My Morning Routine ENGLISH LESSON—Learn English with Me! | Speaking English Lesson—Pronunciation

258,342 views ・ 2019-05-21

Rachel's English


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

00:00
It’s 6:37 in the morning.
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That’s about how well my eyes focus when I get up.
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What time do you get up?
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I was recently at a YouTube conference where someone did a presentation on My Morning Routine.
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Different people across the world just taking their camera through their morning,
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showing people what their life is like and I thought: This is fascinating!
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I loved seeing other cultures, seeing what people did, how they lived just a normal day.
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So I decided today, I'm going to do the same. I'm going to show you my morning routine.
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What is my morning like? And of course, we'll turn it into an English lesson along the way.
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I have a baby. What do you think the first thing I do every morning is?
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The first thing is always nurse Sawyer.
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He's a little too distracted by the camera to nurse right now.
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Nurse – this word has several different meanings.
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You can nurse a baby, you can nurse a sick person, you can nurse a cold, and you can even nurse a beer.
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We’ll go over these meanings.
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First, I want to say the verb ‘breastfeed’ can be used interchangeably with this term,
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and it doesn’t mean anything else, so that can be another option.
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The first thing I do every morning is breastfeed my baby.
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Notice that I’m not saying the T here – that’s common.
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When the T comes between two consonants, we often drop it.
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Breastfeed.
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Straight from the S sound in to the F sound.
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Breastfeed.
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Now, let’s talk about all those different meanings.
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If we use this word as a noun, it’s somebody who's been trained as a nurse, to care for the sick, it’s an occupation.
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My aunt is a surgical nurse.
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As a verb, like I used it, it can mean to breastfeed, to feed a baby.
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It can also be used to describe caring for someone who is sick: she nursed him back to health.
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It can be used to describe taking care of an ailment: I’ve been nursing a cold for two weeks.
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That means I’m taking throat lozenges for it, drinking lots of tea, trying to get better.
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We also use it to talk about a drink, usually an alcoholic one, that we’re drinking very slowly.
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Just taking a sip every once in a while.
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Rachel, can I get you a drink?
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No thanks, I’m still nursing this beer.
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02:13
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This is something new. This is different from our routine.
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Looking at a camera.
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One of the first things I try to do everyday is make the bed which I used to never do.
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But it's one tiny thing that I can do to create a little bit
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of organization in a life that is otherwise very chaotic right now.
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02:40
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Chaotic, chaos.
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Here the CH makes a hard K sound.
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Kk-- It’s also common to make a CH sound, like in ‘chest’, ch-- or an SH sound, like in Chicago, sh--.
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CH makes a K in choir, echo, Chemistry, anchor, stomach, orchestra, and many others.
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You can’t tell how a CH should be pronounced just by looking at it, you have to know word by word.
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This is why spelling and pronunciation is so tricky in English.
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Then I head downstairs to have breakfast with Stoney and David.
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I don't feel like cereal so I'm going to make an egg. Does anybody want an egg?
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I don't.
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>> No? >> Okay.
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I used the phrase ‘feel like’.
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You can use this interchangeably with ‘want’, except the form of the verb will change.
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I feel like going to bed, I want to go to bed.
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So with ‘feel like’ we follow it with the ING form of a verb, feel like going.
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With ‘want’, the next verb is in the infinitive, want to go, wanna go.
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But the meaning of the two sentences is the same.
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This applies to the negative as well. I don’t feel like having cereal, I don’t want to have cereal.
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But when I said it, I followed it by a noun. I don't feel like cereal so I'm going to make an egg.
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I don't feel like cereal.
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So nothing else changes
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I don’t feel like cereal, I don’t want cereal.
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04:09
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Hey Stoney, your mouth is totally full.
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So we can't understand you. So take your time, chew, swallow, and then say what you were trying to say.
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Good, daddy. It's good.
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It's good? The toast?
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Yes.
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Looks like it's really good.
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The most common breakfast in the US is probably cereal with milk. That’s what David and Stoney had.
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What do you usually have for breakfast?
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Post it to Instagram, tag me, @RachelsEnglish, I love to see this kind of thing,
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what people eat in different cultures.
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Let’s have breakfast together.
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Mommy, I want some milk.
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Okay. Well, how would you ask me to get you some milk?
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Milk, please?
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Sure.
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What time are you guys getting together?
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Here, David's talking about getting together with a friend and his kids.
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This is a phrasal verb that means to meet, to spend time together.
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You could also use it as a noun: we’re having a get-together at our house this weekend.
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Why don’t you come?
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If you use it with ‘it’, the meaning is different.
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'Get it together' means to get organized or get stabilized after chaos.
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For example, if Stoney is having a tantrum, we could say, ‘get it together, Stoney’.
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Or, at a busy time in my life lately, I missed a meeting because I totally forgot.
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I apologized and said, “I’m so sorry I forgot.
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I just can’t get it together these days.”
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Get together is to meet.
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Get it together is to recover from a period of chaos.
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05:50
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Mommy, where is the flashing part?
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Oh, I put it over there.
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There?
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06:00
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The flashing part – here, Stoney is talking about a camera that had a blinking light.
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Did you notice that Stoney can’t say ‘there’ yet?
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There.
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He can’t make a TH.
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I’ve worked with him on it several times and he just can’t coordinate putting the tongue tip through the teeth.
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I know this is a huge challenge for my non-native students, so I just wanted you to know it takes time!
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Stoney has been speaking English for over two years now, and he still doesn’t have that sound.
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There.
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I’m interested to see when he picks it up.
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And breakfast just continues with random loud noises.
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The rest of the morning continues with cleaning up the kids.
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Okay, let's get you cleaned up.
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How was 'get you' pronounced?
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Have you noticed that it’s really common to hear a CH in this phrase?
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Let's get you cleaned up.
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When a word that ends in T is followed by ‘you’ or ‘your’, that T often turns into a CH.
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Chuu. Chuu. Ge-chuu.
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There's no rule about doing this or not.
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It's just a habit the happens and many Americans do it a lot of the time.
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If you don't do it, you can do a stop T.
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Get you, get you.
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Let's get you cleaned up.
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Stoney, you want these waffle pretzels for your snack, right?
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Do you want one right now?
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Yes.
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Special treat.
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07:45
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Snack.
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We all need a good snack every once in a while.
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This is not a full meal, but a little bit of food that we eat between meals.
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Snack.
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At our house, we get up anywhere between 6 and 6:45.
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Stoney doesn’t leave for school until after 9, so we have a lot of time to fill up.
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Sometimes we go out for a walk, but often we just play at home.
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08:09
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I've already got it all ready for you.
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Did you hear the ‘you’ reduction?
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Yuh, yuh.
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I've already got it all ready for you.
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Hey, hey. We're not skipping teeth. Stand up. Stoney.
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We’re not skipping teeth.
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I’m sure many parents can relate to this.
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When you skip something, you don’t do something that is part of a regular sequence.
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In this case, brushing teeth in the morning is definitely part of our morning routine.
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Stand up.
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Mercy.
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Mercy.
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This is an exclamation of exasperation, surprise, anger, or frustration.
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I was feeling all of those things!
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Luckily, he did decide to brush his teeth.
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And now, we brush teeth. It's just part of getting ready for school.
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09:04
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My camera died, after that, we got Stoney dressed and David took him to school,
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then he came home and took Sawyer while I went to work. And that is our morning routine.
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I hope you liked this video. I hope you learned a little something.
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Please subscribe. I make new videos every Tuesday.
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Did you see anything that surprised you or learned anything new?
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Put it in the comments below, I love to hear what you're learning with the videos.
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That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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