HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR ๐Ÿ“ž PHONE ๐Ÿ“ฑ SKILLS TO SOUND MORE LIKE A NATIVE | Go Natural English

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2018-05-28 ใƒป Go Natural English


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HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR ๐Ÿ“ž PHONE ๐Ÿ“ฑ SKILLS TO SOUND MORE LIKE A NATIVE | Go Natural English

203,259 views ใƒป 2018-05-28

Go Natural English


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

00:00
Hello
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Hello. Hello. I don't think this thing is working. Hey naturals, what's up?
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It's your American English teacher Gabby Wallace here for go natural English
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And in this video you are going to learn how to improve
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Your phone skills to sound more like a native
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Natural English speaker. I know these days that everybody prefers to text like does this thing even work for phone calls anymore?
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I mean everybody just
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texts
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but there are certain situations when it just makes more sense to have a phone call or you
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Have to have a phone call
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Like maybe you have a phone interview
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Or maybe you have to make an appointment and you need to actually speak
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With your voice on the phone and in that kind of situation
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you need to sound like a
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clear natural
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confidence
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fluent English speaker because we can't rely on things like gestures or
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Lip-reading or the written word like we can for text so I'm gonna teach you a lot of things in
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This lesson about how to speak more clearly more
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naturally on your next phone
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Conversation so this is gonna be super helpful and I want to invite you if you would like to learn more with go natural
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English with our ebook the English fluency formula
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I have a free sample for you to check out so you can click right up there on
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The card to get your free sample. Oh my gosh
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and in that for example
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You're going to learn so many strategies to help you to improve your English and speak more naturally
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So a week ago
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this video presentation from Google's sundar Pichai came out where he was presenting the new
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Google
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Assistant and it blew my mind. I was insane how
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natural this
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Robot sound I mean really the Google assistant not a real person
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but she sounded just like a real person to me and to
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The real person that she was calling so I thought we could actually take a look at this video clip
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It's sure and analyze. What makes this
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robot this machine
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sounds so natural because if we can analyze that and if this machine can sound like a
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Natural native English speaker then obviously, so can you because you're a human right?
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So if this machine can do it, then you can definitely do it. Okay, so let's take a look
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Let's say you want to ask Google to make you a haircut appointment on Tuesday between 10:00 and noon
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What happens is the Google assistant makes the calls seamlessly in the background for you?
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So what you're going to hear is the Google assistant actually calling a real salon to schedule the appointment for you
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Let's listen
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What time are you looking for well at 12:00 p.m
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We do not have a quality available. But closest we have to that is a 1:15
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Do you have anything between 10:00 a.m. And
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12:00 p.m
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Depending on what service she would like. What service is she looking for?
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Just a woman's haircut for now. Okay, we have a 10 o'clock
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10:00 a.m. Is fine. Okay. What's her birth name?
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The first name is Lisa
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Okay, perfect. So I will see Li five ten o'clock on May third
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Okay, please Thanks great. Have a great day. Bye
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Hi, so the first word that we have here is just a simple greeting
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Hi, but let's pay attention to the intonation
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It goes up and down and it sounds very friendly. You can even repeat while you're watching this to practice with me
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Hi, so it's different than just a flat intonation. Hi, that sounds a bit
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gruff a bit aggressive a bit
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Not very nice, actually. So if we go up and down hi, it sounds so nice
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so our first thing to focus on is
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intonation
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next we're gonna take a look at how we can stress words blend sounds together as a sound more native-like in our
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pronunciation and
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Use intonation again in order to indicate that we have an open
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kind of
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Question that we're inquiring about in this conversation. We're asking about booking a haircut
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So again, the question was or is that it's not even a question
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It's a phrase but it's it's it's stated in a way where the intonation goes up at the end. So that sounds like a question
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I'm calling a book a woman's haircut for a client
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For a client so the intonation is going up and this is sometimes referred to as up
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Speak because this is not actually a question. It's a question would be something like
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may I book a
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Haircut for a client and of course at the end of this question
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The intonation would go up because we're asking may I but this is a statement, but it's phrased
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Like a question because we're ending the statements in an upward intonation
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So if you're calling to inquire about an appointment
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Or you're asking to set a certain time or you're kind of asking permission
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Like can I may I if that's the intention even though that's not the way you phrase the sentence?
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Well, then your intonation can go up and that's quite common in the United States in North American English
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Haircut for a client I'm calling a local woman's haircut for a client
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So let's look at how we're pronouncing the words and how they're blending together. I'm calling
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book
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We don't say I'm calling we say I'm calling to book call in to book a woman's haircut
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for a client we don't say for a client for a client so
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Those words that are not
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Stressed get blended and the sounds change slightly
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so because we're stressing other words like
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haircuts and
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client and of course the main verb
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Calling and book then other words are not stressed and those sounds get a bit mushed or blended together
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So I'm calling
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to
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book a
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Haircut for a woman's haircut, it's but again haircut is stressed more than women's
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for
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Clients so stress words are really important to say more
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Strongly so louder and longer than the non stressed words
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Which kind of get blended together and that's part of what makes this machine sound so natural
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I'm looking for something on May 3rd. Um
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this little pause is so
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important and it's kind of ironic because most language teachers would tell you not to say
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Um when you're speaking English when you're presenting or when you're practicing English, don't say it
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Um, it's a filler. It doesn't mean anything. It's not academic
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Well, you know what? It may not be good for your presentations
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I mean academically speaking and it doesn't mean anything but it makes your speech sounds so much more natural
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um, I think it's a good idea to use, um every once in a while because it is a
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it is a marker of
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Natural English speech so if you want to sound more natural use, um, not all the time
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But every once in a while you notice in conversation, it's only used once I'm looking for something. I'm a third
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I'm looking for something on May 3rd. So we're using words like I'm looking for something on May 3rd
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Looking first so this is a common way to express
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What date you would like or?
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something that you are
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Searching for I'm looking for something on May 3rd. So why do we say something?
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We're not talking about a thing. We're looking for a time. We're looking for an appointment
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So why don't we just say I'm looking for an appointment on May 3rd. Well
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Natural English is sometimes really general. Sometimes people use words like
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Something and sometimes and thing and that's really common
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So again, you don't always have to use the more academic word
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If you want to sound more natural more like a native speaker
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You can use general words sometimes on May 3rd again
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the intonation is going up because we're kind of asking for information here and May 3rd is
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Stressed because this is the most important keyword in the sentence. They're like, give me one
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The best part of this google assistant conversation was when she uses
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the sound or the filler word
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Mm-hmm, everyone cracked up because this is so
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surprising from a machine because this is something so
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natural and so human to use a filler
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So another key takeaway is to use fillers sometimes as I mentioned. Um
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Might not be something that your teacher would recommend but it's very natural just like. Mm-hmm
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so when you're listening when you're waiting when you want to show that you are hearing your
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Partner or the other person on the phone line use fillers like this. Mm-hmm
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That means I'm listening or I'm waiting or what time are you looking for? Well
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At 12:00 p.m. Next at 12:00 p.m. So I'm looking for some at 12 p.m
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The intonation is going down to confirm and to say that you're looking for the specific time
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Do you have anything between 10 a.m. And
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12 p.m. Uh
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Again, this natural pause and natural filler is something that distinguishes
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humans from machines we use these natural fillers to think and to make our speech
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More flowing so use these again not all the time every time but every once in a while
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Um. Mm-hmm. It's gonna make you sound a lot more
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Natural so we also are blending sounds together depending on which words are stressed or unstressed
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Do you have anything between 10 a.m. And
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12 p.m. So, do you have anything between 10 a.m. And
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12 p.m
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So you can see where the words are stressed and doors that are not stressed are blended and do not do
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You but do you do you have anything?
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Just a woman's haircut for now
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Just is another very natural word meaning only or simply but we use it a lot
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also for now is a nice way to
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Confirm what you want at this moment, maybe next month
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You want something additional just a woman's haircut for now and notice that we stress haircut. We're not stressing
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Just or women's because they already know it's a woman
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We're stressing haircut because that's the service that we want for now. Okay, we have a 10 o'clock
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10:00 a.m. I'm
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Confirming the time 10 a.m
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Is fine when you're confirming information, you can drop your intonation down 10 a.m
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Is fine and notice the way that we say fine, it's not fine. It's fine
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So it's longer and we have that little up-down intonation today
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I'm fine, and that sounds really nice and friendly unlike today. I'm fine. So
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longer and up-down
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Intonation sounds very friendly just like I mentioned in the beginning
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When Google assistant said hi not high
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You know, okay look their birthday
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The first thing that believed that now this is interesting because we have up speak again the first names Lisa
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It's because we're expecting to be asked more
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Information. The first name is Lisa and I expect maybe the person at the hair salon would ask for the last name or the
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Phone number or give me some additional information. So again, the upwards intonation indicates that the conversation will continue
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It's not over yet. Okay
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But this last sentence. Okay, great
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Thanks has a downward intonation and that is confirmation that the conversation is
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Ending and we have that upward downward information on grade. Okay, great. It's a bit longer
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Thanks, so you can see how we can use intonation in so many ways to show our
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Our attitude that we're nice and we're friendly we can also use intonation to say that we are
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Awaiting more information or we know that the conversation is not over yet
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we can use natural pauses and filler words like um, uh or
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Mm-hmm to show that we're listening or to just sound more natural we can use
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Stress to make sure that our communication is clear and we're getting the key words, really
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strongly
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clearly
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communicated haircut
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10:00 a.m. 12:00 p.m
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Lisa
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Those are all very important words in this conversation
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So how can you improve you're in to sound more natural and have better phone conversations? Well, first of all listen to more
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native
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Natural conversations, it could be between Google assistant, which it's so weird to say that she sounds natural
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But she does because so many
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Linguists have put so much
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research and
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investment into actually figuring out how to make Google assistant sound natural and it's working so you could listen to these
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Conversations and of course listen to real human conversations, which is something that we do inside the go natural English fluent communication
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Course you can also
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Practice because once you listen to the conversations, you're going to improve your knowledge
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Really focus on what you're hearing. Not just the vocabulary word. Not just the
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The words themselves, but really listen to the information
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Listen to the stress. Listen to the pauses. Listen to the filler words that you're hearing and
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Practice those now before you practice them in a real life conversation
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I highly recommend one strategy that I use with my students which is
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recording yourself
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Listening to yourself and also sharing that with other people who can give you feedback
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That's something that we do inside my course as well, but you can learn strategies like that that you can do on your own
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No matter if you take a course or just study on your own and those are the kind of strategies that I teach
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Inside the go natural English eBook the English fluency formula
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So record yourself listen compare yourself to other
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Natural or native English speakers, and then finally practice in the real world make a phone call
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I remember the first time that I made a phone call in Spanish. I was so nervous
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I was sweating from every pore of my body, but
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practicing makes perfect practice makes perfect as they say is so
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Make some practice phone calls make some just easy
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and phone calls
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I mean you could make a reservation at a restaurant you could cancel your reservation at the restaurant
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You could make an appointment for a haircut just like in this example
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You could call one of those customer service hotlines and ask questions about
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An item or a service or product? There's so many ways that you can practice your English without really
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feeling like
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there's big consequences if you make a mistake, or if they can't understand you so make use of
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Those little opportunities to practice and that's how you gain confidence and improve your fluency
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Okay
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so I hope that you enjoyed this analysis of the Google assistant and the tips for improving your
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English on the phone for sounding more natural and native like if you'd like to get all my best tips strategies and
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Practice for learning English should check out the English fluency formula ebook right over there
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You can get a free sample when you click up there if you'd like to continue watching
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Amazing go natural English videos here on YouTube. Click right down
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There and if you haven't subscribed yet and what are you doing? Make sure you subscribe and hit the bell to get
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Notifications. Thanks so much for watching and I'll see you next week in the next English tip video. Bye for now
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