Words to make yourself more interesting

403,083 views ・ 2014-06-25

English Jade


μ•„λž˜ μ˜λ¬Έμžλ§‰μ„ λ”λΈ”ν΄λ¦­ν•˜μ‹œλ©΄ μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ²ˆμ—­λœ μžλ§‰μ€ 기계 λ²ˆμ—­λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.

00:01
Hi, everyone. I'm Jade. I'm talking about informal intensifiers today and this is a
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μ•ˆλ…•ν•˜μ„Έμš” μ—¬λŸ¬λΆ„. μ €λŠ” μ œμ΄λ“œμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ €λŠ” 였늘 비곡식 강쑰어에 λŒ€ν•΄ μ΄μ•ΌκΈ°ν•˜κ³  μžˆλŠ”λ° 이것은
00:06
way to make a story more dramatic and it's what we use as native speakers when we're,
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이야기λ₯Ό 더 극적으둜 λ§Œλ“œλŠ” 방법이며 μš°λ¦¬κ°€ 이야기λ₯Ό ν•  λ•Œ μ›μ–΄λ―ΌμœΌλ‘œμ„œ μ‚¬μš©ν•˜λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
00:12
yeah, telling a story.
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.
00:14
So when we're telling a story, we'll put in these adverbs to add drama you could say.
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μš°λ¦¬κ°€ 이야기λ₯Ό ν•  λ•Œ 말할 수 μžˆλŠ” λ“œλΌλ§ˆλ₯Ό μΆ”κ°€ν•˜κΈ° μœ„ν•΄ μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ 뢀사λ₯Ό 넣을 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
00:26
But we... We've got a choice of intens-... They're otherwise known as intensifiers. We've
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ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ μš°λ¦¬λŠ”... μš°λ¦¬λŠ” μΈν…μŠ€λ₯Ό 선택할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€-... 그것듀은 μΈν…μ‹œνŒŒμ΄μ–΄λ‘œ μ•Œλ €μ Έ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μš°λ¦¬λŠ”
00:33
got a choice of what words we can use. Any they depend... And the words we choose depend
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μ‚¬μš©ν•  수 μžˆλŠ” 단어λ₯Ό 선택할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀이 μ˜μ‘΄ν•˜λŠ” λͺ¨λ“  것... 그리고 μš°λ¦¬κ°€ μ„ νƒν•˜λŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄λŠ”
00:38
on the context and they depend on the kind of story you want to tell. So let's...
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λ¬Έλ§₯에 따라 λ‹€λ₯΄λ©° 당신이 λ§ν•˜κ³ μž ν•˜λŠ” μ΄μ•ΌκΈ°μ˜ μ’…λ₯˜μ— 따라 λ‹€λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그럼...
00:45
Firstly, to describe what "posh" is. In the UK, "posh" means belonging to a higher social
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λ¨Όμ € "포쉬"κ°€ 무엇인지 μ„€λͺ…ν•˜κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ˜κ΅­μ—μ„œ "posh"λŠ” 더 높은 μ‚¬νšŒ 계측에 μ†ν•˜λŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€
00:54
class. It could be a way of behaving, it could be a way of speaking. So we have that in England
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. 행동 방식일 μˆ˜λ„ 있고 λ§ν•˜λŠ” 방식일 μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μš°λ¦¬λŠ”
00:59
because of the queen and all stuff like that, and that's just the way English British society
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μ—¬μ™•κ³Ό 그와 같은 λͺ¨λ“  것듀 λ•Œλ¬Έμ— μ˜κ΅­μ—μ„œ 그것을 가지고 있으며 그것이 λ°”λ‘œ 영ꡭ 영ꡭ μ‚¬νšŒμ˜ λ°©μ‹μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
01:04
is. So posh people use different words in their speech. So in their speech, these are
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. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ ν˜Έν™”λ‘œμš΄ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ μ—°μ„€μ—μ„œ λ‹€λ₯Έ 단어λ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ κ·Έλ“€μ˜ μ—°μ„€μ—μ„œ
01:15
the preferred words for posh English. So someone might say: "When my contact lens was in my
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κ³ κΈ‰ μ˜μ–΄μ— λŒ€ν•΄ μ„ ν˜Έν•˜λŠ” λ‹¨μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μ–΄λ–€ μ‚¬λžŒμ€ "λ‚΄ μ½˜νƒνŠΈλ Œμ¦ˆκ°€ λˆˆμ— 듀어갔을 λ•Œ
01:25
eye, it was fairly uncomfortable." Or "rather" has the same meaning. "It was my eye. I was
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μƒλ‹Ήνžˆ λΆˆνŽΈν–ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€."라고 말할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜λŠ” "였히렀"λŠ” 같은 μ˜λ―Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. "λ‚΄ λˆˆμ΄μ—ˆμ–΄.
01:32
rather upset." And they mean the same thing. They mean like: "quite".
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였히렀 μ†μƒν–ˆμ–΄." 그리고 그듀은 같은 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. "맀우"와 같은 μ˜λ―Έμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
01:40
Not used so much nowadays, but in the past, posh people liked to say: "Terribly" and "Awfully"
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μš”μ¦˜μ—λŠ” 많이 μ‚¬μš©λ˜μ§€ μ•Šμ§€λ§Œ κ³Όκ±°μ—λŠ” ν˜Έν™”λ‘œμš΄ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ "λ”μ°ν•˜κ²Œ"와 "λ”μ°ν•˜κ²Œ"라고 λ§ν•˜λŠ” 것을 μ’‹μ•„ν–ˆκ³ 
01:49
and they didn't mean them as terrible/awful. They actually mean the opposite, they mean
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그것듀이 λ”μ°ν•˜κ±°λ‚˜ λ”μ°ν•˜λ‹€λŠ” μ˜λ―ΈλŠ” μ•„λ‹ˆμ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은 μ‹€μ œλ‘œ λ°˜λŒ€λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그듀은
01:53
"very" and "good". "I went to the party and it was a terribly lovely party and there were
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"맀우"와 "쒋은"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. "νŒŒν‹°μ— κ°”λŠ”λ° 정말 멋진 νŒŒν‹°μ˜€κ³ 
01:59
many people there." Or you could say: "Borris is an awfully good chap." That means: "very
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거기에 λ§Žμ€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ μžˆμ—ˆμ–΄μš”." λ˜λŠ” μ΄λ ‡κ²Œ 말할 μˆ˜λ„ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "BorrisλŠ” 정말 쒋은 λ…€μ„μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€." 그것은
02:08
good chap" for a posh person. Posh language is going to prefer these informal intensifiers.
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ν˜Έν™”λ‘œμš΄ μ‚¬λžŒμ—κ²Œ "μ•„μ£Ό 쒋은 녀석"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. Posh μ–Έμ–΄λŠ” μ΄λŸ¬ν•œ 비곡식 κ°•μ‘°μ–΄λ₯Ό μ„ ν˜Έν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
02:16
Neutral English-sometimes posh people will use it too-neutral English, we would use all
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쀑립적인 μ˜μ–΄-가끔 κ³ κΈ‰μŠ€λŸ¬μš΄ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ λ„ˆλ¬΄ 쀑립적인 μ˜μ–΄λ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
02:23
of these adverbs mostly. So you would be intensifying a story by saying: "I was in so much pain."
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λŒ€λΆ€λΆ„ 이 뢀사λ₯Ό λͺ¨λ‘ μ‚¬μš©ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 당신은 "λ‚˜λŠ” λ„ˆλ¬΄ κ³ ν†΅μŠ€λŸ¬μ› μ–΄μš”."라고 λ§ν•¨μœΌλ‘œμ¨ 이야기λ₯Ό κ°•ν™”ν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
02:31
And you really make the "so" long: "So much pain" when you're telling a story. Again,
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그리고 당신은 이야기λ₯Ό ν•  λ•Œ "λ„ˆλ¬΄"λ₯Ό 길게 λ§Œλ“­λ‹ˆλ‹€. "λ„ˆλ¬΄ κ³ ν†΅μŠ€λŸ¬μ›Œμš”". λ‹€μ‹œ λ§ν•˜μ§€λ§Œ
02:37
you can emphasize the "really". "I was really stressed." You could say that. One thing to
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"정말"을 κ°•μ‘°ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "정말 슀트레슀 λ°›μ•˜μ–΄μš”." κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ 말할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
02:46
mention about "quite" is they mean... It means the same thing as "fairly", but "fairly" is
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"quite"에 λŒ€ν•΄ μ–ΈκΈ‰ν•΄μ•Ό ν•  ν•œ κ°€μ§€λŠ” 그듀이 μ˜λ―Έν•˜λŠ” 것은... "fairly"와 같은 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•˜μ§€λ§Œ "fairly"λŠ”
02:54
more posh and "quite" is more in the middle or whatever. And "too" means negative. So:
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더 κ³ κΈ‰μŠ€λŸ½κ³  "quite"λŠ” 쀑간에 더 κ°€κΉμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 "too"λŠ” 뢀정을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ:
03:07
"When my contact lens got stuck in my eye..." This sentence is not going to work. The sentence
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"λ‚΄ μ½˜νƒνŠΈ λ Œμ¦ˆκ°€ λ‚΄ λˆˆμ— λ°•ν˜”μ„ λ•Œ..." 이 λ¬Έμž₯은 μž‘λ™ν•˜μ§€ μ•Šμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
03:20
I'm thinking of, you'd say something is too expensive as in too much for a negative when
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λ‚΄κ°€ μƒκ°ν•˜κ³  μžˆλŠ” λ¬Έμž₯은 이 뢀사λ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•  λ•Œ μ–΄λ–€ 것이 λ„ˆλ¬΄ λΉ„μ‹Έμ„œ 뢀정에 λΉ„ν•΄ λ„ˆλ¬΄ λΉ„μ‹Έλ‹€κ³  말할 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
03:27
you're using this adverb.
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.
03:30
But we have even more choice for informal intensifiers. We have slang words. So I'm
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κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ μš°λ¦¬λŠ” 비곡식 κ°•ν™”μ œμ— λŒ€ν•΄ 훨씬 더 λ§Žμ€ μ„ νƒκΆŒμ΄ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 속어가 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ
03:37
going to teach you some English slang that people use. "Bare" means "very" and "nough"
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μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ μ‚¬μš©ν•˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ 속어λ₯Ό κ°€λ₯΄μ³ λ“œλ¦¬κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "Bare"λŠ” "맀우"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•˜κ³  "nough"λŠ”
03:45
also means "very". You couldn't... You could write the... You could write this on Facebook
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"맀우"λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•˜κΈ°λ„ ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은 ν•  수 μ—†μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€... 당신은 글을 μ“Έ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€... 이것을 페이슀뢁
03:50
or in chat or something, but you couldn't write it anywhere formally. "And when my contact
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μ΄λ‚˜ μ±„νŒ… 등에 μ“Έ μˆ˜λŠ” μžˆμ§€λ§Œ κ³΅μ‹μ μœΌλ‘œλŠ” 어디에도 μ“Έ 수 μ—†μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "그리고 λ‚΄ μ½˜νƒνŠΈ
03:58
lens got stuck in my eye, I was bare stressed. You know that." Or: "I couldn't get it out.
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λ Œμ¦ˆκ°€ λ‚΄ λˆˆμ— 듀어갔을 λ•Œ λ‚˜λŠ” 슀트레슀λ₯Ό 거의 받지 λͺ»ν–ˆλ‹€. λ„ˆλ„ μ•Œμž–μ•„." λ˜λŠ”: "λ‚˜λŠ” 그것을 κΊΌλ‚Ό 수 μ—†μ—ˆλ‹€.
04:05
I was nough upset. I didn't know what to do." They mean... "Nough" I used it like "really"
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λ‚˜λŠ” ν™”κ°€ λ‚˜μ§€ μ•Šμ•˜λ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” 무엇을 해야할지 λͺ°λžλ‹€." κ·Έ 말은... "μ•ˆλΌ" κ±°κΈ°μ„œ "정말"처럼 μ‚¬μš©ν–ˆμ–΄μš”
04:11
there. So you also have this option if you wish.
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. λ”°λΌμ„œ μ›ν•˜λŠ” 경우 이 μ˜΅μ…˜λ„ μ‚¬μš©ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
04:16
And I don't know about in your country, but English people swear quite a lot. I don't
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그리고 λ‚˜λŠ” λ‹Ήμ‹ μ˜ λ‚˜λΌμ— λŒ€ν•΄ 잘 λͺ¨λ₯΄μ§€λ§Œ μ˜κ΅­μΈλ“€μ€ κ½€ 많이 λ§Ήμ„Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ”
04:22
really swear, I don't really like it. But here is swear words you can use. You probably
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μ •λ§λ‘œ λ§Ήμ„Έν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” 그것을 μ •λ§λ‘œ μ’‹μ•„ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ 여기에 μ‚¬μš©ν•  수 μžˆλŠ” μš•μ„€μ΄ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은 μ•„λ§ˆ
04:27
know this one, I bet you know this one. But do you know this one? "Bloody" it's not a
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이것을 μ•Œκ³ μžˆμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” 당신이 이것을 μ•Œκ³  μžˆλ‹€κ³  ν™•μ‹ ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. 근데 이거 μ•„μ„Έμš”? "Bloody"λŠ”
04:35
very strong swear word anymore. At the end of my story I said: "The bloody contact lens
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더 이상 κ°•ν•œ μš•μ„€μ΄ μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚΄ μ΄μ•ΌκΈ°μ˜ λμ—μ„œ λ‚˜λŠ” "λ“œλ””μ–΄ 핏빛 μ½˜νƒνŠΈλ Œμ¦ˆκ°€
04:41
finally came out." You call something "bloody" if it's irritating or annoying. It used to
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λ‚˜μ™”λ‹€"κ³  λ§ν–ˆλ‹€. μ§œμ¦λ‚˜κ±°λ‚˜ μ§œμ¦λ‚˜λŠ” 것을 "ν”Όνˆ¬μ„±μ΄"라고 λΆ€λ¦…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . μ˜ˆμ „μ—λŠ”
04:50
be strong, it's not so bad now. And here are two other ones. I found that people say these
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κ°•ν–ˆμ§€λ§Œ μ§€κΈˆμ€ κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ λ‚˜μ˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 여기에 λ‹€λ₯Έ 두 가지가 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 이 말을 ν•˜κΈ°
04:57
ones when they don't like to say this one. They sound kind of like this one and they're
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싫을 λ•Œ 이런 말을 ν•œλ‹€λŠ” 것을 μ•Œμ•˜λ‹€. 그것듀은 이것과 λΉ„μŠ·ν•˜κ²Œ 듀리며
05:05
a little bit more polite swear words. And they sound like this: "frigging" or "flipping".
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쑰금 더 μ •μ€‘ν•œ μš•μ„€μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 그리고 그듀은 "frigging"λ˜λŠ” "flipping"처럼 λ“€λ¦½λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:11
"My flipping contact lens got stuck in my eye."
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"λ‚΄ λ’€μ§‘νžŒ μ½˜νƒνŠΈ λ Œμ¦ˆκ°€ λ‚΄ λˆˆμ— κ±Έλ ΈμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€."
05:14
So what's the position of the informal intensifiers when they're in sentences? Let's take a look.
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κ·Έλ ‡λ‹€λ©΄ λ¬Έμž₯에 μžˆμ„ λ•Œ 비곡식 κ°•μ‘°μ–΄μ˜ μœ„μΉ˜λŠ” λ¬΄μ—‡μž…λ‹ˆκΉŒ ? ν•œ 번 보자.
05:21
So we can do adverb before adjective with "rather", "quite" and "really". Here's an
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ "rather", "quite", "really"둜 ν˜•μš©μ‚¬ μ•žμ— 뢀사λ₯Ό 뢙일 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‹€μŒμ€
05:28
example sentence. You could use any of them. "I'd rather want a sandwich. Don't you know?"
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μ˜ˆμ‹œ λ¬Έμž₯μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 당신은 κ·Έλ“€ 쀑 ν•˜λ‚˜λ₯Ό μ‚¬μš©ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "차라리 μƒŒλ“œμœ„μΉ˜λ₯Ό ​​원해. λͺ°λΌ?"
05:35
So the position here is before the verb. These ones.
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λ”°λΌμ„œ μ—¬κΈ°μ„œ μœ„μΉ˜λŠ” 동사 μ•žμ— μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이것듀.
05:40
What about this one? "Don't be so bloody stupid." It's not a very nice thing to say to someone.
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이건 μ–΄λ•Œ? "λ„ˆλ¬΄ λ©μ²­ν•˜κ²Œ ꡴지 마." λˆ„κ΅°κ°€μ—κ²Œ λ§ν•˜λŠ” 것은 그리 쒋은 일이 μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€.
05:48
And the grammar here is "so" + swear word + adjective. So you could change it, you could
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그리고 μ—¬κΈ°μ„œ 문법은 "so" + μš•μ„€ + ν˜•μš©μ‚¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 당신은 그것을 λ°”κΏ€ 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€, 당신은
05:56
say: "Don't be so beep stupid." If you wanted to.
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말할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€: "κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ 삐 μ†Œλ¦¬ 내지 마 ." 당신이 μ›ν•œλ‹€λ©΄.
06:00
And what about the slang words? These are newer words. I don't think the grammar is
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μ†μ–΄λŠ” μ–΄λ–»μŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ? 이것은 μƒˆλ‘œμš΄ λ‹¨μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 말둜만 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμ— 문법이 μ§„ν™”ν–ˆλ‹€κ³  μƒκ°ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
06:10
that evolved for them because people just use them in speech. The position is usually
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. μœ„μΉ˜λŠ” 보톡 λ¬Έμž₯μ—μ„œ
06:16
after the verb like in a sentence. "It was bare jokes." "Jokes" is also slang. We usually
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like 동사 뒀에 μ˜΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. " 노골적인 λ†λ‹΄μ΄μ—ˆλ‹€." "농담"도 μ†μ–΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μš°λ¦¬λŠ” 보톡
06:26
say: "a joke" which is a noun. But "jokes" in slang means "funny" as an adjective. So
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λͺ…사인 "농담"이라고 λ§ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ μ†μ–΄μ˜ "jokes"λŠ” ν˜•μš©μ‚¬λ‘œμ„œ "μž¬λ―ΈμžˆλŠ”"을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
06:36
yeah, you could say: "It was nough jokes." Means it was really funny also.
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예, "농담이 μ•„λ‹™λ‹ˆλ‹€."라고 말할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . 정말 μž¬λ―Έμžˆμ—ˆλ‹€λŠ” λœ»μ΄κΈ°λ„ ν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
06:41
And what about this one? "Sarah is terribly charming." That means that she is very charming.
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그리고 이것은 μ–΄λ–»μŠ΅λ‹ˆκΉŒ? "μ‚¬λΌλŠ” 정말 맀λ ₯적이야." 그것은 κ·Έλ…€κ°€ 맀우 맀λ ₯μ μ΄λΌλŠ” 것을 μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
06:49
Remember what I said? They mean the opposite. "Sarah is terribly charming." How do we do
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λ‚΄κ°€ ν•œ 말 κΈ°μ–΅ν•΄? κ·Έ λ°˜λŒ€λ₯Ό μ˜λ―Έν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. "μ‚¬λΌλŠ” 정말 맀λ ₯적이야." 그럼 μ–΄λ–»κ²Œ ν•˜μ£ 
06:54
that then? It's "to be" followed by adverb followed by adjective.
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? "to be" 뒀에 뢀사, ν˜•μš©μ‚¬κ°€ μ˜΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
06:59
And, yeah, now I want to talk to you about a nonstandard use that I've observed quite...
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그리고 λ„€, 이제 μ €λŠ” μ œκ°€ κ΄€μ°°ν•œ λΉ„ν‘œμ€€ μš©λ²•μ— λŒ€ν•΄ λ§μ”€λ“œλ¦¬κ³  μ‹ΆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€...
07:09
I've observed people using it quite a lot, but it's considered not grammatically correct.
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μ €λŠ” μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 이 μš©λ²•μ„ κ½€ 많이 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜λŠ” 것을 κ΄€μ°°ν–ˆμ§€λ§Œ λ¬Έλ²•μ μœΌλ‘œ μ˜¬λ°”λ₯΄μ§€ μ•Šμ€ κ²ƒμœΌλ‘œ κ°„μ£Όλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:16
But I'll point it out to you in case you hear it. You can decide to use it if you want because
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κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ 당신이 그것을 λ“£λŠ” κ²½μš°μ— λ‚˜λŠ” λ‹Ήμ‹ μ—κ²Œ 그것을 지적할 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ΄ 그것을 λ§ν•˜κΈ° λ•Œλ¬Έμ— μ›ν•œλ‹€λ©΄ 그것을 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜κΈ°λ‘œ κ²°μ •ν•  수
07:21
people do say it or you can decide not to use it if you'd like to say everything grammatically
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있고, λͺ¨λ“  것을 λ¬Έλ²•μ μœΌλ‘œ μ •ν™•ν•˜κ²Œ λ§ν•˜κ³  μ‹Άλ‹€λ©΄ 그것을 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜μ§€ μ•ŠκΈ°λ‘œ κ²°μ •ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
07:26
correctly. So some people would say something like this: "I so want those shoes!" We don't
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. κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μ–΄λ–€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ€ μ΄λ ‡κ²Œ 말할 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€ . "μ € μ‹ λ°œμ΄ λ„ˆλ¬΄ κ°–κ³  μ‹Άμ–΄μš”!" μš°λ¦¬λŠ”
07:35
put "so" in this... In this position before the verb. We could say: "I really want those
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여기에 "so"λ₯Ό 넣지 μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€... 동사 μ•žμ˜ 이 μœ„μΉ˜μ—. μš°λ¦¬λŠ” "μ € μ‹ λ°œ 정말 κ°–κ³  μ‹Άμ–΄μš”!"라고 말할 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:44
shoes!" But in British English, it's not considered correct to put "so" here. Anyway, you know
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κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‚˜ μ˜κ΅­μ‹ μ˜μ–΄μ—μ„œλŠ” 여기에 "so"λ₯Ό λ„£λŠ” 것이 μ˜³λ‹€κ³  여겨지지 μ•ŠμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ–΄μ¨Œλ“ , 당신은 μ§€κΈˆ μ•Œκ³  μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€
07:50
now. You can decide if you want to say that.
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. κ·Έλ ‡κ²Œ λ§ν•˜κ³  싢은지 κ²°μ •ν•  수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
07:53
Let's look, finally, at the position of swear words with nouns. So here are two examples:
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λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰μœΌλ‘œ λͺ…사가 μžˆλŠ” μš•μ„€μ˜ μœ„μΉ˜λ₯Ό β€‹β€‹μ‚΄νŽ΄λ³΄κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€ . κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 여기에 두 가지 μ˜ˆκ°€ μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
08:03
"The kitchen was a bloody mess." Wherever I lived when I was a student, that was a true
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"주방은 μ—‰λ§μ§„μ°½μ΄μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€." λ‚΄κ°€ 학생일 λ•Œ 어디에 μ‚΄λ“  그것은
08:10
sentence for me. "The kitchen was a bloody mess." "A mess" is a noun for an untidy place.
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λ‚˜μ—κ²Œ μ§„μ •ν•œ λ¬Έμž₯μ΄μ—ˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "주방이 λ‚œμž₯νŒμ΄μ—ˆμ–΄μš” ." "A mess"λŠ” μ–΄μˆ˜μ„ ν•œ μž₯μ†Œλ₯Ό λ‚˜νƒ€λ‚΄λŠ” λͺ…μ‚¬μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€.
08:16
So the grammar we've got here is the swear word and then followed by the noun. "A bloody
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κ·Έλž˜μ„œ μš°λ¦¬κ°€ μ—¬κΈ° μžˆλŠ” 문법은 μš•μ„€μ΄κ³  κ·Έ 뒀에 λͺ…사가 μ˜΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. "ν”Όμ˜
08:24
mess".
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엉망".
08:25
And our last example: "Their customer service is a flipping joke." So you won't want to
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그리고 우리의 λ§ˆμ§€λ§‰ 예: "κ·Έλ“€μ˜ 고객 μ„œλΉ„μŠ€λŠ” 우슀꽝슀러운 λ†λ‹΄μž…λ‹ˆλ‹€." κ·Έλž˜μ„œ 당신은
08:34
go back there, will you? So yeah, just something that you can start to use to enrich your storytelling
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거기둜 λŒμ•„κ°€κ³  싢지 μ•Šμ„ κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€, κ·Έλ ‡μ£ ? 예, μ˜μ–΄λ‘œ μŠ€ν† λ¦¬ν…”λ§μ„ λ”μš± ν’λΆ€ν•˜κ²Œ ν•˜κΈ° μœ„ν•΄ μ‚¬μš©ν•  수 μžˆλŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
08:42
more in English. I really recommend that.
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. 정말 μΆ”μ²œν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€.
08:46
And the next thing I recommend is for you to go to the engVid website and do the quiz
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λ‹€μŒμœΌλ‘œ μ œκ°€ μΆ”μ²œν•˜λŠ” 것은 engVid μ›Ήμ‚¬μ΄νŠΈλ‘œ μ΄λ™ν•˜μ—¬ 이에 λŒ€ν•œ ν€΄μ¦ˆλ₯Ό ν’€μ–΄μ„œ
08:50
on this so that they will become a little bit more familiar to you and you're getting
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그듀이 μ—¬λŸ¬λΆ„μ—κ²Œ μ’€ 더 μΉœμˆ™ν•΄μ§€κ³ 
08:55
these intensifiers in the correct position. Please do subscribe to this channel and watch
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μ˜¬λ°”λ₯Έ μœ„μΉ˜μ— 이 μΈν…μ‹œνŒŒμ΄μ–΄λ₯Ό κ°–κ²Œ λ˜λŠ” κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 이 채널을 κ΅¬λ…ν•˜κ³ 
09:02
some of my other videos as well; more for you to learn. Also, not just my engVid channel,
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λ‹€λ₯Έ λ™μ˜μƒλ„ μ‹œμ²­ν•˜μ„Έμš”. 더 λ§Žμ€ 것을 배울 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ˜ν•œ λ‚΄ engVid μ±„λ„λΏλ§Œ μ•„λ‹ˆλΌ
09:07
my other channel because I've got two YouTube channels. Yay! And you can learn there and
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두 개의 YouTube 채널이 있기 λ•Œλ¬Έμ— λ‹€λ₯Έ 채널도 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. 예이! 그리고 당신은 κ·Έκ³³μ—μ„œ 배울 수 있고
09:13
you can learn here with me. So I'd really appreciate you to subscribe in both places.
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μ—¬κΈ°μ„œ λ‚˜μ™€ ν•¨κ»˜ 배울 수 μžˆμŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. κ·ΈλŸ¬λ‹ˆ 두 κ³³ λͺ¨λ‘ κ΅¬λ…ν•΄μ£Όμ‹œλ©΄ 정말 κ°μ‚¬ν•˜κ² μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€.
09:19
So I'm finished now. I'm going to go. I'm going to go and swear at some people in the
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이제 λλ‚¬μŠ΅λ‹ˆλ‹€. λ‚˜λŠ” κ°ˆκ±°μ•Ό. λ‚˜λŠ” κΈΈμ—μ„œ μ–΄λ–€ μ‚¬λžŒλ“€μ—κ²Œ κ°€μ„œ μš•μ„ ν•  κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€
09:27
street. No, not really. Okay, see you.
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. μ•„λ‹ˆ 정말. μ’‹μ•„, λ‚˜μ€‘μ— 보자.
이 μ›Ήμ‚¬μ΄νŠΈ 정보

이 μ‚¬μ΄νŠΈλŠ” μ˜μ–΄ ν•™μŠ΅μ— μœ μš©ν•œ YouTube λ™μ˜μƒμ„ μ†Œκ°œν•©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ „ 세계 졜고의 μ„ μƒλ‹˜λ“€μ΄ κ°€λ₯΄μΉ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μˆ˜μ—…μ„ 보게 될 κ²ƒμž…λ‹ˆλ‹€. 각 λ™μ˜μƒ νŽ˜μ΄μ§€μ— ν‘œμ‹œλ˜λŠ” μ˜μ–΄ μžλ§‰μ„ 더블 ν΄λ¦­ν•˜λ©΄ κ·Έκ³³μ—μ„œ λ™μ˜μƒμ΄ μž¬μƒλ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. λΉ„λ””μ˜€ μž¬μƒμ— 맞좰 μžλ§‰μ΄ μŠ€ν¬λ‘€λ©λ‹ˆλ‹€. μ˜κ²¬μ΄λ‚˜ μš”μ²­μ΄ μžˆλŠ” 경우 이 문의 양식을 μ‚¬μš©ν•˜μ—¬ λ¬Έμ˜ν•˜μ‹­μ‹œμ˜€.

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