don’t hear
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it, you haven’t listened to enough native speaker pronunciation. What’s happening
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here is we are losing the letter “d” and changing it to a “jah” sound instead.
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“jah”. “Di-jah see that?” Next we’ve got a question and answer. -“I
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saw Jack last night.” -“Did you?” -“I saw Jack last night.” -“Did you?” We’re
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actually just looking at: “Did you?” “Did-yah? Did-yah? Did-yah?”, “did. jə”, “jə”.
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“you” becomes “jə”. “did. jə”. Or I could also say… Here… Here, the emphasis
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is on “did”. -“I saw Jack last night.” -“Did-yah? Did-yah?” “Did” is the
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bigger word. “Did-yah?” I’m surprised. I can also answer the question like this:
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-“I saw Jack last night. I saw Jack last night.” -“Di-jew? Di-jew?” There, “dʒu”
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is the bigger word. What we’re doing here, when I underline this part, is I’m showing
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where the main stress is. Here, “did” is the main stress: “did. jə”. Here,
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“dʒu” is the main stress: “di. dʒu”. It gives us a different meaning when we change
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the stress in a sentence. Another example: “Did you go?” Very slow:
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“Did you go?” All the words are very clear and separate. “Did you go?”, “Did-yah
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go? Did-yah go?”, “did… did. jə gəʊ, did. jə gəʊ”. “you” becomes “jə”:
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“did. jə gəʊ”. Another example: “Di-jah go? Di-jah go?”, “di. dʒə gaʊ”. “dʒə”,
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“di. dʒə gaʊ”. More examples coming up.
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Let’s look now at: “Do you want to go?” I should have put a bit more space, there;
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a separate word. “Do you want to go?” So slow, taking me forever to say it. Oh,
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let’s count the syllables. “Do you want to go?” Five. “Jew wanna go? Jew wanna
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go? Jew wanna go? Jew wanna go?” If I say this one really fast: “Jew wanna go? Jew
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wanna go? Jew wanna go?” So, there’s four syllables here, but there’s five here, so
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I’m losing one of the sounds. “Jew wanna go?”, “dʒu: wɒnnə gəʊ”. This symbol,
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here, which is like a backwards “a”, is “ɒ”, “ɒ”. “wɒnnə, wɒnnə”.
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“Jew wanna go?”, “dʒu: wɒnnə gəʊ”. Now, I can also say it a different way: “Juh-wanna
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go? Juh-wanna go?”, “Jew wanna go?”, “Juh-wanna go?”, “Jew”, “Juh”,
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“Jew”, “Juh”. “Jew wanna go?”, “Juh-wanna go?”, “dʒe wɒnnə gəʊ”.
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This part is all the same. The only different was: “dʒu”, “dʒe”, “dʒu”, “dʒe”.
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Another example, here: “Do you know her?” We’re talking about her. “Do you know
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her?” “Da-jah knowa? Da-jah knowa? Da-jah knowa?” “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “Da-jah
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knowa?” Schwa is here, here, and here. Here, I’ve spelt it with “a”: “Da-jah knowa”,
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but if I wanted to, I could also spell it like “duh”: “Duh-jah knowa?” The thing
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about schwa, although we have one symbol for it here, here, and here, it slightly changes
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sound every time, depending on the letters next to it. So, it’s a bit… If you’ve
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got a very sensitive ear, it can be really hard to learn, because it always slightly
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changes. So, I spelt it with “a”, there, but I could also spell with “u”; depends
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what you hear more. “Duh-jah knowa?”, “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “Duh-jah knowa?”
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Or I could say: “Jew knowa? Jew knowa? Jew knowa?”, “dʒu: nəʊ. ə”. This part’s
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the same again. Difference is here: “də.jə”, two syllables, “də.jə”; here, only one
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syllable: “dʒu”, “dʒu: nəʊ. ə”. So, here I get three sounds: “dʒu: nəʊ.
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ə”. Here, I have: “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, four sounds. “də. jə nəʊ. ə”, “də.
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jə nəʊ. ə”. So, this explains why when native speakers
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are speaking, it seems like they’re talking so fast, but actually what’s happening is
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the words are joining up in ways so that we can pronounce them smoothly, and so our sentences
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can flow. And what this also shows you is that there are so many differences in pronunciation;
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one person says this way, another person says something different, which is why we can take
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one sentence: “Do you know her?” and we get something completely different. One says
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this with four syllables, and the other says with three syllables. So, this explains also
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why native speakers are so hard to understand sometimes.
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What you can do now is the quiz on this lesson, and I’ll see you again soon. Thanks for
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watching. Bye.
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