How to Add Emphasis in English - Improve Your Spoken English

101,901 views ・ 2020-06-12

Oxford Online English


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

00:01
Hi, my name’s Marie.
0
1020
1630
00:02
welcome to Oxford Online English!
1
2650
2190
00:04
In this video, we’re going to show you how to add emphasis while speaking English.
2
4840
4799
00:09
But what does it mean to add emphasis?
3
9639
3231
00:12
Adding emphasis is a way to show your listener that certain words or ideas are more important.
4
12870
7140
00:20
In this lesson, you’ll see how to use different pronunciation features and grammar structures
5
20010
5160
00:25
to add emphasis to your spoken or written English.
6
25170
4090
00:29
Another thing: don’t forget to turn on subtitles if you need them!
7
29260
3470
00:32
This video has English subtitles; click the ‘CC’ button on the video player to turn
8
32730
4730
00:37
them on.
9
37460
1260
00:38
On your mobile phone, use the settings icon.
10
38720
3000
00:41
Let’s start with one of the most common ways to add emphasis to an idea.
11
41720
7340
00:49
What time is John flying to Paris tomorrow?
12
49060
2120
00:51
He isn’t flying to Paris *tomorrow.* Did you hear the stressed word?
13
51190
5070
00:56
Which one was it?
14
56260
1950
00:58
Hopefully, you heard that ‘tomorrow’, was stressed.
15
58210
3320
01:01
Why do you think this is?
16
61530
3720
01:05
Before we answer that question, let’s have a look at three more examples.
17
65250
3340
01:08
Listen for the stressed words and think about what the stress means.
18
68590
5430
01:14
What time is John flying to Paris tomorrow?
19
74020
1880
01:15
He isn’t *flying* to Paris tomorrow.
20
75900
3200
01:19
What time is John flying to Paris tomorrow?
21
79100
2399
01:21
*He* isn’t flying to Paris tomorrow.
22
81499
2870
01:24
What time is John flying to Paris tomorrow?
23
84369
2360
01:26
He isn’t flying to Paris tomorrow.
24
86729
2351
01:29
In the first sentence, ‘flying’ was stressed.
25
89080
3040
01:32
In the second, ‘he’ was stressed.
26
92120
2740
01:34
And the third?
27
94860
1440
01:36
There were no stressed words!
28
96300
1909
01:38
Trick question.
29
98209
1550
01:39
When you stress one word, you show that this idea is more important.
30
99760
5300
01:45
Often, you do this to show contrast with an opposite idea, or to disagree with someone.
31
105060
5900
01:50
In the first sentence, adding stress to ‘flying’ means that he is going to Paris
32
110960
4640
01:55
tomorrow, but that he isn’t going by plane.
33
115609
3341
01:58
Maybe he’s taking the Eurostar train
34
118950
2250
02:01
or driving.
35
121200
1220
02:02
What about the second sentence?
36
122420
2300
02:04
What does it mean if you stress the word ‘he’?
37
124720
4220
02:08
This suggests that other people we know are flying to Paris tomorrow, but
38
128940
4440
02:13
‘*he’* isn’t.
39
133380
2420
02:15
What about our first example?
40
135800
1940
02:17
What does it mean if you stress the word ‘tomorrow’?
41
137740
3620
02:21
Think about it.
42
141360
2780
02:24
Adding stress to ‘tomorrow’ means he is flying to Paris, but not tomorrow.
43
144140
5610
02:29
Maybe he’s flying today, or the day after tomorrow.
44
149750
4340
02:34
Adding word stress is a simple way to add emphasis to your idea.
45
154090
4270
02:38
This is especially useful when you want to correct someone, or disagree with somebody
46
158360
4480
02:42
else.
47
162840
4060
02:46
So, what did you think of the movie?
48
166900
1380
02:48
Amazing!
49
168280
680
02:48
It was so tense!
50
168960
1220
02:50
Yeah, I saw you jump so many times!
51
170180
2260
02:52
I know!
52
172440
1020
02:53
*Never* have I been so scared.
53
173460
2580
02:56
That basement scene was so frightening, I could hardly watch.
54
176040
3340
02:59
And the ending!
55
179420
1300
03:00
What a twist!
56
180730
1050
03:01
At no point did I see that coming.
57
181780
2260
03:04
What was the director’s name again?
58
184060
1620
03:05
Maria Thornby, I think.
59
185800
2220
03:08
Not only did she direct it, but she also wrote and starred in it too!
60
188020
4420
03:12
She’s one to watch, then.
61
192440
2440
03:14
Look at two sentences.
62
194880
3500
03:18
You heard one of these in the dialogue.
63
198380
2160
03:20
Do you remember which?
64
200540
3820
03:24
You heard number two.
65
204360
1640
03:26
Next question: what’s the difference between these two sentences?
66
206000
6260
03:32
The structure in sentence two is called an inversion.
67
212270
4130
03:36
This is another way to add emphasis to your ideas.
68
216400
3500
03:39
When you make an inversion, you do two things: first, you start the sentence with an adverb,
69
219900
7140
03:47
like ‘never’, ‘only’, ‘not only’ or ‘at no point’.
70
227040
5520
03:52
The adverb can be a single word or a phrase.
71
232560
3690
03:56
Secondly, you put an auxiliary verb before the main verb.
72
236250
3700
03:59
You can make inversions in different verb tenses.
73
239950
3560
04:03
For example, look at four sentences.
74
243510
3130
04:06
Can you say what verb tenses they are?
75
246640
4320
04:10
Could you do it?
76
250960
1000
04:11
Pause the video if you want more time to think.
77
251960
5360
04:17
Sentence one is past perfect.
78
257320
2900
04:20
Two is present simple.
79
260229
2261
04:22
Three is future, with ‘will’, and four is past simple.
80
262490
6390
04:28
Inversions like this are more common written English,
81
268880
3420
04:32
but you might hear them in conversations, too.
82
272300
2860
04:35
Like all emphasis, you shouldn’t overuse them.
83
275160
6140
04:41
You’re not coming to the party tonight, right?
84
281300
1940
04:43
I *am* coming!
85
283240
1800
04:45
Why would you think I wasn’t?
86
285040
1460
04:46
Well, last time we went to their place, you were in a terrible mood.
87
286500
3160
04:49
It didn’t look like you were enjoying yourself at all.
88
289660
2100
04:51
Well, I was quite tired, but I *did* have a good time.
89
291760
3740
04:55
OK, well that’s good.
90
295500
2000
04:57
I *do* hope you’re bringing Michelle with you, too?
91
297500
2780
05:00
I haven’t seen her for ages.
92
300280
1620
05:01
Yes, she’ll be there.
93
301900
1600
05:03
Is she going to make her orange cake again?
94
303500
2300
05:05
That was the best!
95
305800
1400
05:07
I’ll ask her.
96
307200
1400
05:08
She *does* make the best cakes.
97
308600
2600
05:11
In the dialogue, you heard four examples of adding emphasis by stressing an auxiliary verb.
98
311200
6000
05:17
Can you remember the sentences you heard?
99
317200
2900
05:20
Which auxiliary verb did they use?
100
320100
4100
05:24
You heard these four sentences.
101
324200
4000
05:28
One of these four is different from the others.
102
328200
3000
05:31
Can you see which sentence is different, and why?
103
331200
5300
05:36
The sentence ‘I *am* coming’ is different.
104
336500
4420
05:40
It’s different because in the other three sentences, you add an auxiliary verb for emphasis:
105
340920
5880
05:46
‘do’, ‘does’ or ‘did’.
106
346800
4000
05:50
Here, there’s already an auxiliary verb – ‘am’ – and you simply pronounce
107
350800
4680
05:55
it with more stress.
108
355480
2560
05:58
If you have a sentence in the present simple or past simple, and you want to add emphasis,
109
358040
5760
06:03
with most verbs you can add an auxiliary verb ‘do’, ‘does’ or ‘did’ to make
110
363800
5200
06:09
your idea sound stronger.
111
369000
2200
06:11
You need to pronounce the auxiliary verb with stress, too.
112
371200
3160
06:14
Don’t say ‘I did have a good time’.
113
374360
2640
06:17
Say ‘I *did* have a good time.
114
377000
3000
06:20
In other verb tenses, there is already an auxiliary verb.
115
380000
3900
06:23
For example: ‘I am going to tell her.’
116
383900
4300
06:28
‘They can speak Italian.’
117
388200
3700
06:31
‘You have grown a lot.’
118
391900
3700
06:35
To add emphasis to sentences like these, simply pronounce the auxiliary verb with stress,
119
395600
5999
06:41
like this: ‘I *am* going to tell him.’
120
401600
4480
06:46
‘They *can* speak Italian.’
121
406080
3940
06:50
‘You *have* grown a lot.’
122
410020
3760
06:53
Now, let’s look at one more way you can add emphasis when you speak.
123
413780
7220
07:01
Olivier, can you come downstairs, please?
124
421000
2420
07:03
What’s happened?
125
423430
1000
07:04
Look in the living room.
126
424430
1109
07:05
Did you break the TV?
127
425539
1160
07:06
I didn’t break the TV!
128
426699
2030
07:08
Well, what happened then?
129
428729
1511
07:10
It was the dog who did it!
130
430240
2009
07:12
He ran through the living room chasing the cat and got caught on the wires.
131
432249
4311
07:16
OK, sorry, my mistake.
132
436560
2340
07:18
Look at a sentence you heard.
133
438900
3180
07:22
Here’s a question: why say it like this?
134
442080
3320
07:25
Why not just say ‘The dog did it’?
135
445409
3820
07:29
You can probably guess the answer: saying it this way adds emphasis.
136
449229
4931
07:34
But, do you know what this sentence structure is called?
137
454160
4620
07:38
It’s called a cleft sentence, also known as a focusing sentence.
138
458780
5199
07:43
‘Cleft’ has a similar meaning to ‘split’ or ‘divided’.
139
463979
4140
07:48
In the sentence we used – ‘It was the dog who did it’ – you can see that the
140
468119
4431
07:52
sentence is in two parts.
141
472550
2149
07:54
The first, ‘it was the dog’ and the second ‘who broke the TV’.
142
474699
4960
07:59
A cleft sentence will always have at least two verbs: one in the first part, and one
143
479659
4651
08:04
in the second.
144
484310
1590
08:05
Cleft sentences often start with the word ‘it’, but they can also start in different
145
485900
4480
08:10
ways.
146
490389
1000
08:11
You can also start a cleft sentence with ‘what’ plus a clause.
147
491389
4511
08:15
For example ‘what I hate most about living here is the dark winters.’
148
495900
7400
08:23
‘What I need right now is a good long holiday.’
149
503300
4900
08:28
‘What I’d like to do is put this aside and think about it again after a good night’s
150
508200
5960
08:34
sleep.’
151
514160
2740
08:36
It’s also possible to make cleft sentences starting with ‘all’, ‘something’ or
152
516900
5740
08:42
‘one thing’.
153
522640
1360
08:44
For example ‘All I want is to lie down.
154
524000
2650
08:46
I feel terrible!’
155
526650
3010
08:49
‘Something you should think about is choosing the words you use more carefully.’
156
529660
6140
08:55
In the last sentence, you could also use ‘one thing’, which is interchangeable with ‘something’.
157
535800
7520
09:03
There are other ways to form cleft sentences, but these are the most common.
158
543320
4800
09:08
All these sentences follow the same pattern; they’re divided into two parts, with at
159
548120
5320
09:13
least one verb in each part.
160
553440
2840
09:16
Thanks for watching.
161
556280
1220
09:17
See you next time!
162
557500
1000
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7