ENGLISH VOCABULARY - 25+ Vocabulary Words for Vegetables! - Perfect Vocabulary Pronunciation

233,124 views

2018-11-06 ・ Rachel's English


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ENGLISH VOCABULARY - 25+ Vocabulary Words for Vegetables! - Perfect Vocabulary Pronunciation

233,124 views ・ 2018-11-06

Rachel's English


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

00:00
I'm here at my local grocery store to go grocery shopping for some vegetables for this
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vegetable vocabulary video.
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Garlic looks good.
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Tomatoes on the vine.
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Those look nice.
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These might be heirloom tomatoes.
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They are, mmm, those looks so nice.
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Slice that on a sandwich.
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There you heard the terms garlic and tomatoes.
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Both are two-syllable words with stress on the first syllable.
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For garlic.
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We have an R followed by L.
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Depending on your native language, that can be tricky.
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Try practicing it, holding out your R.
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Garrrr— the tip is pulled slightly back enough and it's not touching anything.
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Garrrr— garlic.
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Then bring your tongue tip up and forward for the light L.
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Garlic.
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Say that with me.
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Garlic.
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Garlic looks good.
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Tomato or tomatoes.
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Notice that the first T is a true T, unlike tomorrow or today,
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which also start with an unstressed syllable, T schwa.
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This really has to be a true T.
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It sounds weird with a flap T.
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The second T however is a flap T
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because it comes between two vowels and doesn't start a stressed syllable.
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Tomato.
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Toma-- dadadada-- Tomato.
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Make that by just flapping your tongue once on the roof of the mouth.
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Tomato.
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Tomatoes.
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Say those with me.
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Tomato.
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Tomatoes.
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You also heard the phrase: tomatoes on the vine, which is just what it sounds like.
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A set of tomatoes still attached to the vine.
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Tomatoes on the vine.
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Those look nice.
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Also, I said heirloom tomatoes.
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Those are tomatoes grown from heirloom seeds.
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Notice that the H is silent in that word.
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Heirloom.
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Say that with me.
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Heirloom.
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These might be heirloom tomatoes.
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They are, mmm, those looks so nice.
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Slice that on a sandwich.
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You also heard a funny pronunciation of the word 'sandwich'.
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We often don't say the D sound in this word.
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So it sounds like sanwich, sanwich, with just an N sound and you'll even hear it with an M instead of an N.
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That's what I did.
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Sam, Sam-wich.
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Sandwich.
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Sandwich.
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A very common pronunciation of that word.
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Sandwich.
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Say that with me.
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Sandwich.
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Slice that on a sandwich.
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Let's look at a close-up of garlic.
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Garlic.
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This is called a head of garlic, and one piece pulled off is called a clove.
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Head.
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Clove.
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Say those with me.
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Head.
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Clove.
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Sweet potato.
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Red onion.
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Yellow onion.
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White onion.
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Red potato.
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Regular potato. Russet.
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There, you saw several varieties of potatoes and onions.
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Potato rhymes with tomato.
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The first T is a true T because it begins a stressed syllable even though it does come between two vowels.
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The second T is a flap T because it comes between two vowels and doesn't start a stressed syllable.
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Potato.
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Potato.
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The first O is a schwa.
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Pot—
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the second O is the OH diphthong.
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Oh. Oh.
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Potato.
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Say that with me.
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Potato.
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Red potato.
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Regular potato. Russet.
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Onion.
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The first letter O is the UH as in butter sound.
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Uh—
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Onion.
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Onion.
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Say that with me.
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Onion.
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Red onion.
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Yellow onion.
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White onion.
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All sorts of mushrooms.
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Look how big these portabellas are.
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Oh my gosh, they're huge.
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Mushrooms.
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One of my favorite vegetables.
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So many varieties.
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And also one of Stoney's favorite vegetables.
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Two-syllable word, stress on the first syllable.
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Mush-room.
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Room, room, room.
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Room is unstressed, lower in pitch, has less energy in the voice.
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Room, mushroom.
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Mushroom.
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Say that with me.
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Mushroom.
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All sorts of mushrooms. Look how big these portabellas are.
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Oh my gosh.
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Cauliflower.
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Oh, that looks good.
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Cauliflower.
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The first syllable can have the AW vowel, caul— or the AH vowel, ca— cauli-- cauli-- cauliflower.
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The first syllable is the most stressed.
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Cauliflower.
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Say that with me.
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Cauliflower.
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Cauliflower.
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Oh, that looks good.
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Like garlic, a unit of one cauliflower is called a head.
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When you cut it up into smaller pieces, those pieces are called 'florets'.
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Florets. Say that with me.
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Florets.
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Nice and fresh.
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Asparagus.
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Asparagus.
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A four-syllable word with stress on the second syllable.
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So the first syllable should lead up to it, and the last two syllables fall away.
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Ah-spar-agus.
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Asparagus.
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Say that with me.
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Asparagus.
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Asparagus.
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Oh wow, look at this artichoke.
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I've never made an artichoke. I've only ever bought them canned.
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Artichoke.
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Here, we have a flap T.
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Why?
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It doesn't come between two vowels.
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That's the rule for flap T, but there is a second rule.
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A T is also a flap T when it comes after an R, before a vowel or diphthong like here.
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So you'll flap your tongue once on the roof of the mouth.
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Arti-- dididididi-- Artichoke. First-syllable stress. Artichoke.
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Say that with me.
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Artichoke.
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Oh wow, look at this artichoke.
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The eggplants look good.
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Is that on the list?
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Yep? And the cabbages.
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Eggplants.
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Eggplant has nothing to do with a chicken but one variety was originally called this
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because it looked like a goose egg.
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Make the G with a back of the tongue, gggg-- then close your lips for the P,
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egg-- and you don't try to pull your tongue away to fully pronounce the G.
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Egg-plant.
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Eggplant.
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Eggplant.
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That G is too heavy.
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Instead, just lift the tongue, egg-- and close the lips for the P and release.
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Eggplant.
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Eggplant.
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Say that with me.
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Eggplant.
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The eggplants look good.
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Parsnips.
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Don't think that's on our list.
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Parsnip.
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I love these put into a fruit and vegetable smoothie.
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Make sure you drop your jaw for the AW vowel before the R.
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Par-- paarr-- parsnip.
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Say that with me.
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Parsnip.
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Parsnips.
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I also bought a bunch of vegetables and brought them home.
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Let's take a look.
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Avocado.
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Let's cut it open.
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An avocado. Let's see.
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What's on the inside?
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It's not a seed.
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Is it a pit?
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Does that sound right to you? It's a pit.
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There it is.
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Avocado.
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Avocado.
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We have two syllables here with the AH as in father vowel.
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Don't let that first letter O fool you.
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It's a schwa.
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Uh, said very quickly.
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Avo, avo, uh, uh, avo. Avocado.
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Third syllable is the most stressed but the first syllable has some stress too.
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A-vo-ca-do.
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Avocado.
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Avocado.
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Say that with me.
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Avocado.
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Avocado.
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I mentioned seed and pit.
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I went over the pronunciation of these two words in the fruit vocabulary video that I did.
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Did you miss that?
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It's a great one.
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I'll put a link to that one towards the end of this video.
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An avocado. Let's see.
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What's on the inside?
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It's not a seed.
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Is it a pit?
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Does that sound right to you?
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It's a pit.
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There it is.
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Broccoli.
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Broccoli.
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Just like cauliflower, this is a head.
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And when it's cut into smaller pieces, those are called florets.
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This is one of those words that can be three syllables or two like: camera, camera, and family, family.
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I recommend you go with the two-syllable pronunciation I think it's more common and it's simpler.
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Brocc--li instead of broc-uh-li. Broccoli.
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First-syllable stress.
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Broccoli.
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Say that with me.
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Broccoli.
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Broccoli.
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Cabbage. Let's cut it open.
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I have to be really careful because this knife is extremely sharp.
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I actually gave it to David for Father's Day and the same day, we had to go to the ER because he got his finger.
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I better be really careful.
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This is a tough cabbage.
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There we go.
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Cabbage.
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Cabbage.
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Which can be extremely hard to cut.
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Cabbage. This is also called a head.
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A head of cabbage.
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But it doesn't cut down into florets the way that broccoli and cauliflower does.
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Good thing I was so careful with that knife, right?
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The first syllable is stressed so keep the second syllable really short.
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Age, age, age.
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Cabbage.
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Cabbage.
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Say that with me.
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Cabbage.
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Cabbage.
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Which can be extremely hard to cut.
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Carrot.
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Carrots.
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I can't hear this word without thinking of Anne of Green Gables
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where a boy teases her for having red hair by calling her carrots.
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Carrots. Carrots.
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You mean, hateful boy!
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How dare you!
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This word is written phonetically with the AH as in bat vowel but that's not how it's pronounced.
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R changes this vowel.
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It's more like the EH as in bed vowel but not quite that either.
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Car-- car-- car-- Just like CARE, care.
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Carrot. Carrot. Carrots.
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Say those with me.
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Carrot. Carrots.
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Carrot.
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I have two peppers, a red pepper, and an orange pepper.
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Peppers.
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There are so many kinds of peppers.
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Bell peppers, like you saw in the video, and then all kinds of hot spicy peppers.
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And then of course, there's the spice pepper, which with salt is very typical on the American dinner table.
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Pepper.
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Unstressed schwa R ending, said quickly, low in pitch.
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Er, er.
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Pepper.
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Pepper. Say that with me.
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Pepper.
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I have two peppers, a red pepper, and an orange pepper.
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Here's a bunch of kale.
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Kale is a really thick, hearty leaf.
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Kale.
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K constant, AY diphthong, and the dark L.
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Kale.
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Kale.
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This is a bunch of kale, not a head like we have with lettuce or cabbage.
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All of the leaves were already cut off and not attached to a main stem.
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So it's a bunch, kale.
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Say that with me.
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Kale.
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Kale.
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Kale is a really thick, hearty leaf.
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Lettuce a two-syllable word with first-syllable stress.
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What do you notice about the double T?
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Lettuce.
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It's a flap T. A single sound.
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The second syllable is said very quickly.
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Lettuce. Us, us, us.
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Lettuce. Say that with me.
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Lettuce.
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This is a bunch of scallions.
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Also known as green onions.
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Scallions or green onions.
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Green onion or scallion.
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You already know onion.
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Green can be a little tricky because of the GR consonant cluster.
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With clusters with R, I always recommend holding out the R as you practice to give you some time to focus in
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on the right sound and position.
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Grrrr-een green, green, green onion.
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Say that with me.
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Green onion.
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Green onions.
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Scallion another word for the exact same thing.
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A dark L, scal-- scal-- scallion, scallion.
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Say that with me. Scallion.
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Scallions.
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Corn.
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This is an 'ear of corn' and when you take off the outer leaves to reveal the kernels of the corn,
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this act, this verb, which is harder than it looks, it's called shucking.
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I'm shucking the corn.
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Corn.
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Corn on the cob.
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Corn.
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This word has the AW as in law vowel but when it's followed by R, just like it is here, it changes.
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Now, the lips around more and the tongue pulls back more.
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So it's not aw, law but it's uhl, co-- corn.
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Corn.
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Corn.
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Corn.
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Say that with me.
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Corn.
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Corn.
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Shucking corn is a lot of work, isn't it?
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I called the green things that I was pulling down leaves but really that's the husk.
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And inside the husk, those strands that look like hair, that's called corn silk.
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You'll see some more corn silk coming up in a minute.
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This is an ear of corn, and when you take off the outer leaves to reveal the kernels of the corn, this act, this verb,
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which is harder than it looks, it's called shucking.
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I'm shucking the corn.
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I didn't get video of celery, cucumber, or radishes, three other common vegetables.
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Celery is another word that can be three syllables.
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Cel--err--ee.
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Celery.
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But I recommend pronouncing it with two: cel-ree.
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Celery.
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Celery.
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Say that with me. Celery.
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Cucumber.
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Three-syllable word, stress on the first syllable, which has the JU diphthong.
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Cu-- cu-- cucumber.
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Say that with me.
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Cucumber.
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Radish or radishes.
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The plural here, ES adds an extra syllable because the last sound of the noun was an SH.
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Radishes.
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Radishes.
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It's like the word 'is' said very quickly as a third syllable.
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Radish.
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Radishes.
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Say those with me.
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Radish. Radishes.
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I hope this vegetable vocab video has helped you.
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What other vocab videos would you like to see?
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Put it in the comments below.
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That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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That's it for the vegetable vocabs.
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Here's some corn silk.
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Woo! Celebrate!
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