FAST ENGLISH—Everything You Need To Speak Fast English Like a Native Speaker

584,350 views ・ 2019-04-23

Rachel's English


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

00:00
Rachel: In today's video, we're going to go over how
0
290
2030
00:02
to speak English fast. And we're also going to go over one mistake you want to make sure
1
2320
4580
00:06
you avoid when you're trying to pick up your pace speaking English.
2
6900
5940
00:12
First, let's listen to a native speaker speaking quickly. This is my friend Tom who you might
3
12840
6860
00:19
recognize because he's been on this channel before. Hi is an outstanding accent coach
4
19700
4460
00:24
in my online school "Rachel's English Academy."
5
24160
2470
00:26
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
6
26630
2550
00:29
Rachel: That sounds pretty natural doesn't it? Pretty
7
29180
2650
00:31
American. To me it sounds completely conversational and completely natural. But it is really fast.
8
31830
6380
00:38
What is he doing?
9
38210
1000
00:39
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
10
39210
2560
00:41
Rachel: He's speaking with reductions. He's takes
11
41770
2350
00:44
I-am-going-to and pronounces it 'I'm goin' to.'
12
44120
6410
00:50
We actually have 3 reductions there and they each show a very good example of how to speak
13
50530
5360
00:55
fast in American English. So let's break it down and study. Actually first, let's compare
14
55890
5810
01:01
this sentence. What if he said the sentence with no reductions at all then what would
15
61700
4550
01:06
it sound like?
16
66250
1000
01:07
Tom: Hi Rachel, I am going to Starbucks.
17
67250
2820
01:10
Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
18
70070
2280
01:12
Rachel: Wow, there's a big difference there. One's
19
72350
2670
01:15
natural, sounds fast, very American. The other one sounds completely unnatural. All of the
20
75020
6110
01:21
sounds are American and the melody is American but somehow it just doesn't work out to sound
21
81130
5810
01:26
like a natural conversational Englsih.
22
86940
1940
01:28
Tom: Hi Rachel, I am going to Starbucks.
23
88880
2980
01:31
Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
24
91860
1800
01:33
Rachel: Let's look at the very beginning. He takes
25
93660
2230
01:35
'I am' and says 'I'm' a contraction. Tip #1: Use contractions. Americans use contractions
26
95890
7089
01:42
when speaking English all the time. If you never use a contraction, it would start to
27
102979
4611
01:47
sound a little unnatural. A contraction is a kind of reduction. And
28
107590
4210
01:51
I guess I should define reductions here. A reduction is when we change or drop a sound.
29
111800
5290
01:57
So in the combination 'I am', we have the I dipthong, the A vowel, the M consonant,
30
117090
6050
02:03
I am. But when we make a contraction, we drop the A vowel and it becomes 'I'm','I'm.' So
31
123140
6150
02:09
that drop sound means this is a reduction.
32
129290
3039
02:12
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
33
132329
2390
02:14
Rachel: Notice he's not saying I'm. He's saying: I'm,
34
134719
4121
02:18
I'm, I'm. He's saying it really quickly. You can too. Practice that with me. I'm, I'm,
35
138840
4970
02:23
I'm.
36
143810
1000
02:24
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
37
144810
1420
02:26
Rachel: There are so many contractions in American
38
146230
3789
02:30
English. Take for example, you are that becomes 'you're'. But actually even that reduces.
39
150019
7101
02:37
It's very common to pronounce that you're, you're, you're. We change the vowel to the
40
157120
4710
02:41
schwa and we make it super fast. You're going to love this. You're, you're. You're
41
161830
5781
02:47
doing so well. You're, you're. I think you're right. You're, you're. So fast.
42
167611
9229
02:56
Because there are so many contractions and tricks to their pronunciation, I'm going to
43
176840
4269
03:01
put together a playlist on how to speak English fast. I'm going to put lots of videos in there
44
181109
5061
03:06
that supplement what we're learning here today. So I'm going put in videos on contractions
45
186170
5200
03:11
including a really fun one that includes some real-life English.
46
191370
3949
03:15
Woman: That's because she's a good teacher.
47
195319
2280
03:17
Rachel: That's because. Did you hear that? Another
48
197599
3191
03:20
contraction. That is, that's. Okay, let's go back to Tom's sentence.
49
200790
4199
03:24
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
50
204989
3540
03:28
Rachel: I'm goin' to. Going. An 'ing' verb. He changed
51
208529
4290
03:32
the 'ng' ending sound at the end and made it an in' instead. Goin' instead of going.
52
212819
7611
03:40
So when we make this change it changes the vowel too. The I vowel, when it's followed
53
220430
4709
03:45
by 'ng' tends to sound more like EE. But when it's followed just by 'n', then it does sound
54
225139
4970
03:50
like a pure E. So, going ing, ing, ing sounds like E plus ng. And 'goin', in, in, in sounds
55
230109
8970
03:59
like the E vowel and the N consonant. And I do feel like I'm able to make that ending
56
239079
4511
04:03
faster. Going. goin'.
57
243590
1890
04:05
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
58
245480
3159
04:08
Rachel: We've changed a sound. An example of a reduction.
59
248639
3930
04:12
So tip 1 was use contractions. Tip 2 expands that, Use Reductions. We have so many of em'
60
252569
6691
04:19
in American English and Americans use them all the time when they speak.
61
259260
4240
04:23
It is common to change the ing ending to an in' ending. You'll hear other people do it.
62
263500
11780
04:35
Did you hear that? Doin' instead of doing. So we do it especially with really common
63
275280
4910
04:40
words in casual conversations. If you do this all the time, always change the ing ending
64
280190
5900
04:46
to an in' consonant. It will probably start to sound like a southern dialect. Nothing
65
286090
4500
04:50
wrong with that if you live in the southern part of the US and you want that dialect.
66
290590
3810
04:54
But if you want a more standard American accent, use this reduction a little sparingly.
67
294400
5670
05:00
Let's go back to Tom's sentence. Wow! It is a tiny sentence and he is showing us so many
68
300070
4650
05:04
things that makes us speak faster when we speak American English. We're going to learn one
69
304720
4560
05:09
more tip on how to speak English fast before we get into our mistake that I wanna make
70
309280
4130
05:13
sure that you avoid.
71
313410
1430
05:14
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
72
314840
2790
05:17
Rachel: The word 'to'. How did he pronounce it?
73
317630
3470
05:21
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
74
321100
2300
05:23
Rachel: I didn't hear 'tu'. And I didn't hear 'u',
75
323400
3690
05:27
to. What did you hear?
76
327090
2390
05:29
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
77
329480
2880
05:32
Rachel: Hmmm. Let's listen to the sentence when he's
78
332360
2250
05:34
fully pronouncing everything.
79
334610
1440
05:36
Tom: Hi Rachel, I am going to Starbucks.
80
336050
3160
05:39
Rachel: Now I did hear the true T and the U vowel.
81
339210
3650
05:42
But both of those sounds changed when he was speaking more casually.
82
342860
4000
05:46
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
83
346860
3050
05:49
Rachel: What's happening? 2 things. First, the true
84
349910
3080
05:52
T, tu. He's changing that to a flap T. The true T is a stop consonant. It has 2 parts.
85
352990
6730
05:59
A stop and a release. The flap T is a quick single flap of the tongue against the roof
86
359720
5230
06:04
of the mouth. So I can make that more quickly duh duh duh duh duh rather than tu, tu, tu, tu,
87
364950
6440
06:11
tu which sorts of stops the momentum. In American English it is very common to change the T
88
371390
5110
06:16
to a flap T in certain situations. Those situations are: when the T sound comes between two vowels
89
376500
6750
06:23
or when the T sound comes after an R and before a vowel. And I should say, when I say vowel
90
383250
5520
06:28
in these rules, I do mean vowel or dipthong. Let's listen to how Tom says it again.
91
388770
4840
06:33
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
92
393610
2150
06:35
Rachel: Okay now there it came after an N before a
93
395760
3890
06:39
vowel. Okay sometimes with the word to, the word today, the word tomorrow. In those 3
94
399650
5680
06:45
words probably together too. The beginning T can become a flap T even if the sound before
95
405330
6630
06:51
wasn't a vowel dipthong or an R. They can do that when the sound before was voiced like
96
411960
5670
06:57
in this case, the N. That sound is voiced 'n'.
97
417630
2970
07:00
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
98
420600
2920
07:03
Rachel: So he makes the T a flap T. He changes the
99
423520
2720
07:06
vowel to the schwa. Very common reduction. This word will almost never be pronounced
100
426240
4460
07:10
to. It will usually be pronounced 'tu' with a true T or 'tu' with a flap T. Now he did the
101
430700
7180
07:17
flap T as we've already discussed and we talked about we make a flap T when it comes between
102
437880
5190
07:23
certain sounds. What does it mean comes between? It's the beginning of the word. The letter
103
443070
5370
07:28
T is the beginning of the word 'to'. But wait, this brings us to tip 3 and that is linking.
104
448440
7440
07:35
Linking will help you speak more quickly and it is how Americans speak all the time. Let's
105
455880
4280
07:40
listen to his sentence again.
106
460160
1450
07:41
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
107
461610
2290
07:43
Rachel: The N sound goes right into the flap T with
108
463900
2670
07:46
no brake. In American English, the unit of the word doesn't matter in spoken Englsih.
109
466570
5099
07:51
We don't do anything to signal the end of a word, the beginning of the next word. Within
110
471669
4601
07:56
a single thought group all of the words, all of the sounds link together smoothly transitioning from
111
476270
5619
08:01
one sound to the next. Because of this, it means the phrase like f'or getting my' sounds
112
481889
6561
08:08
just like 'forgetting my.' It's my fault for getting my hopes up. For
113
488450
6540
08:14
getting my, for getting my. I keep forgetting my homework. Forgetting my, forgetting my.
114
494990
7890
08:22
For getting my sounds just like forgetting my because the sounds are the same, the stress
115
502880
5061
08:27
is the same and there's no differentiation between word units in spoken English. The
116
507941
5990
08:33
unit we use in spoken English is a thought group. That is the words that make up a single
117
513931
5199
08:39
thought that we articulate. Now that might include brakes as we think of what to say
118
519130
4429
08:43
and those brakes each make a new thought group. But the important thing to know is linking.
119
523559
5981
08:49
Within a thought group, everything links together smoothly with no brakes. That means a T can
120
529540
5390
08:54
become a flap T when it links 2 words together and follows the rules. Another example linking
121
534930
6069
09:00
the word at with the article A: at a, at a, at a, at a. That becomes a flap T. That sound
122
540999
6861
09:07
links the 2 words together. I do have a playlist on linking. I go over
123
547860
5229
09:13
the different kinds of links and how to practice them to really smooth out your speech, click
124
553089
4861
09:17
here or on the video description and actually I'll add that to the playlist 'How to Speak
125
557950
4319
09:22
Fast in American English.' So we have the flap T. We talked about a true
126
562269
4421
09:26
T. T, T. The stop and the release. We actually have another way that we pronounce the T and
127
566690
5030
09:31
that is as a stop T. That means that we make the stop but we don't release. For example
128
571720
4679
09:36
in the word 'thoughtful.' Thought-ful. You didn't hear t t t buy you heard thought-ful.
129
576399
7940
09:44
A quick brake. I'm exaggerating it there. thoughtful, thoughtful. There it is at a regular
130
584339
6211
09:50
spoken pace. Do you hear that little lift between syllables. Thoughtful, thoughtful.
131
590550
5639
09:56
It's not thoughful, thoughful. That little lift between syllables is the stop, is the
132
596189
5580
10:01
stop T. And just so you know, there are 2 other ways
133
601769
3490
10:05
you might hear the T sound pronounced. First, totally dropped. We do this sometimes after
134
605259
4921
10:10
N like in the word 'interview' or 'internet' or 'center'. And the other thing that we do
135
610180
6430
10:16
with the T is we can make it actually we often make it a ch sound when it's followed by R
136
616610
6070
10:22
like in the word 'train'. T is maybe the most complicated sound as far as how much it changes.
137
622680
6110
10:28
I will make sure that I link to a whole playlist on all of these T pronunciations here and
138
628790
5159
10:33
also on the video description. But this video is not about T pronunciations. It's about
139
633949
5830
10:39
how to speak English fast. Let's go back to Tom's sentence.
140
639779
4110
10:43
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
141
643889
2211
10:46
Rachel: Okay so we've talked about tips for speaking
142
646100
2520
10:48
English fast. Use contractions, use reductions, use linking. I said there is one thing I wanted
143
648620
6089
10:54
to tell you to make sure not to do. And that one thing is cheat your stress syllables.
144
654709
6271
11:00
Let's listen to his sentence again. What is the stressed syllable?
145
660980
2760
11:03
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
146
663740
3099
11:06
Rachel: Starbucks. It's very clear. It's longer. It
147
666839
2721
11:09
has an up down shape in pitch. That is the shape of stress. Starbucks. Now what would
148
669560
5430
11:14
that sentence sound like if he had cheated that. If he had also made that syllable really
149
674990
4560
11:19
fast. Then it would sound something like: I'm going to Starbucks. I'm going to Starbucks. I'm
150
679550
5920
11:25
going to Starbucks. Listen to how he says it again.
151
685470
3469
11:28
Tom: Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
152
688939
2181
11:31
Rachel: And I need that. I need that longer syllable.
153
691120
3140
11:34
That stressed syllable. It gives me my anchor. And that's why we still understand each other.
154
694260
5819
11:40
If everything was reduced and linked and said extremely quickly. I wouldn't be able to understand
155
700079
5091
11:45
anything. But it's these longer stressed syllables that give me my anchor in these sentences,
156
705170
5570
11:50
that help my mind organize when I'm hearing that help me understand. And when you don't
157
710740
4870
11:55
use reductions at all and everything is fully pronounced then I lose my anchors. They're
158
715610
4900
12:00
less clear. That's why it's really important for people to understand you for you to use
159
720510
5820
12:06
reductions. It seems like well that's not a very clear pronunciation I shouldn't use
160
726330
4449
12:10
it. But actually you should. Because it's that contrast of really fast with the longer
161
730779
5180
12:15
stressed syllable that helps us understand you. It gives us the context, the structure
162
735959
5430
12:21
of American English. Let's listen to the two sentences in contrast one more time.
163
741389
5230
12:26
Tom: Hi Rachel, I am going to Starbucks.
164
746619
3200
12:29
Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
165
749819
2301
12:32
Rachel: Did you notice how we were wearing different
166
752120
1969
12:34
outfits? This is from a fun video series I did with Tom a while back while we wore casual
167
754089
5340
12:39
clothes when we were speaking natural American English and then we wore very formal clothes
168
759429
4751
12:44
when we we were speaking with no reductions and only true T pronunciations. And I wanna
169
764180
4909
12:49
want to say that's not a formal way of talking. It's just an unnatural way of talking but we did
170
769089
4310
12:53
this outfit change to add to the contrast.
171
773399
3060
12:56
Tom: Hi Rachel, I am going to Starbucks.
172
776459
3190
12:59
Hey Rach, I'm goin' to Starbucks.
173
779649
1991
13:01
Rachel: I don't want to tease you with just that one
174
781640
2660
13:04
sentence. Let's go ahead and watch the full lesson. You'll be able to study how we speak
175
784300
4149
13:08
English fast. How we speak English really quickly by using reductions, linking, contractions
176
788449
5990
13:14
and things like the flap T.
177
794439
1620
13:16
Tom: Do you want to come along?
178
796059
2491
13:18
You wanna come along?
179
798550
1000
13:19
Rachel: Do you. Do is reduced so much that we almost
180
799550
4810
13:24
don't hear it. Just a light D sound. The vowel in you isn't quite a pure u either. It's a
181
804360
6450
13:30
little more relaxed heading towards the schwa. do you, do you, do you. Do you wanna. Want to reduces
182
810810
8589
13:39
to wanna. Do you wanna. Do you wanna.
183
819399
3180
13:42
Tom: Do you want to come along?
184
822579
1750
13:44
You wanna come along? Do you want to come along?
185
824329
2620
13:46
You wanna come along?
186
826949
2010
13:48
Rachel: No thank you Tom.
187
828959
3180
13:52
No thanks. Thank you becomes thanks. One last syllable
188
832139
4490
13:56
No thank you Tom. No thanks.
189
836629
2760
13:59
No thank you Tom. No thanks.
190
839389
4860
14:04
I have got too much I want to get done here. I've got too much I wanna get done here.
191
844249
5221
14:09
I have becomes I've. Got too. Just one T between those two words. Got too. Got too. Want to
192
849470
11289
14:20
becomes wanna. Wanna. Get. We use a stop T sound here because the next sound is a consonant.
193
860759
9690
14:30
Get done. Get done. I have got too much I want to get done here.
194
870449
6820
14:37
I've got too much I wanna get done here. I have got too much I want to get done here.
195
877269
5331
14:42
I've got too much I wanna get done here.
196
882600
2620
14:45
Tom: Okay. I will be back soon.
197
885220
3510
14:48
OK. I'll be back soon.
198
888730
1349
14:50
Rachel: I will becomes I'll reduced to I'll
199
890079
4391
14:54
Tom: Okay. I will be back soon.
200
894470
2440
14:56
OK. I'll be back soon. Okay. I will be back soon.
201
896910
3320
15:00
OK. I'll be back soon.
202
900230
2279
15:02
Rachel: Oh, I would love a coffee though.
203
902509
3971
15:06
Oh, I'd like a coffee though.
204
906480
2229
15:08
I would becomes I'd
205
908709
1831
15:10
Oh, I would love a coffee though. Oh, I'd like a coffee though.
206
910540
5880
15:16
Oh, I would love a coffee though. Oh, I'd like a coffee though.
207
916420
5089
15:21
Tom: Medium?
208
921509
1980
15:23
Rachel: That will be fine.
209
923489
1761
15:25
Tom: Medium?
210
925250
1000
15:26
Rachel: That'll be fine.
211
926250
1370
15:27
That will becomes that'll. A two syllable word with stress on the first syllable. The
212
927620
6469
15:34
T at the end of that is a flap T because it comes with two vowels. That'll. That'll.
213
934089
5560
15:39
Tom: Medium?
214
939649
1240
15:40
Rachel: That will be fine.
215
940889
1380
15:42
Tom: Medium?
216
942269
1000
15:43
Rachel: That'll be fine.
217
943269
1190
15:44
Tom: Medium?
218
944459
1000
15:45
Rachel: That will be fine.
219
945459
1130
15:46
Tom: Medium?
220
946589
1281
15:47
Rachel: That'll be fine.
221
947870
2569
15:50
Tom: Great! See you in a bit.
222
950439
2531
15:52
Great. Seeya in a bit.
223
952970
2130
15:55
Rachel: Great with a stop T. This is because it's
224
955100
3859
15:58
the end of a sentence. You is more relaxed here. Not an u vowel but more of a schwa.
225
958959
6250
16:05
See ya, see ya. And finally, bit. With a stop T, bit, bit. Again, because it's coming at
226
965209
7820
16:13
the end of a sentence.
227
973029
1451
16:14
Tom: Great! See you in a bit.
228
974480
2440
16:16
Great. Seeya in a bit. Great! See you in a bit.
229
976920
4279
16:21
Great. Seeya in a bit.
230
981199
2050
16:23
Rachel: So many options for reductions and contractions
231
983249
4090
16:27
in such a short conversation. I also have a playlist of all four videos that Tom and
232
987339
5391
16:32
I made in that video series I called it a 'Contractversation' you can check it out here
233
992730
5269
16:37
or on the video description below. You've got a lot to do to study how to speak English
234
997999
4760
16:42
really fast. There are so many habits to make your own. One thing that helps a lot is studying
235
1002759
5440
16:48
real English conversation and I'm excited to tell you that this summer, we're going
236
1008199
3940
16:52
to do just that. We're going to learn English with movies. We're going to take some of the
237
1012139
4651
16:56
summer's hottest blockbusters: Captain Marvel, Avengers Endgame and we're going to take small
238
1016790
5459
17:02
scenes and study them. We're going to study T pronunciations, reductions, stress. All of
239
1022249
5391
17:07
this great stuff. I'm also going to make a free audio lesson that's downloadable to go with
240
1027640
5260
17:12
each video. If you want to get in with those free audio
241
1032900
3160
17:16
lessons, sign up by clicking here or in the video description below. I'm doing this because
242
1036060
5000
17:21
I don't want to bombard people with emails if they don't want them. You'll only get the
243
1041060
4040
17:25
audio lessons that are free download with the videos if you sign up.
244
1045100
4370
17:29
What! Are you serious!? Come on!
245
1049470
2090
17:31
Rachel: That's one of the scenes we'll be studying.
246
1051560
2430
17:33
This all starts June 18, get ready to join me, we're going to study English together all
247
1053990
5060
17:39
summer long. That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's
248
1059050
4420
17:43
English!
249
1063470
20260
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