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

232,466 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
0
0
5300
00:05
vegetable vocabulary video.
1
5300
2200
00:07
2
7500
6680
00:14
Garlic looks good.
3
14180
1460
00:15
Tomatoes on the vine.
4
15640
2340
00:17
Those look nice.
5
17980
2160
00:20
These might be heirloom tomatoes.
6
20140
2980
00:23
They are, mmm, those looks so nice.
7
23120
2420
00:25
Slice that on a sandwich.
8
25540
2160
00:27
There you heard the terms garlic and tomatoes.
9
27700
3280
00:30
Both are two-syllable words with stress on the first syllable.
10
30980
3740
00:34
For garlic.
11
34720
1340
00:36
We have an R followed by L.
12
36060
2360
00:38
Depending on your native language, that can be tricky.
13
38420
2740
00:41
Try practicing it, holding out your R.
14
41160
2720
00:43
Garrrr— the tip is pulled slightly back enough and it's not touching anything.
15
43880
7320
00:51
Garrrr— garlic.
16
51200
3920
00:55
Then bring your tongue tip up and forward for the light L.
17
55120
3480
00:58
Garlic.
18
58600
1140
00:59
Say that with me.
19
59740
1840
01:01
Garlic.
20
61580
1740
01:03
Garlic looks good.
21
63320
1560
01:04
Tomato or tomatoes.
22
64880
2460
01:07
Notice that the first T is a true T, unlike tomorrow or today,
23
67340
5500
01:12
which also start with an unstressed syllable, T schwa.
24
72840
4500
01:17
This really has to be a true T.
25
77340
2020
01:19
It sounds weird with a flap T.
26
79360
2320
01:21
The second T however is a flap T
27
81680
2400
01:24
because it comes between two vowels and doesn't start a stressed syllable.
28
84080
4240
01:28
Tomato.
29
88320
1400
01:29
Toma-- dadadada-- Tomato.
30
89720
3560
01:33
Make that by just flapping your tongue once on the roof of the mouth.
31
93280
3820
01:37
Tomato.
32
97100
1800
01:38
Tomatoes.
33
98900
1520
01:40
Say those with me.
34
100420
1360
01:41
Tomato.
35
101780
1720
01:43
Tomatoes.
36
103500
1700
01:45
You also heard the phrase: tomatoes on the vine, which is just what it sounds like.
37
105200
4540
01:49
A set of tomatoes still attached to the vine.
38
109740
2880
01:52
Tomatoes on the vine.
39
112620
2580
01:55
Those look nice.
40
115200
2460
01:57
Also, I said heirloom tomatoes.
41
117660
3140
02:00
Those are tomatoes grown from heirloom seeds.
42
120800
3200
02:04
Notice that the H is silent in that word.
43
124000
2840
02:06
Heirloom.
44
126840
1260
02:08
Say that with me.
45
128100
1820
02:09
Heirloom.
46
129920
1080
02:11
These might be heirloom tomatoes.
47
131000
3260
02:14
They are, mmm, those looks so nice.
48
134260
2380
02:16
Slice that on a sandwich.
49
136640
2320
02:18
You also heard a funny pronunciation of the word 'sandwich'.
50
138960
4000
02:22
We often don't say the D sound in this word.
51
142960
2700
02:25
So it sounds like sanwich, sanwich, with just an N sound and you'll even hear it with an M instead of an N.
52
145660
10200
02:35
That's what I did.
53
155860
1220
02:37
Sam, Sam-wich.
54
157080
3800
02:40
Sandwich.
55
160880
1380
02:42
Sandwich.
56
162260
960
02:43
A very common pronunciation of that word.
57
163220
2560
02:45
Sandwich.
58
165780
1100
02:46
Say that with me.
59
166880
1480
02:48
Sandwich.
60
168360
1600
02:49
Slice that on a sandwich.
61
169960
1860
02:51
Let's look at a close-up of garlic.
62
171820
3700
02:55
Garlic.
63
175520
2240
02:57
This is called a head of garlic, and one piece pulled off is called a clove.
64
177760
5160
03:02
Head.
65
182920
1240
03:04
Clove.
66
184160
920
03:05
Say those with me.
67
185080
1460
03:06
Head.
68
186540
1560
03:08
Clove.
69
188100
1320
03:09
Sweet potato.
70
189420
1980
03:11
Red onion.
71
191400
1240
03:12
Yellow onion.
72
192640
1260
03:13
White onion.
73
193900
920
03:14
Red potato.
74
194820
2600
03:17
Regular potato. Russet.
75
197420
2720
03:20
There, you saw several varieties of potatoes and onions.
76
200140
3680
03:23
Potato rhymes with tomato.
77
203820
2840
03:26
The first T is a true T because it begins a stressed syllable even though it does come between two vowels.
78
206660
6480
03:33
The second T is a flap T because it comes between two vowels and doesn't start a stressed syllable.
79
213140
5600
03:38
Potato.
80
218740
1740
03:40
Potato.
81
220480
1260
03:41
The first O is a schwa.
82
221740
1620
03:43
Pot—
83
223360
1020
03:44
the second O is the OH diphthong.
84
224380
2620
03:47
Oh. Oh.
85
227000
1600
03:48
Potato.
86
228600
1240
03:49
Say that with me.
87
229840
1400
03:51
Potato.
88
231240
1140
03:52
Red potato.
89
232380
2500
03:54
Regular potato. Russet.
90
234880
3040
03:57
Onion.
91
237920
760
03:58
The first letter O is the UH as in butter sound.
92
238680
3360
04:02
Uh—
93
242040
1500
04:03
Onion.
94
243540
1240
04:04
Onion.
95
244780
860
04:05
Say that with me.
96
245640
1780
04:07
Onion.
97
247420
1480
04:08
Red onion.
98
248900
1260
04:10
Yellow onion.
99
250160
1160
04:11
White onion.
100
251320
1300
04:12
All sorts of mushrooms.
101
252620
1540
04:14
Look how big these portabellas are.
102
254160
2020
04:16
Oh my gosh, they're huge.
103
256180
5280
04:21
Mushrooms.
104
261460
960
04:22
One of my favorite vegetables.
105
262420
2180
04:24
So many varieties.
106
264600
1700
04:26
And also one of Stoney's favorite vegetables.
107
266300
2820
04:29
Two-syllable word, stress on the first syllable.
108
269120
3100
04:32
Mush-room.
109
272220
2420
04:34
Room, room, room.
110
274640
1500
04:36
Room is unstressed, lower in pitch, has less energy in the voice.
111
276140
4360
04:40
Room, mushroom.
112
280500
2900
04:43
Mushroom.
113
283400
1060
04:44
Say that with me.
114
284460
1800
04:46
Mushroom.
115
286260
1480
04:47
All sorts of mushrooms. Look how big these portabellas are.
116
287740
4080
04:51
Oh my gosh.
117
291820
1740
04:53
Cauliflower.
118
293560
1200
04:54
Oh, that looks good.
119
294760
4660
04:59
Cauliflower.
120
299420
1060
05:00
The first syllable can have the AW vowel, caul— or the AH vowel, ca— cauli-- cauli-- cauliflower.
121
300480
11280
05:11
The first syllable is the most stressed.
122
311760
3140
05:14
Cauliflower.
123
314900
1020
05:15
Say that with me.
124
315920
2020
05:17
Cauliflower.
125
317940
1640
05:19
Cauliflower.
126
319580
1200
05:20
Oh, that looks good.
127
320780
1740
05:22
Like garlic, a unit of one cauliflower is called a head.
128
322520
4460
05:26
When you cut it up into smaller pieces, those pieces are called 'florets'.
129
326980
5960
05:32
Florets. Say that with me.
130
332940
2300
05:35
Florets.
131
335240
1660
05:36
Nice and fresh.
132
336900
1680
05:38
Asparagus.
133
338580
5660
05:44
Asparagus.
134
344240
1500
05:45
A four-syllable word with stress on the second syllable.
135
345740
3320
05:49
So the first syllable should lead up to it, and the last two syllables fall away.
136
349060
5560
05:54
Ah-spar-agus.
137
354620
3300
05:57
Asparagus.
138
357920
1400
05:59
Say that with me.
139
359320
1380
06:00
Asparagus.
140
360700
1520
06:02
Asparagus.
141
362220
4740
06:06
Oh wow, look at this artichoke.
142
366960
3280
06:10
I've never made an artichoke. I've only ever bought them canned.
143
370240
4320
06:14
Artichoke.
144
374560
1020
06:15
Here, we have a flap T.
145
375580
1440
06:17
Why?
146
377020
760
06:17
It doesn't come between two vowels.
147
377780
2500
06:20
That's the rule for flap T, but there is a second rule.
148
380280
3540
06:23
A T is also a flap T when it comes after an R, before a vowel or diphthong like here.
149
383820
5580
06:29
So you'll flap your tongue once on the roof of the mouth.
150
389400
2960
06:32
Arti-- dididididi-- Artichoke. First-syllable stress. Artichoke.
151
392360
7000
06:39
Say that with me.
152
399360
1440
06:40
Artichoke.
153
400800
1720
06:42
Oh wow, look at this artichoke.
154
402520
2680
06:45
The eggplants look good.
155
405200
1720
06:46
Is that on the list?
156
406920
2140
06:49
Yep? And the cabbages.
157
409060
4060
06:53
Eggplants.
158
413120
1400
06:54
Eggplant has nothing to do with a chicken but one variety was originally called this
159
414520
4860
06:59
because it looked like a goose egg.
160
419380
2020
07:01
Make the G with a back of the tongue, gggg-- then close your lips for the P,
161
421400
5920
07:07
egg-- and you don't try to pull your tongue away to fully pronounce the G.
162
427320
5680
07:13
Egg-plant.
163
433000
2300
07:15
Eggplant.
164
435300
980
07:16
Eggplant.
165
436280
1100
07:17
That G is too heavy.
166
437380
1560
07:18
Instead, just lift the tongue, egg-- and close the lips for the P and release.
167
438940
6800
07:25
Eggplant.
168
445740
1380
07:27
Eggplant.
169
447120
1180
07:28
Say that with me.
170
448300
1440
07:29
Eggplant.
171
449740
1600
07:31
The eggplants look good.
172
451340
1940
07:33
Parsnips.
173
453280
2600
07:35
Don't think that's on our list.
174
455880
2440
07:38
Parsnip.
175
458320
1060
07:39
I love these put into a fruit and vegetable smoothie.
176
459380
3940
07:43
Make sure you drop your jaw for the AW vowel before the R.
177
463320
3980
07:47
Par-- paarr-- parsnip.
178
467300
4280
07:51
Say that with me.
179
471580
1660
07:53
Parsnip.
180
473240
1380
07:54
Parsnips.
181
474620
2580
07:57
I also bought a bunch of vegetables and brought them home.
182
477200
3180
08:00
Let's take a look.
183
480380
2440
08:02
Avocado.
184
482820
1040
08:03
Let's cut it open.
185
483860
1800
08:05
An avocado. Let's see.
186
485660
2200
08:07
What's on the inside?
187
487860
1800
08:09
It's not a seed.
188
489660
3200
08:12
Is it a pit?
189
492860
1920
08:14
Does that sound right to you? It's a pit.
190
494780
3920
08:18
There it is.
191
498700
3360
08:22
Avocado.
192
502060
2100
08:24
Avocado.
193
504160
920
08:25
We have two syllables here with the AH as in father vowel.
194
505080
4180
08:29
Don't let that first letter O fool you.
195
509260
2760
08:32
It's a schwa.
196
512020
1300
08:33
Uh, said very quickly.
197
513320
2560
08:35
Avo, avo, uh, uh, avo. Avocado.
198
515880
5700
08:41
Third syllable is the most stressed but the first syllable has some stress too.
199
521580
4680
08:46
A-vo-ca-do.
200
526260
3500
08:49
Avocado.
201
529760
1520
08:51
Avocado.
202
531280
1140
08:52
Say that with me.
203
532420
1460
08:53
Avocado.
204
533880
2020
08:55
Avocado.
205
535900
2440
08:58
I mentioned seed and pit.
206
538340
2560
09:00
I went over the pronunciation of these two words in the fruit vocabulary video that I did.
207
540900
5300
09:06
Did you miss that?
208
546200
940
09:07
It's a great one.
209
547140
1360
09:08
I'll put a link to that one towards the end of this video.
210
548500
3520
09:12
An avocado. Let's see.
211
552020
2300
09:14
What's on the inside?
212
554320
1900
09:16
It's not a seed.
213
556220
3080
09:19
Is it a pit?
214
559300
1960
09:21
Does that sound right to you?
215
561260
1660
09:22
It's a pit.
216
562920
2320
09:25
There it is.
217
565240
2820
09:28
Broccoli.
218
568060
2800
09:30
Broccoli.
219
570860
1120
09:31
Just like cauliflower, this is a head.
220
571980
2280
09:34
And when it's cut into smaller pieces, those are called florets.
221
574260
4420
09:38
This is one of those words that can be three syllables or two like: camera, camera, and family, family.
222
578680
8300
09:46
I recommend you go with the two-syllable pronunciation I think it's more common and it's simpler.
223
586980
6100
09:53
Brocc--li instead of broc-uh-li. Broccoli.
224
593080
5800
09:58
First-syllable stress.
225
598880
1740
10:00
Broccoli.
226
600620
1020
10:01
Say that with me.
227
601640
1400
10:03
Broccoli.
228
603040
1600
10:04
Broccoli.
229
604640
2320
10:06
Cabbage. Let's cut it open.
230
606960
3020
10:09
I have to be really careful because this knife is extremely sharp.
231
609980
4620
10:14
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.
232
614600
7760
10:22
I better be really careful.
233
622360
3740
10:26
This is a tough cabbage.
234
626100
3740
10:29
There we go.
235
629840
3640
10:33
Cabbage.
236
633480
1800
10:35
Cabbage.
237
635280
980
10:36
Which can be extremely hard to cut.
238
636260
3520
10:39
Cabbage. This is also called a head.
239
639780
2280
10:42
A head of cabbage.
240
642060
1540
10:43
But it doesn't cut down into florets the way that broccoli and cauliflower does.
241
643600
5220
10:48
Good thing I was so careful with that knife, right?
242
648820
3140
10:51
The first syllable is stressed so keep the second syllable really short.
243
651960
3940
10:55
Age, age, age.
244
655900
1940
10:57
Cabbage.
245
657840
1520
10:59
Cabbage.
246
659360
900
11:00
Say that with me.
247
660260
1440
11:01
Cabbage.
248
661700
1940
11:03
Cabbage.
249
663640
1040
11:04
Which can be extremely hard to cut.
250
664680
3320
11:08
Carrot.
251
668000
2900
11:10
Carrots.
252
670900
1160
11:12
I can't hear this word without thinking of Anne of Green Gables
253
672060
4140
11:16
where a boy teases her for having red hair by calling her carrots.
254
676200
6000
11:22
Carrots. Carrots.
255
682200
4320
11:26
You mean, hateful boy!
256
686520
3140
11:29
How dare you!
257
689660
1560
11:31
This word is written phonetically with the AH as in bat vowel but that's not how it's pronounced.
258
691220
5300
11:36
R changes this vowel.
259
696520
1800
11:38
It's more like the EH as in bed vowel but not quite that either.
260
698320
4160
11:42
Car-- car-- car-- Just like CARE, care.
261
702480
6900
11:49
Carrot. Carrot. Carrots.
262
709380
3840
11:53
Say those with me.
263
713220
2020
11:55
Carrot. Carrots.
264
715240
3860
11:59
Carrot.
265
719100
2620
12:01
I have two peppers, a red pepper, and an orange pepper.
266
721720
6380
12:08
Peppers.
267
728100
1000
12:09
There are so many kinds of peppers.
268
729100
2080
12:11
Bell peppers, like you saw in the video, and then all kinds of hot spicy peppers.
269
731180
5240
12:16
And then of course, there's the spice pepper, which with salt is very typical on the American dinner table.
270
736420
6960
12:23
Pepper.
271
743380
1080
12:24
Unstressed schwa R ending, said quickly, low in pitch.
272
744460
3540
12:28
Er, er.
273
748000
1780
12:29
Pepper.
274
749780
1580
12:31
Pepper. Say that with me.
275
751360
2160
12:33
Pepper.
276
753520
1300
12:34
I have two peppers, a red pepper, and an orange pepper.
277
754820
5880
12:40
Here's a bunch of kale.
278
760700
2880
12:43
Kale is a really thick, hearty leaf.
279
763580
4200
12:47
Kale.
280
767780
920
12:48
K constant, AY diphthong, and the dark L.
281
768700
3380
12:52
Kale.
282
772080
2020
12:54
Kale.
283
774100
1180
12:55
This is a bunch of kale, not a head like we have with lettuce or cabbage.
284
775280
4180
12:59
All of the leaves were already cut off and not attached to a main stem.
285
779460
4760
13:04
So it's a bunch, kale.
286
784220
2720
13:06
Say that with me.
287
786940
2000
13:08
Kale.
288
788940
2100
13:11
Kale.
289
791040
1540
13:12
Kale is a really thick, hearty leaf.
290
792580
4100
13:16
Lettuce a two-syllable word with first-syllable stress.
291
796680
4000
13:20
What do you notice about the double T?
292
800680
2900
13:23
Lettuce.
293
803580
1160
13:24
It's a flap T. A single sound.
294
804740
2640
13:27
The second syllable is said very quickly.
295
807380
2420
13:29
Lettuce. Us, us, us.
296
809800
2640
13:32
Lettuce. Say that with me.
297
812440
2440
13:34
Lettuce.
298
814880
1760
13:36
This is a bunch of scallions.
299
816640
1900
13:38
Also known as green onions.
300
818540
4000
13:42
Scallions or green onions.
301
822540
3560
13:46
Green onion or scallion.
302
826100
2220
13:48
You already know onion.
303
828320
1920
13:50
Green can be a little tricky because of the GR consonant cluster.
304
830240
4500
13:54
With clusters with R, I always recommend holding out the R as you practice to give you some time to focus in
305
834740
6000
14:00
on the right sound and position.
306
840740
2560
14:03
Grrrr-een green, green, green onion.
307
843300
6080
14:09
Say that with me.
308
849380
1600
14:10
Green onion.
309
850980
1280
14:12
Green onions.
310
852260
2200
14:14
Scallion another word for the exact same thing.
311
854460
3780
14:18
A dark L, scal-- scal-- scallion, scallion.
312
858240
8120
14:26
Say that with me. Scallion.
313
866360
3880
14:30
Scallions.
314
870240
1380
14:31
Corn.
315
871620
1420
14:33
This is an 'ear of corn' and when you take off the outer leaves to reveal the kernels of the corn,
316
873040
10900
14:43
this act, this verb, which is harder than it looks, it's called shucking.
317
883940
8440
14:52
I'm shucking the corn.
318
892380
4420
14:56
Corn.
319
896800
1520
14:58
Corn on the cob.
320
898320
1960
15:00
Corn.
321
900280
780
15:01
This word has the AW as in law vowel but when it's followed by R, just like it is here, it changes.
322
901060
6600
15:07
Now, the lips around more and the tongue pulls back more.
323
907660
3580
15:11
So it's not aw, law but it's uhl, co-- corn.
324
911240
8740
15:19
Corn.
325
919980
1940
15:21
Corn.
326
921920
1720
15:23
Corn.
327
923640
920
15:24
Say that with me.
328
924560
1520
15:26
Corn.
329
926080
1300
15:27
Corn.
330
927380
1400
15:28
Shucking corn is a lot of work, isn't it?
331
928780
2520
15:31
I called the green things that I was pulling down leaves but really that's the husk.
332
931300
5280
15:36
And inside the husk, those strands that look like hair, that's called corn silk.
333
936580
5840
15:42
You'll see some more corn silk coming up in a minute.
334
942420
3540
15:45
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,
335
945960
14120
16:00
which is harder than it looks, it's called shucking.
336
960080
5200
16:05
I'm shucking the corn.
337
965280
3880
16:09
I didn't get video of celery, cucumber, or radishes, three other common vegetables.
338
969160
6100
16:15
Celery is another word that can be three syllables.
339
975260
2800
16:18
Cel--err--ee.
340
978060
1940
16:20
Celery.
341
980000
1260
16:21
But I recommend pronouncing it with two: cel-ree.
342
981260
4360
16:25
Celery.
343
985620
1500
16:27
Celery.
344
987120
1000
16:28
Say that with me. Celery.
345
988120
3380
16:31
Cucumber.
346
991500
960
16:32
Three-syllable word, stress on the first syllable, which has the JU diphthong.
347
992460
5400
16:37
Cu-- cu-- cucumber.
348
997860
4180
16:42
Say that with me.
349
1002040
1620
16:43
Cucumber.
350
1003660
1680
16:45
Radish or radishes.
351
1005340
2820
16:48
The plural here, ES adds an extra syllable because the last sound of the noun was an SH.
352
1008160
6520
16:54
Radishes.
353
1014680
1720
16:56
Radishes.
354
1016400
1260
16:57
It's like the word 'is' said very quickly as a third syllable.
355
1017660
4280
17:01
Radish.
356
1021940
1240
17:03
Radishes.
357
1023180
1480
17:04
Say those with me.
358
1024660
1580
17:06
Radish. Radishes.
359
1026240
3980
17:10
I hope this vegetable vocab video has helped you.
360
1030220
3460
17:13
What other vocab videos would you like to see?
361
1033680
2920
17:16
Put it in the comments below.
362
1036600
2080
17:18
That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
363
1038680
4720
17:23
That's it for the vegetable vocabs.
364
1043400
2040
17:25
Here's some corn silk.
365
1045440
1460
17:26
Woo! Celebrate!
366
1046900
3760
17:30
367
1050660
6560
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