Learn English with Movies – Steve Jobs

276,043 views ・ 2019-07-30

Rachel's English


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

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In the US, summer is for sun, sand, and blockbuster movies.
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And this summer, we're going to use those movies to learn English and study how to sound American.
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Every video this summer is going to be a study English with movies video.
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We'll pull scenes from the summer's hottest movies as well as favorite movies from years past.
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It's amazing what we can discover by studying even a small bit of English dialogue.
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We'll study how to understand movies, what makes Americans sound American, and of course,
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any interesting vocabulary, phrasal `verbs, or idioms that come up in the scenes we study.
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I call this kind of exercise a Ben Franklin exercise.
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First, we'll watch the scene. Then, we'll do an in-depth analysis of what we hear together.
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This is going to be so much fun. Be sure to tell your friends and spread the word that all summer long,
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every Tuesday, we're studying English with movies here at Rachel's English.
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If you're new to my channel, click subscribe and don't forget the notification button.
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Let's get started. First, the scene.
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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Fix it? Yeah.
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Ha. Ha. Ha.
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In forty minutes? Fix it.
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I can't.
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Who's the person who can?
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I'm the person who can, and I can't.
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How bad are you saying?
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It's pretty bad.
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I don't know what that means.
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It means the demo is more than likely going to crash.
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You have to keep your voices down. Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
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Now the analysis.
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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What are our stressed words here? Our anchors in this sentence?
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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Need, say, our two verbs, and then the word 'hello'. We, it, and to, all a little bit lower in pitch, flatter,
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it's the valleys compared to the mountains in this smoothly curved line of intonation.
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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Need it, the D comes between two vowels here, it's a flap linking those two words together.
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And then we have an ending T and a beginning T. How's that pronounced?
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Need it to-- need it to-- need it to--
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Those two words link together with a single true T and as so often happens, the vowel in the word 'to'
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reduces to the schwa, te, te.
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We need it to say--
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We need it to say--
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We need it to say--
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We need it to, we need it to. How does he pronounce the word 'hello'?
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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We need it to say, "Hello".
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Hello , hello, really clearly, a schwa, an UH kind of sound rather than an EH kind of sound.
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It can be pronounced either way, it is the unstressed syllable. He-he-hello or huh-huh-hello.
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He does huh-huh-hello. Hello. Hello. So you have your choice there but when you're imitating him,
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and try to do it the way he does it with the schwa, and don't forget this ends in an OH diphthong.
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I find my students sometimes cut this off: hello oh-oh. Oh-oh-oh. A little bit more lip rounding.
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"Hello".
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You're not hearing me.
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You're not hearing me. You're not hearing me. 'You're' and 'here', more stressed there.
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Now 'you are', 'you're', or 'your' often gets reduced. It's said very quickly and it's pronounced: yer yer yer.
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Flat in pitch. Now, he's not doing it flat in pitch. He's making it stressed but he's also sort of using
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the reduced vowel. It's more like just the Y in the R sound, isn't it? So since it is stressed,
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I would write that with the UR as in bird vowel. You're, you're not hearing me. How is the T pronounced?
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You're not hearing me.
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You're not hearing me.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's a stop T because the next word begins with a consonant. You're not hearing me.
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Whoa! Different day, different outfit, important announcement.
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Did you know that with this video, I made a free audio lesson that you can download?
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In fact, I'm doing this for each one of the youtube videos I'm making this summer.
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All 11 of the Learn English with Movies videos!
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So follow this link or find the link in the video description to get your free downloadable audio lesson.
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It's where you're going to train all of the things that you've learned about pronunciation in this video.
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Back to the lesson.
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You're not hearing me.
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You're not hearing me.
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You're not hearing me.
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>> It's not going to say-- >> Fix it.
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It's not going to say--
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Now often we reduce 'going to' to 'gonna' he doesn't here, he stresses 'going', this is not what is going to
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happen in the future, it's not-- 'It's' and 'not' lead up in pitch to that stressed syllable 'go', it's not going to say.
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It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say--
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And again, we have a stop T in 'not' because the next word begins with a consonant.
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The word 'to' is pronounced here as a flap T rather than a true T. Going to, going to, going to, going to, going to say.
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So native speakers do this pretty frequently when the sound before is voiced and really frequently
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when the sound before was a vowel or diphthong. Here, it's not a vowel or diphthong, it's the NG sound,
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but that's a voiced consonant, and so he is making that more of a D sound or a flap T. It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say--
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>> It's not going to say-- >> Fix it.
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And then Steve Jobs, the character playing Steve Jobs, cuts him off. Fix it.
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Hey guys popping in for a quick minute here. I'm waiting on the subway on a sweltering summer afternoon
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here in Philly, and you know what my new favorite thing to do is while waiting? Audiobooks.
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Audible is sponsoring this video. Thank you, Audible!
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They actually have a lot of audiobooks on English for non-native speakers.
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Go to audible.com/rachelsenglish or text rachelsenglish to 500 500 if you live in the US to get started.
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This offer ends July 31st 2019. This month, I recommend you try easy American idioms.
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If you find you don't like it, you can exchange it for free.
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Also be sure to check out Audible Originals, their exclusive audiobooks on all sorts of topics that you
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can't find anywhere else. Once you sign up and get easy American idioms,
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choose one of the idioms you learned in the audio book, and put it in the comments below.
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Once again, to try it out, go to audible.com/rachelsenglish or
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text rachelsenglish to 500 500 if you live in the US. Now, let's get back to that analysis.
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It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say--
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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And then Steve Jobs, the character playing Steve Jobs, cuts him off. Fix it.
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A two-word thought group, fix it, stress on the first syllable and the word 'it' just follows down in pitch,
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following the line, the curve down from fix. Fix it. And a stop T.
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Now, this time, it's a stop T because it's at the end of a thought group, and native speakers often do that.
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Almost always, a T is a stop T when it's followed by a consonant, a word that begins the consonant,
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when the T is not part of a cluster. But it's also very often a stop T at the end of a thought group. Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Notice Mr. Jobs holds on to the F consonant. Ffff. Puts more energy in it.
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By exaggerating the beginning sound or holding on to the beginning sound of a word,
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it makes the stress even more stressed. It's even more intense. Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Now, the letter X can be pronounced two different ways. It's either the KS cluster, unvoiced,
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or the GZ cluster, voiced. How is it pronounced?
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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KS. In the word 'fix', it is the KS cluster, and that S sound links right into the IH vowel, very smooth. Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Fix it.
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Now, we're getting a lot of energy in the voice. These two men do not see eye to eye on what's happening,
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and Steve Jobs is used to having his way. The other character is feeling a little bit desperate,
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I think, and his pitch is getting higher.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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You're not hearing me. You're not hearing me. It's not going to say-- Uuuhhh--
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All of that is a higher pitch than just normal conversational English.
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And I think this happens often in other languages as well when people are in a heated discussion,
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a discussion with a lot of emotion, that the pitch can creep up and up.
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So think about that and try to imitate that when you're working with the audio that goes with this lesson.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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You're not hearing me.
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It's not going to say-- Fix it.
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Fix it? Yeah.
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Fix it? Fix it? Okay, his F isn't as strong, he's not stressing it as much. Now he's going: fix it?
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The intonation is different. Steve Jobs made it a statement. He was demanding it.
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This guy is asking it as a question. You want me to fix it?
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Fix it?
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Fix it?
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Fix it?
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So two-word thought group. Totally different shape here. The one was a command the other is a questioning
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of that command. Still a stop T. Still links together smoothly. Fix it?
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Fix it?
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Fix it?
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Fix it? Yeah.
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Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
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Little up-down shape, a single word in a thought group, shape of stress. Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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I love it. He is so casually throwing this out there. Yeah, I want you to fix it. He's not understanding what
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would go into fixing it, and that fixing it is impossible. He is not accepting that as the outcome.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Yeah.
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Ha. Ha. Ha. In forty minutes?
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Okay. So then the character has this great laugh. Ha. Ha. Ha.
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Ha. Ha. Ha. In forty minutes?
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Ha. Ha. Ha. In forty minutes?
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Ha. Ha. Ha. In forty minutes?
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In forty minutes? He can't believe it. He has an incredulous tone. It's not gonna happen.
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In 40 minutes? For-- minutes? And then the pitch goes up at the end because again, it's a question.
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He's saying: you want me to fix it in 40 minutes? I noticed the word 'in' which is unstressed,
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was said really quickly and I didn't really hear the N. In forty? In forty? Do you hear it?
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In forty minutes?
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In forty minutes?
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In forty minutes?
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Not very clear. The T in 'forty' is a flap T, it does follow the rules that comes after an R
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and before a vowel or diphthong. So we usually make that a flap T. Forty. Forty minutes?
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In forty minutes?
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In forty minutes?
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In forty minutes? Fix it.
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Fix it. Okay, we're giving another command. The intonation goes down. Fix it. At the end.
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That is a statement. And again, a stop T.
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Fix it. Fix it.
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Fix it. I can't.
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I can't.
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I can't. Stress on the word 'can't' and he does release this into a true T.
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If you've been watching many of my Ben Franklin analysis videos, then you know that
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in the N apostrophe T contraction, we often don't release that into a true T. But here, he does. Very clear. I can't.
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He is stressing that word. It is not possible.
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I can't.
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I can't.
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I can't.
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Who's the person who can?
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What's the stress of Steve Jobs' next line?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can? Who's, per--, can, more stressed. 'The' and 'who' less stressed,
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lower in pitch, but still smoothly connected into the line. Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Can fix it. So if he had said: who's the person who can fix it? Then maybe he would have reduced 'can' but it's...
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'Fix' and 'it' are not in the sentence here, they're implied, but 'can' is the only verb and so the vowel is not reduced.
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It remains the AA as in bat vowel. Can. When that's followed by N, we add an extra sound, sort of
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like the schwa, the UH as in butter vowel, before the N. It's the back of the tongue relaxing. Can. Can.
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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Who's the person who can?
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can.
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They're doing a lot of talking over each other, aren't they? One person is not finishing before the next person starts.
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And how does he stress this sentence?
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can. 'I'm' is often not stressed but here, it's the important part of the sentence.
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can.
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Da da da dat da da. Three long syllables, three shorter syllables. The, son-- and who.
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Now, don't be fooled by the letter O here, that is the schwa, it's said very quickly. Person. Person.
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I'm the person who can. And again, with 'can', can, we have AH vowel, an UH sound, and then the N. Can.
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can.
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I'm the person who can, and I can't.
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And I can't. And I can't.
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Both I and can't, a little stressed. Some of that up-down shape. Again, he does a true T release here.
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He really wants to stress the negative. Can't. The word 'and', and I can't, it's reduced.
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The D is dropped, this is really common, ending N links right into the AI diphthong.
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And I can't.
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And I can't.
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And I can't.
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But the vowel isn't reduced, it's AH. And, and, just like 'can', there's a little bit of an UH sound in there
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as the tongue relaxes. And, and, and, and, and I can't.
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And I can't.
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And I can't.
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And I can't.
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16:46
Can't. Again, AH followed by N, relax the back of the tongue first. Ah, ah, cah--, can't, can't.
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17:01
And I can't.
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17:03
And I can't.
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17:05
And I can't.
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17:08
How bad are you saying?
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17:09
How bad are you saying? How bad-- stressed, how bad are you saying? So, before this clip,
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17:19
he was saying there were some problems with the demo.
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17:23
Now Steve Jobs is asking just how bad are these problems?
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17:27
How bad are you saying?
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1760
17:29
How bad are you saying?
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1800
17:31
How bad are you saying?
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1360
17:32
Bad and say, most stressed. What's happening with our unstressed words?
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17:37
How bad are you saying?
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1057900
1760
17:39
How bad are you saying?
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17:41
How bad are you saying?
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17:42
How is said quickly. How, how, how, how, how. Less clear.
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17:48
How bad are you saying?
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17:50
How bad are you saying?
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17:52
How bad are you saying?
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17:53
'Are you' becomes: ur you, ur you, ur you, ur you.
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17:57
Bad ur you, bad ur you. So the word 'are' reduces. I would write that as schwa R. Ur you, ur you, ur you.
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1077920
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18:03
And those two words are flat, said very quickly. Are you saying--
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18:08
Are you saying?
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18:09
Are you saying?
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18:11
Are you saying?
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18:11
It's pretty bad.
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18:13
Okay, what's the stress of this next statement? It's pretty bad. It's pretty bad.
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18:19
Most stress on the word 'pre', the syllable 'pre' of the word 'pretty'.
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18:25
It's pretty bad.
278
1105220
1660
18:26
It's pretty bad.
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18:28
It's pretty bad.
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1108500
1220
18:29
It's pretty bad. And he does a little bit of a nod, a little head gesture on that stressed syllable. It's pretty bad.
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18:37
Pretty bad. Bad, also some length.
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18:41
It's pretty bad.
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1121100
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18:42
It's pretty bad.
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1600
18:44
It's pretty bad.
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18:45
Pretty. It's pretty bad. It's pretty bad. Pretty. We have two Ts here, they're a flap T because those,
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18:53
that sound comes between two vowels.
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18:56
We have the IH as in sit vowel, the letter E makes the IH as in sit vowel here. Pre-- pre-- pretty. Pretty bad.
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19:05
It's pretty bad.
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19:07
It's pretty bad.
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1147160
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19:08
It's pretty bad.
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1148780
880
19:09
I don't know what that means.
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1149660
2020
19:11
I don't know what that means.
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1151680
2020
19:13
I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
294
1153700
2200
19:15
The word 'don't' said really quickly, here, the N apostrophe T contraction has a little stop at the end
295
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19:22
to show us the T. I don't, I don't, I don't, I don't know. I don't know. I don't know.
296
1162300
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19:27
And 'know' is stressed. I don't know what that means. And 'means' is the most stressed word there.
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19:34
I don't know what that means.
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19:36
I don't know what that means.
299
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19:39
I don't know what that means.
300
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19:41
So the phrase 'I don't know', that can be pronounced several different ways.
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19:45
You may have heard it really casual like: I don't know. I don't know. No T at all. But here, he does signify a T
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19:52
by putting a little break, that abrupt stop, that is the stop T. I don't know. I don't know.
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19:59
I don't know--
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1199220
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20:00
I don't know--
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20:02
I don't know what that means.
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20:03
I don't know what that means. 'What' and 'that', lower in pitch, a little flatter compared to 'know' and 'means'.
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20:10
What that, what that. They both have stop Ts as well.
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20:14
They're both followed by words that begin with a consonant. What that, what that, what that.
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20:19
What that means.
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20:21
What that means.
311
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20:23
What that means.
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20:23
Means the demo was more than likely going to crash.
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20:26
Means the demo. So he responds, I actually don't hear the word 'it'.
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20:30
Grammatically, it makes sense, but sometimes, we drop the subject like that
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20:34
when we know what we're talking about. Means the demo.
316
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20:38
Means the demo--
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20:41
means the demo was more than likely going to crash.
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20:44
Means the demo is more than likely-- most stressed there, going to crash. Crash.
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20:52
Now the first time this guy said 'going to', he stressed 'going' and it said: going to, it came out as: going to.
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21:01
Now, he's not stressing it. He's stressing 'likely' and 'crash'. And instead, 'going to' comes out as 'gonna'.
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21:08
Common reduction for that.
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21:10
Means the demo is more than likely going to crash.
323
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21:13
Means the demo is more than likely going to crash.
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21:16
Means the demo is more than likely going to crash.
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21:19
So we have a little length on 'means'. Means the demo-- The word 'the', faster, lower in pitch.
326
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21:27
Means the demo is more than likely-- is more than, is more than, is more than.
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21:32
These three words all unstressed, flatter in pitch. Can you simplify them as you say them?
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21:38
Is more than, is more than, is more than.
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21:41
Is more than, is more than, is more than likely going to crash.
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21:46
Than. I would write that with the schwa. More than, more than, more than.
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21:51
Reduced.
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21:52
Is more than--
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21:55
is more than likely going to crash.
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21:57
You have to keep your voices down.
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21:58
Okay, then another character comes in, and she's a whispering, and the scene's getting really intense.
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22:04
You have to keep your voices down.
337
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22:06
You have to keep your voices down.
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22:08
You have to keep your voices down.
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22:10
You have to keep your voices down. You have to keep your voices down. 'Have' has some stress.
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22:17
Voi-- has more stress. You have to keep your voices down.
341
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22:21
You have to keep your voices down.
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22:23
You have to keep your voices down.
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22:25
You have to keep your voices down.
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22:27
You have to keep-- you have to keep-- Now, have you noticed that when the word 'have' is followed by the word
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22:32
'to' which happens pretty frequently, that instead of a V sound, we get more of an F sound?
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22:38
The T is unstressed. She does make that a true T. She of course does still make this a schwa.
347
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22:47
You have to keep your voices down.
348
1367180
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22:49
You have to keep your voices down.
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1369140
1920
22:51
You have to keep your voices down.
350
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22:52
Have to, have to, have to. But the common pronunciation for these two words is
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22:57
to make the V sound an F and may use a true T for the T. Have to, have to. You have to-- you have to--
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23:06
You have to--
353
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23:07
you have to--
354
1387220
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23:08
You have to keep your voices down.
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23:10
The word 'your', so often reduces to yer yer. I would say she doesn't really do that. I still hear it sort of as your,
356
1390360
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23:18
your, but it's said really quickly, still unstressed. To keep your, to keep your, to keep your, to keep your.
357
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23:25
To keep your voices down.
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23:27
To keep your voices down.
359
1407260
1660
23:28
To keep your voices down.
360
1408920
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23:30
You have to keep your voices down. And then she goes right on, so I put a period there, two sentences,
361
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6140
23:36
two sentences is how I would write that grammatically, but she puts it all together into one big thought group.
362
1416560
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23:42
So she doesn't stop the energy of the voice, keeps on going, no breaks, right from the N and
363
1422180
5200
23:47
down into the J sound of Joel.
364
1427380
3600
23:50
To keep your voices down.
365
1430980
1760
23:52
To keep your voices down.
366
1432740
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23:54
To keep your voices down. Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
367
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3340
23:57
Joel Pforzheimer. Joel Pforzheimer. So stress, in any name, is on the last name.
368
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24:04
So whether your name is four names long, five names long, when you say the full name,
369
1444900
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24:09
stress is on the last name, and the last name 'Pforzheimer' has stress on the first syllable.
370
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24:15
So the energy of the voice goes up towards the stress, the peak on the stressed syllable of Pforzheimer.
371
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7760
24:22
Joel, Joel, the voice is going up towards that peak.
372
1462800
5260
24:28
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
373
1468060
2820
24:30
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
374
1470880
2620
24:33
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
375
1473500
2320
24:35
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house. Joel Pforzheimer is sitting--
376
1475820
5260
24:41
A little bit of stress there, sitting out in the house. Okay, what is the word 'house' mean here?
377
1481080
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24:48
This is another word for 'in a theater for the audience'.
378
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3440
24:52
So not the stage, but where all of the seats are, where the audience sit, that's the house.
379
1492180
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24:58
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
380
1498600
2640
25:01
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
381
1501240
2740
25:03
Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
382
1503980
2180
25:06
Pforzheimer is sitting, is sitting, is sitting. So the word 'is' would be written in IPA with the IH vowel and
383
1506160
6400
25:12
the Z consonant, but it's followed by the letter S.
384
1512560
3380
25:15
And the letter S is unvoiced, it's paired with the Z because they have the same mouth position,
385
1515940
5600
25:21
and in cases like this, it's gonna overpower the Z, and they're gonna link together it with a single Z.
386
1521540
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25:27
Sorry, a single S sound. Is sitting, is sitting, is sitting. Double T in 'sitting', that's a flap T
387
1527800
7560
25:35
because the T sound comes between two vowel sounds. Is sitting, is sitting.
388
1535360
5160
25:40
Is sitting out in the house.
389
1540520
1880
25:42
Is sitting out in the house.
390
1542400
2040
25:44
Is sitting out in the house.
391
1544440
1580
25:46
Is sitting out in the house.
392
1546020
2180
25:48
Is sitting out in the house.
393
1548200
2240
25:50
Is sitting out in the house.
394
1550440
1560
25:52
So ending NG consonant linking right into the vowel, the next sound, which is the OW as in now diphthong.
395
1552000
7560
25:59
Then the T in 'out' links the words 'out' and 'in' together as a flap T, because it comes between two vowels.
396
1559560
7720
26:07
Out in, out in, out in. Out in the house. And 'in' and 'the', both lower in pitch, unstressed, said quickly
397
1567280
7320
26:14
before the next up-down shape, the stressed word of house.
398
1574600
4220
26:18
Is sitting out in the house.
399
1578820
1900
26:20
Is sitting out in the house.
400
1580720
1920
26:22
Is sitting out in the house.
401
1582640
1780
26:24
This is intense but let's listen to the whole conversation one more time.
402
1584420
4640
26:29
We need it to say, "Hello".
403
1589060
2100
26:31
You're not hearing me.
404
1591160
900
26:32
It's not going to say-- Fix it.
405
1592060
2480
26:34
Fix it? Yeah.
406
1594540
1420
26:35
Ha. Ha. Ha.
407
1595960
2480
26:38
In forty minutes? Fix it.
408
1598440
1240
26:39
I can't.
409
1599680
720
26:40
Who's the person who can?
410
1600400
840
26:41
I'm the person who can, and I can't.
411
1601240
4740
26:45
How bad are you saying?
412
1605980
940
26:46
It's pretty bad.
413
1606920
860
26:47
I don't know what that means.
414
1607780
1100
26:48
It means the demo is more than likely going to crash.
415
1608880
2220
26:51
You have to keep your voices down. Joel Pforzheimer is sitting out in the house.
416
1611100
3420
26:54
We're going to be doing a lot more of this kind of analysis together.
417
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26:58
What movie scenes would you like to see analyzed like this?
418
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27:01
Let me know in the comments! And if you want to see all my Ben Franklin videos, click here.
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27:06
You'll also find the link in the video description.
420
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27:09
That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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