SILENT LETTERS with RULES | English Speaking, Pronunciation, & Vocabulary, American English

442,964 views ・ 2019-11-12

Rachel's English


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Sshh.
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I’m the D in ‘Wednesday’.
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I’m the B in DEBT. I’m busy being silent.
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Today we’re going over silent letters in English and some of the rules for them, and the many exceptions
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that these rules have.
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Stick with us, you’re going to learn a lot about correct English pronunciation.
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What’s up with all these silent letters?
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Let’s just go through the alphabet.
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We’ll start with A.
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A is silent in the suffix –ally.
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And it’s tricky, because it looks like it should be a syllable, but it’s not.
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Logically.
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Not Lo-gic-a-ly. Just logically.
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Typically. Logically. Typically. Radically.
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Every time you see –ally at the end of a word, is the A silent? No, sorry, that would be too simple.
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Vocally, is not vok-li. It is three syllables.
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Legally is not le-gli.
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It’s three syllables.
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So how to do you know by looking? Well, you don’t.
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This is what truly makes American English hard.
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But many other words with –ally at the ending have a silent A.
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B.
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Now there are some clearer rules here, thankfully.
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We don’t pronounce B after M.
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Climb, dumb, bomb, comb, thumb.
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All of these end in the M sound.
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If I did pronounce the B, it would sound like this: climb.
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Climb.
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But that’s not right, it’s climb.
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Oh great! Every time you see M followed by B, the B in silent.
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No. That’s not actually true.
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As you get into longer words, you'll have to be a little more aware.
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For example, amber.
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The M is at the end of the first syllable, and the B is at the beginning of the second syllable.
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We do pronounce both the M and the B.
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Amber. Amber. Say that with me. Amber.
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Amber is like a stone, but I don’t think it actually is a stone, it's used a lot in jewelry.
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It’s also a word to describe this color.
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It’s also a name for women.
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Amber.
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We also have ambivalent.
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Ambassador. Akimbo. Arms akimbo is when your arms are like this, bent. Akimbo.
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These are all examples of B NOT silent after M because it’s in a different syllable.
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Ambivalent, ambassador, akimbo.
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There’s another case where the B is silent, when it comes before a T.
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Debt, subtle, doubt.
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No B sound in any of these words.
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Debt, subtle, doubt.
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What about this rule? Always?
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Is a B before T always silent? No. In longer words, you’ll find lots of exceptions.
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For example a compound word, where the first word ends in B and the next word begins with T, like ‘bobtail’.
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Bob, bob, bobtail. It’s not ba-tail, bobtail. We do say that B.
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Also with prefixes that end in B, like O-B and S-U-B.
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Obtain.
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B is not silent. Subtotal. B is not silent.
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The Letter C. It’s silent in the state name Connecticut. This middle C is silent, we don’t say it at all.
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Connecticut. It can be silent after S, like in ‘muscle’, ‘scissors’, ‘scent, ’ ‘fascinating’, or ‘scene’.
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But it’s not always silent like in ‘scatter’ or ‘script’.
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And sometimes it goes in a different direction and becomes an SH after S, like in ‘conscience’ or ‘luscious’.
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You know, let’s stop and think about this for a second.
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Every “rule” we’ve studied, there’s an exception. So why study the rule?
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What we’re doing here is going over fairly common words with a silent letter.
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American English pronunciation is not generally rule-oriented,
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so you do have to learn the pronunciation of words individually.
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But it is useful to be exposed to these general rules and these common words that have a silent letter.
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So you can start learning them.
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I had a student once who lived in the US and he worked at a seafood restaurant.
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And he didn’t know that L in ‘salmon’ w as silent.
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How would he if he had never learned that or been taught that before?
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So what we’re doing here is exposing you to these silent letters,
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and also making sure you’re aware that these rules are not absolute rules that can be applied in every situation.
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Ok, let’s get to D. We have Wednesday.
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There’s no rule here about why this D is silent, it just is in this word.
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It’s also silent in ‘handsome’.
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In the word ‘sandwich’, if you looked that up in the dictionary, you WOULD see the D sound.
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But it’s actually never pronounced that way. So Wednesday, Handsome: the dictionary says no D.
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But ‘Sandwich’, the dictionary does say D but it hasn’t caught up with the actual habits of how we speak.
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It's not uncommon to drop the D after N. so that's what's happening in Sandwich.
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Also, words with the silent D, grandma and grandpa.
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Now, with Sandwich, I talked about habit.
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In the dictionary, it says there is a D sound but that’s not our habit anymore.
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The thing about the D between two consonants is it’s really common in our habit to drop that D.
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To make it silent, even if that’s not what the dictionary says.
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This happens in words like sandpaper, soundproof, landmark, windmill.
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We drop the D because it's between 2 other consonants.
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I’ve seen other teachers say the D is silent in a word like ‘edge’, ‘bridge’ or ‘knowledge’.
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Here’s the thing. In the word ‘edge’ the consonant sound is the J sound which is written in IPA like this:
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D, dd, plus ZH, zh, zh. So the J sound actually has a D in it.
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So I don’t think I would say the D is silent in these words. The D is part of the J sound.
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Ok, let’s move on.
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The letter E.
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I’m going to go over a rule for this one, the ending E.
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But first, take a look at this word.
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Au-di-ble.
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There’s no vowel sound at the end of that word.
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Where’s the E sound?
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Okay, now, let’s get back to that rule. Silent ending E.
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This “rule” is taught quite a bit so you’re probably already familiar with it.
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Quite a bit. The word ‘quite’.
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I’m not saying a sound for the letter E on the end of the word, am I? Quite. Quite.
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The word ends with the T sound.
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Quite.
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But if I take away the E in that spelling, I have a different word.
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Quit.
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So the ending E can affect the vowel before the final consonant. It makes it “longer”.
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Quit, IH vowel, versus Quite, AI, AI diph thong, two sounds.
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Quite a bit.
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Now with ‘bit’, if I added an E at the end there, the word would be ‘bite’.
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Again, T is the final sound. The extra E doesn’t add an extra sound at the end,
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but it does change the vowel to a “longer” vowel sound.
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Bite, bit.
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This happens with a lot of words: hop, hope.
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Dim, dime. Rob, robe. Rat, rate. Breath, breathe.
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But note the word ‘café’, we do pronounce that ending E, even if it isn’t written without the accent.
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Café.
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Also, a note about ED endings.
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Regular verbs are written this way to show the past tense,
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and now there are clear pronunciation rules for these.
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If the unconjugated verb ends in T or D, then we do make a sound for the letter E in the ED ending,
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and we have an extra syllable.
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Like, land, landed.
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But if the last letter of the unconjugated verb is any other letter,
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then we don’t make a sound for the letter E in the ED ending, and we just add a D or T sound.
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For example, hum, hummed. Not hum-ed. Or ‘pack’, packed. Not pack-ed.
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I do have a video that goes over these rules for ED endings in a little bit more depth
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with a few more examples so click here if you’re interested or see the link in the video description.
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The letter F.
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Ok this letter is almost never silent, but actually,
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the Merriam-Webster dictionary does give the primary pronunciation of ‘fifth’ with a silent F in the middle.
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Fifth. That’s how I say it, just the first F sound, IH vowel, and the TH at the end.
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“Fifth”.
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The letter G.
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This is silent when a word begins with ‘GN’.
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Gnome, gnat. Gnaw.
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Also GN at the end of a word: design, sign, reign, foreign, assign, campaign.
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Also, ‘GNE’, like ‘champagne’, cologne.
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You know, I did some looking, and I didn’t see any exceptions to these rules.
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Wouldn’t that be neat if we found a rule with no exceptions?
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Also the combination GH after a vowel or diphthong, silent G.
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Daughter, bright, though. Thigh, weigh, dough, eight.
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But there are some exceptions to this rule: cough, rough, tough.
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There, GH does make a sound, it's the F sound.
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The letter H.
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There are some common words that begin with a silent H, like hour, honor, honest, herb.
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But most words that begin with an H do have an H sound, like home, hope, happy.
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Words that begin with WH.
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These words have two different pronunciations, but the most common one is definitely with a silent H.
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Just a clean W sound: what, where, why, whistle.
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Sometimes the CH combination makes a K sound,
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which makes it feel like the H is silent, like in ‘choir’ or ‘chaos’ or ‘echo’.
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When GH is at the beginning of a word, H is silent like in ‘ghost’ or ‘ghetto’.
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H is silent after R like in rhyme, rhythm, and rhubarb.
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But this rule doesn’t work in compound words where the sounds are in two separate syllables, like ‘overheard’
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or ‘bearhug’, or in the word ‘perhaps’.
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There, both sounds are pronounced.
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Perhaps.
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Perhaps this is a good time to take a minute, take a break and let all this silence set in.
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The link to the second part of this two- part series is right here.
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But if you’re seeing this video in it’s first week, that video isn’t ready yet,
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it’s coming out on Tuesday of next week, so be here to see it.
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If that’s the case, I cannot recommend highly enough getting to know the International Phonetic Alphabet.
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Lots of dictionaries use it and it’s your key to understanding the pronunciation of any word.
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To knowing if any letters are silent.
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I have put together a playlist where I go over the IPA symbols for each sound in American English
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so you can really start to get comfortable with them.
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Please do subscribe if you haven’t already and make sure notifications are enabled,
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then come join me here every Tuesday
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for we have a new video studying something interesting about American English pronunciation.
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I love teaching you English, thank you so much for being here and see you next week.
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