STOP 🚫 - These Common English Mistakes are Absolutely WRONG!

411,978 views ・ 2023-07-20

English with Lucy


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

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- Hello lovely students and welcome back to English with Lucy.
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And today, I've got a lesson that I think will give you a real confidence boost, or
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at least I hope it does because we are going to take linguistic snobbery head-on and address
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some common mistakes that you might be making that aren't actually mistakes.
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Learning English is hard, I get it.
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I've been teaching for quite a while now.
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I'm coming up to my decade of teaching and I've seen the struggle and unfortunately,
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there are some people out there who seem to exist specifically to make the path to English
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fluency harder.
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You know who you are guys.
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I see it all the time.
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It happens to me quite a lot.
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I get called out in the comment sections of my own videos for making mistakes.
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"You said this wrong."
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"You wrote that incorrectly."
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"You can't say this, you should say that."
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But what the English language police failed to consider is that English is quite a fluid
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language that doesn't always have hard and fast rules.
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Pronunciation, grammar, sentence structure, and other English conventions have a tendency
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to change from country to country and even city to city within the same country.
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So we're going to take a look at a few of these common mistakes, so that you can feel
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more confident about your own English.
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But before we do that, it wouldn't be an English with Lucy video without a free PDF to accompany
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your lesson.
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We have spent some time making a beautiful PDF that summarises the full lesson today.
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Gives you extra information and provides you with a quiz, so you can test your understanding.
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If you'd like to download that and get all of my future PDFs too, all you have to do
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is click on the link in the description box.
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Enter your name and your email address.
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You sign up to my mailing list, and the PDF will arrive directly in your inbox.
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And after that, you've joined the PDF club, you'll automatically receive all of my future
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PDFs and eBooks along with my news, course updates, and offers.
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It's free, you can unsubscribe at any time.
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Okay, let's get started with our first section of the day, pronunciation.
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Now I want to remind you that English is an official language in over 50 countries worldwide,
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so there's a wide variety of pronunciation differences between countries and regions.
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So I'm not going to dive too deep into that 'cause we could be here for hours if not days.
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Also, I do already have some video lessons about the differences between American and
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British English pronunciation and I'll link those down below.
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As you may already know, I speak with a modern RP accent, so I'm going to focus on pronunciation
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mistakes in my specific accent.
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Let's kick things off with our first word.
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This beauty.
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Sometimes I stare too long at this word and it stops looking like a word.
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How should this word be pronounced?
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Should it be the?
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Should it be the?
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Let me explain.
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I have been told off for saying, that is the best sandwich ever, but I'm right to say that.
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So here are the general rules.
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We typically pronounce it as the when it comes before a vowel sound.
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The enormous building.
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We say the when it comes before a consonant sound.
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The delicious cupcake.
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Now here's where we get into our first mistake.
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You would often hear English speakers use the first pronunciation, the, to add emphasis
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to what is being said regardless of the sound that follows it.
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For example, it's not going to be an ordinary rugby match.
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It is going to be the rugby match of the year.
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So, if anyone tries to correct your pronunciation in these situations, remind them of this little
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fact.
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Sometimes, and I do this a lot, I won't have decided what I'm going to say next.
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So I might extend the into the while I think.
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For example, if I'm reading a menu, I'm going to have the salad, please.
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I just extended it because I was thinking, and that happens a lot.
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I don't if you're like me, but I have no idea about what I'm going to order at a restaurant
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until the waiter appears and then I have to make a snap decision.
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Now, in British English we also have loads of words that have multiple pronunciations,
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and because of that, you might have your pronunciation corrected by someone who thinks they know
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the correct way.
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Let's look at a few of these words, so that you can hit them with a bit of truth because
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these are the words that you can pronounce incorrectly.
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Number one, this one, controversy, controversy.
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My preferred pronunciation is controversy, but controversy is also acceptable.
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I suspect that this pronunciation may have been influenced by the American controversy,
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but feel free to use either one or either one.
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And that brings us to our next set of words.
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Either and neither, or either and neither.
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People love to correct this one.
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They say it's pronounced either, not either, but guess what?
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Either or either one is perfectly acceptable.
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Use whichever feels right.
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Neither or neither one is more correct than the other.
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And you will catch me using both pronunciations in the same sentence.
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I use them both equally.
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Here are a few more common ones.
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We have envelope and envelope.
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We have this one with three, garage, garage and garage.
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I was brought up to say garage.
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And number five, my husband and I pronounce this differently and we grew up in the same
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county of England, Bedfordshire, privacy, privacy.
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I was taught to say privacy, he was taught to say privacy.
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Number six, we have finance, finance, and finance.
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I must say that finance is more common.
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Number seven, data or data.
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Number eight, zebra, more common in British English.
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Zebra, more common in American English.
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Notice that we say A to Z, they say A to Z.
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I don't want to start conspiracy theory, but that could have something to do with it.
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Number nine, this one always surprises me.
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I was taught to say, harassment, but other people say harassment . And number 10, often
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or often.
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Do we say often like soften with no T, or often?
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I was brought up to say often and then a teacher corrected me, so I switched to often, but
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I hear both pronunciations used across the UK.
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Now please remember, if your pronunciation and accent aren't perfect when using these
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or any words in English, don't worry.
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Even attempting to pronounce some of these rather difficult words is a feat in and of
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itself.
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So let's shake it off and move on to a bit of grammar.
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So, this is where things start to get fun because people on the internet love to show
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off their English skills by calling out others on their poor use of grammar.
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But lucky for you, I'm about to set the record straight on a few of the most common errors
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that really grind my gears.
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I'm good.
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Raise your hand, in your tiny little screen, if this has happened to you.
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You're talking to someone and they ask you, "How are you?"
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And you respond with, "I'm good."
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To which they respond, "Don't you mean I'm well?"
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Well, I think it's time to look at the facts.
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Good is an adjective that modifies a noun.
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So in the response I am good, good is simply describing that I, as the subject, am free
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of problems and everything is fine.
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We often use adjectives after the verb to be, they are called predictive adjectives.
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For example, I am hungry, not I am hungrily.
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Meredith is angry, not Meredith is angrily.
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So the response, I'm good, is perfectly acceptable, but often incorrectly considered a mistake.
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But why?
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And I consider this to be a mistake in the past and I'm pretty sure my dad still corrects
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my mum on this when she's not actually wrong.
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But why is this?
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Well, I think that this unnecessary connection stems from the fact that some people assume
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that I'm well is a shortened form of I'm doing well.
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In this case, well, is more grammatically correct because we are modifying the verb,
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doing.
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The response, I'm doing good, would not be appropriate for grammar snobs because we don't
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use an adjective to describe a verb.
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Unless you are actually doing something good, like, donating to charity or volunteering,
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then you would be doing good.
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I'm doing good is still commonly used in some dialects of spoken English, so keep that in
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mind.
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But as a response to how are you?
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I'm good is totally fine, so use it with confidence.
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Number two, let's tackle less versus fewer.
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And it took me ages to grasp this one myself and I may have incorrectly called people out
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on this in the past.
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Whoops, I repent.
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Have you ever been at a shop and seen a sign that says, 10 items or less?
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And have you ever stopped to consider that less isn't actually the correct word to use?
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A snooty grammar critic would claim that the correct word is fewer.
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Why?
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Well, according to traditional grammar rules, fewer should be used when referring to countable
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nouns.
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Things that can be physically counted like books, cups, stuffed animals and other items.
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While less should be used for noncountable nouns, those that represent concepts, or substances
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that cannot be easily separated or counted, such as water, knowledge, and beauty to name
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a few.
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Now, I did mention in a previous video that using less instead of fewer is a common mistake,
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but it's really important to know the rules before you break them.
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You're allowed to break the rules.
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Just not in exams.
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In everyday English, many people tend to disregard the rules and use less in situations where
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fewer would be technically more appropriate.
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I think some of this disregard comes from the fact that it's not always obvious if a
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noun is countable or not.
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I think if you asked most English people on the street, what an accountable or uncountable
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noun is, there'd be none the wiser.
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Plus, replacing fewer with less almost always creates a sentence that is perfectly understandable
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as it is.
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We had fewer customers today than yesterday.
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We had less customers today than yesterday.
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Both are understandable.
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This type of word switching is a common linguistic phenomenon where language evolves and adapts
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to the usage patterns of its speakers.
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As a result, the distinction between fewer and less has become blurred in colloquial
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English and the sign hanging up in your supermarket is just an example of that.
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Okay, on to number three, whom or who?
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That's the question for now, that is...
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Nothing seems to get grammar purists more riled up than someone using who when they
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should have used whom.
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Well, unfortunately for them, whom has been on a steady decline in use since the 1800s
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and we may see it vanish before our very eyes.
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Let's do a quick review, so you can see the traditional rule of thumb.
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Who is used as a subject pronoun.
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It's used to refer to an unknown subject of a sentence performing the action or being
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described like in these examples.
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She is the one who won the award.
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Who ate the last slice of cake?
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Whom is used as an object pronoun.
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It's used to refer to an unknown object of a verb or preposition.
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It typically follows a preposition or a verb that takes a direct object.
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For example, to whom are you speaking?
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Or whom did you invite to the company picnic?
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These days it's often considered too formal to use whom in everyday conversation.
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You're much more likely to hear, who you're speaking to?
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Who did you invite to the company picnic?
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We can survive perfectly without it.
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I don't see many causes for confusion with the decline of whom.
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For this reason, whom is rapidly losing its popularity, so don't feel too down if you
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get corrected for using who instead of whom.
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You probably won't have to worry about it for too much longer.
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Let's talk about prepositions in their proper places.
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Now, you may have noticed another common error in one of my examples in our previous section.
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Who are you talking to?
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That's right, I put a preposition at the end of my sentence and I am not bloody sorry about
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it.
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I'm sorry, I'm not sorry.
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I've already addressed this in another video, so I'm not going to spend too much time on
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it.
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But in spoken English and honestly, in most written communication, it's absolutely fine
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to end a sentence with a preposition.
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For example, I've never been there before.
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What are you up to?
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We'll try to stop by.
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Don't let anyone tell you otherwise unless it's some sort of formal test, then you might
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want to consider restructuring your sentences to appease the grammar perfectionists.
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Last one, and this one really grinds my gears.
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They and their are not only plural.
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People get pretty angry about they and their being used as singular pronouns.
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It is totally acceptable to use they and their as singular pronouns to refer to individuals
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whose gender is unknown, irrelevant, or, and this is the one that gets people upset, people
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who prefer not to be identified by a specific gender.
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That one has featured more on the internet and in the media recently, but the previous
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case, as I mentioned, unknown gender, irrelevant gender, have always used they and their.
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Traditionally, they has been used as a plural subject pronoun.
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However, as English has evolved, the singular they has gained widespread acceptance and
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usage.
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It helps to provide a gender neutral alternative when talking to a singular person without
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making assumptions about gender.
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The traditional use of his or her as an object pronoun placeholder is seen as slightly outdated.
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We now see their used more frequently.
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For example, someone left their umbrella in the office, instead of saying, someone left
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his or her umbrella in the office.
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It just makes sense to me to say their.
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Or, your new patient said they would call back.
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I didn't assume their gender.
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They will call you back.
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I probably don't know their gender.
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They might have written an email.
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They will call you back.
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If someone tries to correct you about they and their and how they should only be used
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as plural pronouns, just kindly remind them that you prefer to adapt to changes in language
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rather than remaining stuck in the old ways.
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So, that's it for this lesson.
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Don't forget to download the PDF.
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The link is in the description box.
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All you have to do is enter your name and your email address and it'll arrive straight
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to you.
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Don't forget to check out all of my courses.
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We have my B1, B2 and, C1 programme, the 12 week programmes.
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And they are, if I do say so myself, absolutely spectacular.
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We have poured our heart and soul into these programmes and they're now ready for you to
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take.
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Again, the link for that is in the description box.
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I will see you soon for another lesson.
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Muah!
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