ENGLISH VOCABULARY: DRIVING

133,391 views ・ 2019-10-01

Rachel's English


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

00:00
We have shoulders, but also roads have shoulders. A car has a spare tire, but also, person might have one too.
0
0
7980
00:07
In this video, we’re going to go over a lot of vocabulary words for driving, and any alternate or idiomatic
1
7980
5780
00:13
meanings they may have. Even if you know some of these words, I’ll make sure you’re focusing on
2
13760
4880
00:18
the pronunciation of these words so that you’re understood and sound great when you say them.
3
18640
5040
00:23
So come road tripping with me and learn vocabulary.
4
23680
3300
00:26
He wants some, too.
5
26980
3140
00:35
One of the things that’s so important for pronunciation is stress. Not just sounds.
6
35960
4580
00:40
So before I have you imitate a word, I’m going to break it down into stress and unstressed syllables.
7
40540
5680
00:46
For example, the first word, accelerate. I’m going to move my hand like this for unstressed syllables,
8
46220
5840
00:52
and like this for stressed syllables. Ac-- cel-- Ac-- cel-- Accelerate.
9
52060
8780
01:00
So copy those components of stress and do practice the words out loud. Accelerate. Accelerate.
10
60840
7780
01:08
Unstressed syllables are shorter and flatter in pitch, and stressed syllables are longer and
11
68620
5100
01:13
the pitch goes up and down. Ik-sel. Accelerate.
12
73720
4720
01:18
I guarantee you focusing on stress will help your pronunciation. Accelerate means increasing speed.
13
78440
7540
01:25
The opposite in driving would be breaking, which is decreasing speed.
14
85980
3500
01:29
And the pedal for this is the accelerator. That’s the noun.
15
89480
3760
01:33
The pronunciation is: ac-cel-er-ate. Notice the first C makes a K sound and the second C makes an S sound.
16
93240
10740
01:43
Accelerate. I’m making that a Stop T. As the noun, accelerator, ra-ra-ra, accelerator.
17
103980
9100
01:53
The T becomes a flap T because it comes between two vowel/diphthong sounds. Accelerate, accelerator.
18
113080
7980
02:01
Say those with me. Accelerate. Accelerator.
19
121060
5140
02:06
Accident. I hope you never have one.
20
126200
2440
02:08
But they do happen frequently and can cause a major slowdown or delay.
21
128640
6000
02:14
I hope we don't hit many delays.
22
134640
3300
02:17
A delay or slowdown, of course, is when you’re not able to drive as quickly as you'd like, or
23
137940
5160
02:23
maybe you can’t drive at all. Maybe traffic is totally stopped. You could say, ‘traffic is at a stand still’.
24
143100
7500
02:30
A slow down. Slow down. Slow down. Say that with me. Slow down.
25
150600
7700
02:38
Delay. De-lay. Delay. Say that with me. Delay.
26
158300
7800
02:46
Let's go back and talk about 'accident'. Ac-ci-dent. Just like with 'accelerate', the first C makes a K sound,
27
166100
9820
02:55
and the second, an S sound. Accident. Ac-ci-dent. Say that with me. Accident.
28
175920
8440
03:04
A term you'll hear in the US for an accident that isn't serious is a fender-bender.
29
184360
5680
03:10
The fender is the part of the car around the wheel, and a fender bender is when this, or any other part of the car
30
190040
6280
03:16
has minor damage from a minor accident.
31
196320
3060
03:19
Someone drove into my car on the way to work.
32
199380
2540
03:21
Oh no, are you okay?
33
201920
1440
03:23
Yeah, it was just a fender bender.
34
203360
2380
03:25
Fender bender. Fen-der ben-der. Fender bender. Say that with me. Fender bender.
35
205740
8720
03:34
Don't tailgate that guy.
36
214460
2200
03:36
Well, all right. But don't be a backseat driver.
37
216660
6380
03:43
Two terms you heard there, tailgate, and backseat driver.
38
223040
4240
03:47
A tailgate is the back of a truck, the part that opens down. That's the noun.
39
227280
5060
03:52
But as a verb, there are two different meanings. One of them means to have a party beside your vehicle.
40
232340
5540
03:57
What? What's that? Why would you have a party beside your vehicle. It's common in the United States
41
237880
6040
04:03
at sporting events especially American football, or some concerts, to arrive early and
42
243920
4740
04:08
have a party in the parking lot. Is this common in your culture too, or is this a purely American thing?
43
248660
6420
04:15
It often involves grilling, it can get very elaborate, people bring tents, tables,
44
255080
5720
04:20
games, and there are even cookbooks dedicated to tailgating.
45
260800
4400
04:25
It's also really common for people to consume a lot of alcohol at a tailgate party.
46
265200
4960
04:30
But when driving, to tailgate means to follow the person ahead of you really closely - too closely.
47
270160
6320
04:36
When I'm driving, I hate being tailgated.
48
276480
2880
04:39
Here, I thought David was driving too closely to the car in front, so I told him not to tailgate that guy.
49
279360
5980
04:45
Don't tailgate that guy.
50
285340
2060
04:47
Compound word, first syllable stress. Tail-gate. Tailgate. Tailgate. Say that with me. Tailgate.
51
287400
10060
04:57
Don't tailgate that guy.
52
297460
2120
04:59
Well, all right. But don't be a backseat driver.
53
299580
3400
05:02
He then told me not to be a backseat driver. Fair enough.
54
302980
4180
05:07
A backseat driver is when someone who is not driving, you don't have to be in the backseat,
55
307160
4480
05:11
you can also be in the front, tells the driver what to do or what not to do. Pretty annoying if you're the driver.
56
311640
6620
05:18
This term can be used in other situations too, not just when you're driving, but anytime someone comments
57
318260
6380
05:24
on what you're doing, criticizes you, gives you unwanted advice. For example, if David was commenting
58
324640
6080
05:30
on decisions I was making about my YouTube channel, without me asking for his advice,
59
330720
5500
05:36
and I didn't want him to, I could say, "Hey, David, I feel like you're backseat driving my videos."
60
336220
5320
05:41
Or, "you're being a backseat driver when it comes to my videos."
61
341540
6200
05:47
Back up - a car in reverse. Notice how I connect those two words with the K. Back up. Back up.
62
347740
7420
05:55
My life has gotten a lot easier since we bought a car with a backup camera.
63
355160
5120
06:00
Both of these words will feel stressed: You're too far forward, you have to back up.
64
360280
5100
06:05
Back up. Back up. Say that with me. Back up. Back up.
65
365380
6760
06:12
>> You have somebody right in your blindspot. >> What is this person doing?
66
372140
2760
06:14
Yeah. I see that person, thank you.
67
374900
4680
06:19
Someone was driving in my blind spot.
68
379580
2540
06:22
That is the spot right next to you, just over your shoulder, where they won’t show up in your side mirror
69
382120
5400
06:27
or your rearview mirror. Notice I’m not saying the D there. Most people drop the D in this phrase,
70
387520
6420
06:33
so you can do it too to make it a little easier and to say and also to sound more natural.
71
393940
4700
06:38
Blind spot. Blind spot. More stress on the first word.
72
398640
4200
06:42
Blind spot. Blind spot. Say that with me.
73
402840
4360
06:47
Blind spot.
74
407200
1300
06:48
Babe, if you slam on the brakes, the camera might go flying.
75
408500
4140
06:52
Right.
76
412640
1720
06:54
Slam on the brakes.
77
414360
1600
06:55
To brake, the verb, is the opposite of accelerate, and the term ‘slam on the brakes’ means to break very suddenly.
78
415960
6960
07:02
Brake.
79
422920
820
07:03
We have a BR cluster, you’ll want to be sure you go right from B into R, not buh-r, buh-r, but brr-- br--
80
423740
8780
07:12
brake, brake, say that with me. Brake.
81
432520
4440
07:16
Changing lanes really intimidated me when I learned how to drive.
82
436960
3520
07:20
Change lanes.
83
440480
1200
07:21
Both have the AY diphthong, both are stressed. That up-down shape. Change lanes. Change lanes.
84
441680
8440
07:30
Say that with me. Change lanes.
85
450120
3200
07:33
Now, would you call this a country road?
86
453320
2220
07:35
Yeah. // Yeah, I would call this a country road.
87
455540
2980
07:38
A country road is a rural road, off the main highway, that goes, well, through the country.
88
458520
5840
07:44
This one is paved, but they can be gravel roads or dirt roads as well.
89
464360
4960
07:49
Note we have a TR cluster here.
90
469320
2160
07:51
The thing about this is it’s very common to make that a CHR. Ch-- Country. Ch, ch, ch. Country. Country road.
91
471480
9140
08:00
Country road. Country road. Say that with me. Country road.
92
480620
6740
08:07
A crosswalk is something that is painted on the road that is meant to be a safe spot for pedestrians,
93
487360
5760
08:13
that is, people who are running or walking, to cross. You might see a sign like this, saying that you must yield.
94
493120
7420
08:20
Crosswalk, that’s a compound word with stress on the first word. Notice the L in ‘walk’ is silent.
95
500540
7540
08:28
Crosswalk. Crosswalk. Say that with me. Crosswalk.
96
508080
5200
08:33
We also mentioned the word yield.
97
513280
3180
08:36
I know this can be really tricky for my students because it has the Y consonant before the EE vowel,
98
516460
5000
08:41
and they sound similar.
99
521460
1280
08:42
In fact, the difference between ‘ear’ and ‘year’ can be impossible for some people to hear,
100
522740
6660
08:49
I have a video on that, and I’ll link to it at the end of this video.
101
529400
3540
08:52
To make the Y, the base of the tongue here in the front of the throat moves towards the back of the throat,
102
532940
4800
08:57
just a little bit, narrowing that space.
103
537740
2460
09:00
Yi-, yi- yield. Yield. Yield means you don’t have to stop, but you have to pay attention and look around you,
104
540200
9160
09:09
because if someone else is approaching, they get priority.
105
549360
3240
09:12
They get the right of way.
106
552600
2200
09:14
Make the Dark L with the back of the tongue, not the front.
107
554800
3060
09:17
Yiellll. Yield. Yield.
108
557860
5600
09:23
Say that with me. Yield.
109
563460
2740
09:26
Your speed's pretty steady there, babe. Are you using cruise control?
110
566200
3440
09:29
No. Just keeping it right at 73.
111
569640
5900
09:35
Cruise control.
112
575540
1380
09:36
This is when you set your car and it holds a steady speed without you needing to keep your foot
113
576920
4580
09:41
on the gas pedal.
114
581500
2120
09:43
The letter S here does make a light Z sound, cruise, cruise. So it’s not crusss, crusss. Cruise. Cruise control.
115
583620
9960
09:53
Control: first syllable, you don’t need to try to make a vowel there. Kn, kn. Control. Cruise control.
116
593580
7040
10:00
Say that with me. Cruise control.
117
600620
3780
10:04
Is this a one-way street, babe?
118
604400
1400
10:05
This is a one-way street, yeah. And, this is actually a detour.
119
605800
4300
10:10
One-way street and detour.
120
610100
2460
10:12
A one-way street is a street that you can only drive one direction on.
121
612560
3780
10:16
Most streets are two-way.
122
616340
2600
10:18
One-way, two-way.
123
618940
2760
10:21
Detour. This is a two-syllable word with first-syllable stress.
124
621700
4560
10:26
The second syllable isn’t really pronounced the way the dictionary says it is.
125
626260
5000
10:31
This is the symbol for the vowel in book, and I think the way we say it is a lot more like the OO vowel, detour.
126
631260
7800
10:39
Detour. Detour. Detour. Say that with me. Detour.
127
639060
8620
10:47
Something you might do on a long road trip is get food from a drive through,
128
647680
4280
10:51
where you pull right up to the restaurant, you don’t even have to get out of your car, you order from a window.
129
651960
6360
10:58
On the sign, you’ll often see this non-standard spelling. The word should actually be spelled THROUGH,
130
658320
8720
11:07
but using this shortened spelling has become popular with drive through’s.
131
667040
4960
11:12
Drive thru.
132
672000
1520
11:13
Drive thru. Say that with me.
133
673520
2920
11:16
Drive thru.
134
676440
2160
11:18
Exit. This is where you leave the highway, and this word has two different pronunciations.
135
678600
5320
11:23
The X can either be pronounced KS, exit, ks-ks, or GZ, exit, gz-gz. Both are acceptable.
136
683920
10060
11:33
You choose the one you like.
137
693980
1900
11:35
I think I usually use the GZ pronunciation.
138
695880
3660
11:39
Exit. Exit. Say that with me. Exit.
139
699540
5480
11:45
Flat tire. I hope you never get one! This is David changing our flat tire once in the airport parking lot.
140
705020
6880
11:51
To deal with a flat tire you’re going to need a spare, and a jack.
141
711900
4140
11:56
Flat tire, notice I’m saying that with just one T.
142
716040
4040
12:00
Flat tire. It’s not flat-tire.
143
720080
3560
12:03
One stop of air, one release into a true T. Flat tire. Say that with me. Flat tire.
144
723640
7540
12:11
Jack. Jack. Say that with me. Jack.
145
731180
6240
12:17
A spare tire is the extra tire that is usually stored under the trunk of your car.
146
737420
5420
12:22
But it’s also an idiom that means, a roll of fat around someone’s waist.
147
742840
5400
12:28
Why not have another beer? I’m working on my spare tire. Spare tire. Spare tire. Say that with me. Spare tire.
148
748240
11560
12:39
Gas station and service plaza.
149
759800
2480
12:42
A gas station is something you can find anywhere. Simply, a place to get gas.
150
762280
4500
12:46
But a service plaza is something particular to interstates, or highways.
151
766780
4200
12:50
You don’t have to take an exit, get on a different road, it’s just right there, right off the highway,
152
770980
5380
12:56
accessible only from the highway. Gas station. Notice there, just like with ‘flat tire’,
153
776360
6700
13:03
which connected with a single T sound, these words are connecting with a single S sound.
154
783060
5620
13:08
Gas station. Gas station. Gas station. Say that with me. Gas station.
155
788680
8940
13:17
Service plaza. A service plaza has not just gas, but bathrooms, and lots of options for food.
156
797620
6860
13:24
Service plaza. Service plaza. Say that with me. Service plaza.
157
804480
8180
13:32
Another thing you might find on the interstate is a rest area or rest stop –
158
812660
4740
13:37
these don’t have gas station or restaurants.
159
817400
2700
13:40
Rest area – the word after ‘rest’ begins with a vowel and I use the T to connect. Rest area. Rest area.
160
820100
8240
13:48
But in ‘rest stop’, the ST is followed by a consonant, and I drop the T in ‘rest’. Rest stop, Rest stop.
161
828340
9240
13:57
I just connect the two words with an S sound. It’s pretty common in spoken English to drop the T
162
837580
6200
14:03
between two other consonants. Rest area, rest stop. Rest area, rest stop. Say those with me.
163
843780
9660
14:13
Rest area, rest stop.
164
853440
3360
14:16
My husband and I debated.
165
856800
2220
14:19
He said he uses ‘rest area’ and ‘service plaza’ interchangeably, and I said: No. They are not the same.
166
859020
7440
14:26
You can't usually get gas at a rest area, can you? Isn't it generally just a rest area?
167
866460
5920
14:32
Oh, I use ‘rest area’ and ‘service plaza’ interchangeably.
168
872380
3120
14:35
Oh babe, those are different things.
169
875500
3260
14:38
Well, I tend to take a little bit of a rest at a service plaza so...
170
878760
5460
14:44
But you can't get service at a rest area.
171
884220
4500
14:48
Fair enough.
172
888720
2660
14:51
Interchangeably – that means no difference in meaning.
173
891380
3480
14:54
He said he uses ‘rest area’ and ‘service plaza’ to mean the same thing.
174
894860
5560
15:00
Fair enough – this is something you can say when you’re arguing or debating with someone,
175
900420
4340
15:04
and they make a good point. You can’t argue it. What they said makes sense.
176
904760
5260
15:10
Fair enough.
177
910020
1100
15:11
Now, let’s talk about a word i’ve already said several times, interstate.
178
911120
5300
15:16
Notice I don’t say the first T.
179
916420
2140
15:18
That's very common.
180
918560
1540
15:20
In fact, if you say that first T, it will likely sound unnatural and overpronounced.
181
920100
5920
15:26
It’s common in English to drop the T after N, for example, interstate, interview, internet.
182
926020
6760
15:32
And it’s not just in ‘inter’ words. Take the word ‘wanted’ for example, or the word ‘center’.
183
932780
5540
15:38
We had centercourt seats.
184
938320
2040
15:40
Did you say 'interstate' babe?
185
940360
1900
15:42
Yeah.
186
942260
500
15:42
Steve, do you say 'interstate' or 'in-terstate'?
187
942760
5140
15:47
I rarely overpronounce the Ts in words.
188
947900
3000
15:50
So you, you would consider 'interstate' an over-pronunciation.
189
950900
4200
15:55
I would.
190
955100
920
15:56
So, you say 'innerstate'?
191
956020
2080
15:58
Yeah.
192
958100
540
15:58
I, I'm not sure you can differentiate between "i-n-n-e-r" and "i-n-t-e-r" in the way I pronounce words.
193
958640
9080
16:07
Try that with me, dropping the first T. Interstate. Interstate.
194
967720
5780
16:13
Let’s take a second to talk about lanes.
195
973500
3480
16:16
This highway has three lanes in each direction.
196
976980
3140
16:20
I want to be clear that in the US, we do not use the term ‘carriageway’. That’s a British English term.
197
980120
5600
16:25
No one here will know what you’re talking about. In fact, I had to look it up to know exactly what it means.
198
985720
5400
16:31
This is a six-lane highway, with three lanes in each direction. Lane, lanes. Say those with me. Lane, lanes.
199
991120
10740
16:41
Now is a good time to talk about shoulders.
200
1001860
3160
16:45
This road has no shoulders. You can’t pull off. This road does have a shoulder. Shoulder, shoulder, shoulder.
201
1005020
9760
16:54
Say that with me. Shoulder.
202
1014780
3220
16:58
Now we’re at P. Let’s talk about parking.
203
1018000
3120
17:01
When Stoney was younger and in the car, and we would say we were there but we needed to park,
204
1021120
4860
17:05
he got really excited because he thought we meant this kind of park.
205
1025980
5160
17:11
The word 'park' has the AH as in FATHER vowel plus R.
206
1031140
3960
17:15
One mistake I notice my students make sometimes is they say ‘prk’, and they don’t drop their jaw enough,
207
1035100
6740
17:21
they pull their tongue back for the R before they’ve made a clear vowel.
208
1041840
3220
17:25
Pa-, jaw drop, tongue forward. Pa-, par-, par-, park. Park. Say that with me. Park.
209
1045060
11020
17:36
Parking lot, parking garage, parallel parking. Parking lot. Say that with me. Parking lot.
210
1056080
9920
17:46
Parking garage. Say that with me. Parking garage.
211
1066000
5400
17:51
Parallel parking. Parallel parking. Parallel parking. Say that with me. Parallel parking.
212
1071400
10380
18:01
When you pass someone, you’re behind them and then you change lanes so that you can drive past them.
213
1081780
6680
18:08
Alright, there's a big truck in the middle lane and we're going to pass him on the left.
214
1088460
7080
18:15
Pass. Pass. Say that with me. Pass.
215
1095540
6220
18:21
You know when it’s hard to pass someone?
216
1101760
2560
18:24
When there’s a lot of traffic, you could say heavy traffic, like during rush hour.
217
1104320
5440
18:29
Do you think we're getting here on rush hour?
218
1109760
2440
18:32
Uh, no, it's Sunday so it shouldn't be bad.
219
1112200
3720
18:35
Great.
220
1115920
1440
18:37
Rush hour is on weekdays, early in the morning, and late in the afternoon
221
1117360
3760
18:41
when people may be commuting to or from work.
222
1121120
3680
18:44
Rush hour. Rush hour. Say that with me. Rush hour.
223
1124800
6080
18:50
A commute is how you get to work, or school. And it implies a significant time or distance.
224
1130880
5420
18:56
For example, when choosing where to live, you’re going to want to consider your commute.
225
1136300
4840
19:01
I don’t even have to commute.
226
1141140
1620
19:02
I just walk 10 minute walk to work. But my husband does have to commute.
227
1142760
4340
19:07
He commutes 45 minutes by bus. Commute. Commute. Say that with me. Commute.
228
1147100
9720
19:16
Traffic. We have another TR cluster, and so many people will make the T a CH sound so it sounds like ‘chraffic’
229
1156820
8240
19:25
rather than ‘traffic’.
230
1165060
3320
19:28
Traffic, traffic. Say that with me. Traffic.
231
1168380
7100
19:35
You might hear words like ‘heavy’ or ‘thick’ for times where there are a lot of cars on the road,
232
1175480
5080
19:40
and ‘light’ if there are just a few cars on the road.
233
1180560
3980
19:44
Also, the term ‘traffic jam’ refers to a point where there are so many cars on the road, no one is moving.
234
1184540
6280
19:50
This can happen when a car has to stop in an intersection and blocks traffic,
235
1190820
4160
19:54
or when there’s bad weather, for example.
236
1194980
2540
19:57
Traffic jam. Traffic jam. Traffic jam. Say that with me.
237
1197520
6740
20:04
You might also hear the term traffic circle.
238
1204260
2320
20:06
We also call it a roundabout. So this is a roundabout, but it’s also used to mean a path,
239
1206580
5480
20:12
a way, that wasn’t very direct.
240
1212060
2380
20:14
For example, we got lost on a road trip, and we did find our way,
241
1214440
3980
20:18
but it was with a lot of wrong turns and taking wrong roads.
242
1218420
3720
20:22
>> It's a really roundabout way we just did. >> Okay.
243
1222140
5200
20:27
There, we used roundabout not to mean a traffic circle, but to mean a non direct way to get somewhere.
244
1227340
6500
20:33
Earlier we talked about yield,
245
1233840
1820
20:35
and of course, you’ll also come across stop signs and stop lights, or traffic lights, when you drive.
246
1235660
5640
20:41
You might have a four-way stop, where everyone stops and the first one there goes first,
247
1241300
5160
20:46
or you might see a sign with a sigh below the stop sign that says ‘cross traffic does not stop’.
248
1246460
6440
20:52
Stop, Stop, stop sign.
249
1252900
4060
20:56
Say those with me. Stop. Stop sign. Notice I’m not releasing the P, that would be: stop. Stop sign. Stop sign.
250
1256960
10140
21:07
Stop sign. And that sounds a little strange.
251
1267100
2980
21:10
We’re more likely to skip the release of a P if the next word begins with a consonant, like sign.
252
1270080
5560
21:15
Stop sign, stop sign. Say that with me again. Stop sign.
253
1275640
6500
21:22
Another sign you’ll definitely see is the speed limit.
254
1282140
3020
21:25
When's the last time you had a speeding ticket?
255
1285160
3640
21:28
>> Oh, it's probably been 20 years. >> Really?
256
1288800
2720
21:31
Yeah.
257
1291520
640
21:32
What is the speed limit on this road?
258
1292160
2320
21:34
I believe it's 55.
259
1294480
2000
21:36
260
1296480
1400
21:37
See, you're definitely speeding.
261
1297880
1960
21:39
I'm speeding, but I'm going a modest 7 miles per hour over the speed limit.
262
1299840
4220
21:44
I'm going to say 55 seem really slow for interstate.
263
1304060
3960
21:48
It does. This is a really heavily traffic stretch.
264
1308020
4600
21:52
In a couple miles, it'll open up a little bit and the speed limit will jump up to 65.
265
1312620
7320
21:59
Speed limit, speeding ticket, speeding.
266
1319940
4100
22:04
Speed, speed, say that with me. Speed.
267
1324040
6280
22:10
The word turn. Turn right, turn left. You might also hear the term right-hand turn or left-hand turn.
268
1330320
8740
22:19
Is this a tricky word for you? It has that R-vowel that I know can be tricky for my students.
269
1339060
5340
22:24
Don’t think of there being a vowel, just a longer R sound. T, urrr, n. Turn. Turn. Say that with me. Turn.
270
1344400
13180
22:37
Another word with this vowel is ‘merge’.
271
1357580
3020
22:40
Here, we're on the highway entrance, merging into traffic.
272
1360600
4520
22:45
Again, don’t think of a vowel, just make a longer R. M, ur, g. Merge, merge.
273
1365120
9080
22:54
Say that with me. Merge.
274
1374200
4300
22:58
Now, the next video you’ll want to watch is one I did on vocabulary in the car, similar to driving.
275
1378500
5860
23:04
If you’ve already seen that one, then please, please do watch another Rachel’s English video
276
1384360
4220
23:08
from the suggested videos, keep the learning momentum going.
277
1388580
4020
23:12
And of course don’t forget to subscribe.
278
1392600
2680
23:15
I love teaching you English, that’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
279
1395280
5040

Original video on YouTube.com
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