Pronunciation of the "OR" sound in English

196,652 views ・ 2019-06-11

Learn English with Gill


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Hello.
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I'm Gill at engVid, and today's lesson is on the pronunciation of a vowel sound, and
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what it sounds like is: "or", and this is a British English vowel sound.
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If you're listening to American speakers or Canadian speakers, the words will be a little
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bit different.
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And also, depending on whether there is an "r" in the spelling, Americans and Canadians
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do pronounce those words differently from the ones that don't have an "r", because they
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make the "or" sound in their pronunciation; but in the UK, in Britain, we don't make the
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"r" sound so much, even if it's in the spelling.
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So, we have a lot of words here which all have different spellings, but they're all
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pronounced in British English with one vowel sound, which is: "or", "or".
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So, it's like the word: "or", and you can see I'm pushing my mouth forward when I'm
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saying it: "or", "or", and it's just a round shape; I'm not making any "r" sound with it.
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It's just: "or", "or".
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So... and a lot of people get distracted, really, by the spellings and try to say the
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word according to the way that it's spelt; when, in fact, sometimes that produces the
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wrong sound.
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So, a word like this, for example...
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Well, with "ght", of course that makes it even more difficult.
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But that's just: "caught", "caught".
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You don't have to try to make "au", "co-... coat".
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Some people try to say: "coat", but it's not.
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It's "caught".
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Okay?
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Just like that spelling of "caught", it's just the same; no different.
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So, that's the case for all of these words, even if they have double "l" in them - it's
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"or", like that.
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Even if they have a "w" at the end, it's still "or".
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So, let's go through the words, and also there may be some words you're not familiar with
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and I'll explain the meaning as we go along.
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So, let's have a look.
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So: "all", "all".
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You probably know this word - everything; all.
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This one: "awful", "awful".
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So, there's a "w" there but we don't say "wa", "awa", "awa", "wa" like that; it's just "or"
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- it's an open, circular shape.
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"Awful", "awful".
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So, people use the word "awful" if something is bad.
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If they're eating something and they're not liking the taste, they say: "Oh, this sandwich.
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Oh, it's awful.
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Awful."
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So, that's "awful".
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And "awkward" is similar.
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If you feel awkward, you don't feel comfortable.
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You feel a bit shy or unhappy.
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If you feel awkward...
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At a party for example, if you don't know anybody and nobody's talking to you, you sort
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of feel awkward.
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Okay?
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Right.
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So, next line: "ball".
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So, "ball" - I'm sure you know that word; sports, football.
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Ball.
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And "bald".
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So, this "bald" is when someone has no hair; they are bald.
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Okay?
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And a "bore", this "bore" is when someone isn't very interesting.
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You're talking to them.
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Maybe you're at that party and then you do find somebody to talk to, but the person you're
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talking to is really a bore - what they're talking about isn't very interesting and you're
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doing your best to look interested, but it's very difficult.
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A bore.
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Okay.
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And "born".
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When a baby is born on a certain date, then that's their birthday.
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"When were you born?"
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Usually someone will ask: "What year were you born?"
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Okay.
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So that's that one.
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So, you notice by now I'm making the same shape with my mouth for every word.
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So, next line: "call", to call someone.
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"Call", shout out to them.
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Call.
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Or just simply the name of somebody: What do you call them?
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You call them by their name.
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Okay?
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"Core", "c-o-r-e", "core" is the middle of something.
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Like, if you have an apple and you eat the apple, but there's a bit left in the middle,
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that's the core; that's the inside part - the core.
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And then "court" - "court" is either the...
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Where the king and queen are - the royal court; or it can be in sport - a tennis court; or
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in...
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In legal terms, it can be where a legal process is...
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It takes place in the law court.
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So, this word: "law" and "court" go together, and they have the same vowel sound.
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Okay.
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And "caught", the past tense of "catch".
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If you catch a ball that someone throws to you: "I have caught the ball."
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So, "caught" - the same.
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Okay.
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So, if you've heard American pronunciations, probably by now you will have heard different...
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A different way of saying these words, but it's your choice whether you want to pronounce
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in British English or American English.
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It depends where you are, really.
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Perhaps if you're in America, you will want to speak with an American accent; if you're
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in the UK, you probably want to speak with a British accent, so...
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And also, you can change, depending on where you are, if you want to.
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If you hear people talking and then you say the same words that they're saying - you probably
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will copy the way they are pronouncing it, which is fine.
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Okay.
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So, let's continue.
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So: "door" - open the door; close the door.
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And "dawn" - the dawn is when the sun rises in the morning.
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Morning, dawn.
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Okay?
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When it first gets light in the morning as the sun rises.
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Then "fall" - to fall is to drop onto the floor; to fall.
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And "for" - "f-o-r" I'm sure you know.
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"What is that for?", "She...
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She...
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She baked a cake for my birthday", something like that.
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"Four" is the number, and it sounds exactly the same as this one: "for", "four".
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"She baked a cake for four people."
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You could have that: "for four people".
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And "floor" - what we stand on is the floor.
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And a "flaw" with a "w" but no sound of a "w": "flaw".
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"Floor" and "flaw" sound exactly the same.
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A "flaw" is something that's wrong with something; something that's not perfect.
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It's an imperfection; something that's not 100% perfect; has a flaw in it.
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Okay.
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Okay, continuing: "gall".
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"Gall" is something that tastes bitter; it has a bitter taste.
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Gall.
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And it can also be used in a metaphorical way.
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If you're annoyed by something, it galls you; it sort of gives you a bitter feeling is the
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idea.
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Okay?
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"Gore" is another word for blood, but it's not used in normal, everyday life.
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It's used in more talking about horror films, that sort of thing.
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"There was a lot of gore in that horror film", that kind of thing.
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And "gory".
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If something is gory, it has blood on it.
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And "gored", the past participle, if someone is gored...
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Often it's a bull that does the goring.
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Bullfighting in Spain, for example: "Someone was gored by the bull" means the bull charged
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with its horns and injured the person, and they were bleeding.
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Okay.
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So: "hall" - a part of a building; the hall or a building itself can be a hall.
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"Horse" that you ride - horse.
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"Haughty", so: "horse", "haughty".
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The spelling is different, but the vowel sound is the same.
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If someone is haughty, they're a bit rather distant and they seem to look down at you.
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They're sort of like this; they think they're superior, so they behave in a haughty way.
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Okay.
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And then "jaw" is this part of your face - the part that moves when we speak is the jaw,
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like that.
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So: "jaw", "or", "or", okay.
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"Law".
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And I once had a student who was either American or she'd spent some time in America, and she
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told me that she was studying a subject, and she called it "law", "law".
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Which sounded like...
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To me, sounded like: "lah".
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And I said: "Oo, I've not heard of that.
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What is that?"
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And so then she spelt it for me: "l-a-w".
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"Oh, law.
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You're studying law."
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But she pronounced it "lah".
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So maybe I'm exaggerating the difference, but that's one...
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That's an example of how the American and the British pronunciations are different,
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and sometimes even a British person won't understand what an American person is saying
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because they pronounce the vowels differently.
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So, there we are.
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So: "law" and "lawyer".
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The "lawyer" is the person who is the professional person who works in the law.
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And "lawn" is in a garden, you have a nice piece of grass, green grass growing which
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you can sit on in the summer, and that's the lawn; it's the grass in your garden and people
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keep it nice and tidy, and cut; cut the grass so that it doesn't grow too high.
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And it's a nice lawn.
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Okay?
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"More" - to have more of something.
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"Mortal" is the opposite of "immortal".
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We are all...
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Human beings are all mortal; meaning: We don't live forever; we're mortal.
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So, this word is often used in maybe in mythology, like Greek and Roman mythology.
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You have the gods and the goddesses who are immortal, and the human beings whose lives
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they often play with who are the mortals; who die.
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The gods and goddesses don't die.
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Okay.
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So, "mortal", and "morning" - the morning.
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Okay
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Then we have "naughty".
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"Naughty" is...
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Often you say to a child: "Stop being naughty" if a child is misbehaving, doing naughty things.
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Maybe running around, breaking things, making a mess, kicking people, anything like that,
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you'd say: "Don't do that.
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That's naughty.
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Naughty.
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Stop it."
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So that's that word: "naughty".
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Okay.
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Bad behaviour.
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"North".
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North, south, east, west.
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North.
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"Normal".
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"Normal" - I'm sure you know that word.
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Normal.
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If something is just ordinary - normal.
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And then this place: "Norfolk" is a place in the UK; an area of the UK called Norfolk.
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Right.
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And then we have "or" - the word itself.
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"Oar", which is when you're rowing a boat, you use an oar or two oars.
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"Paw" is the little hand or the foot of an animal - a paw, like a cat or a dog has a
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paw or any other animal like that.
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This "pore" is in the skin.
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The skin has pores; little holes.
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Okay.
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"Pause" - to stop for a short time; to pause or have a pause.
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So, some people try to pronounce this: "pose", "pose", but that's not right.
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It's "pause".
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Okay.
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"Port" is a drink, like wine, only stronger - port.
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And "pour" - you pour from the bottle.
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So, pour the port from the bottle.
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Okay.
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"Quorum" is when you're having a meeting.
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Sometimes you have to have a certain number of people to be able to make decisions officially,
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so it's called a quorum.
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Do we have a quorum?
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If you have to have a minimum of five people and only four people are there, you can't
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go ahead because any decisions you make will not be valid if it's not a quorum.
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Okay.
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"Raw" - food that isn't cooked is raw, like vegetables or meat.
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"Roar" is the sound an animal makes, like a lion, and it imitates the sound, so a lion
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might go: "Rroarr", like that.
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So, it sounds like what it is - roar.
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And "roaring" - present participle.
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"Saw" - past tense of "see".
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"Sore" - if you have an injury, your skin hurts; it feels sore.
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To "soar" - this spelling is usually a bird or a plane in the air; soar; "to soar" is
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to sort of glide through the air.
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And "soaring".
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And "sure" - sure.
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I'm sure of that; I'm certain - sure.
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"Tall" - tall.
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"Tour" - going on a tour of somewhere as a "tourist"; you're "touring".
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Okay?
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"Wall" is part of a building.
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"Wall".
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"War"- a conflict.
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"Warm" is the temperature.
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-"Do you feel warm enough, or is it very cold in here?"
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-"No.
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I feel quite warm, that's okay."
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It's sort of not hot, it's not cold; it's in between - warm.
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And "warming".
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Okay, we are warming the room.
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And then, finally: "yawn" - to yawn when you're tired.
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You go: "Ah.
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Ah.
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Ah.
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Aw."
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Yawn.
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And the word also imitates what you look like when you're doing it.
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"Yawww", but it's: "yawn", "yawn", and "yawning", "yawning".
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Okay, so that's the first half of the lesson, and I now have some sentences for you to practice
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these words in combination.
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Okay, so let's have a look at some sentences.
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They're a bit strange, but they're designed to give you some practice in using several
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words together, which are pronounced with the "or" sound.
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So: "or" keeps coming up.
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So, first one: "All the lawyers".
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So, those two words have "or" in them.
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"All the lawyers".
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Okay?
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And then the second one: "Pour the port."
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Okay?
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"Pour the port."
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So, you could put those two together, and it would make sense: "All the lawyers pour
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the port."
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Okay?
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Good.
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And then next one: "Four bald bores".
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So, that's three in that sentence.
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"Four bald"-without hair-"bores" - boring people.
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"Four bald bores".
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Okay.
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Then, next one: "The tourists are yawning.
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The tourists are yawning."
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Okay.
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Next one: "The dawn is in the morning.
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The dawn is in the morning."
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Right.
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Next one: "That's an awful flaw.
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That's an awful flaw", meaning a fault; something wrong with something.
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All right.
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Next one: "A tall wall.
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A tall wall".
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All right.
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"The north of Norfolk.
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The north of Norfolk" is on the coast.
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Norfolk has a coast, and the sea above it, so: "The north of Norfolk".
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Okay.
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"His jaw is sore."
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Maybe he's been talking a lot, like me, so his jaw is sore; it's hurting.
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Mine isn't.
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Not yet, anyway.
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"His jaw is sore."
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Okay?
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And then, finally: "I normally call to make sure.
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Normally call to make sure".
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Maybe if...
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If I phone for a friend to check that she's in before I visit her - I normally call to
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make sure that she's in.
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Otherwise if I go and she's not in, I've wasted my time.
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So: "I normally call to make sure."
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Okay.
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So, I hope that's been a useful lesson on pronunciation, and do go to the website: www.engvid.com
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where there's a quiz to test you on this.
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And if you found the lesson useful, do subscribe to my channel.
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And thanks for watching, and see you again soon.
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Bye for now.
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