English Pronunciation Analysis | Advanced English Conversation | Rachel’s English

114,511 views ・ 2018-07-24

Rachel's English


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

00:00
You’ve told me one of your favorite exercises is a Ben Franklin exercise,
0
0
5440
00:05
where we study everything about American English pronunciation
1
5440
3760
00:09
to help you improve your listening comprehension and understand how to sound more American.
2
9200
5840
00:15
So today, we’re going to do a Ben Franklin exercise on a monologue about the weather.
3
15040
5040
00:20
4
20080
7260
00:27
First, we’ll listen to the full monologue, then there will be an in-depth analysis.
5
27340
5240
00:32
After that, after you study everything about stress,
6
32580
2960
00:35
reductions, and linking, there will be a listen and repeat section.
7
35540
4100
00:39
This is where you get to practice out loud and see if you can imitate what I’ve done.
8
39640
5120
00:44
First, the monologue.
9
44760
2060
00:46
10
46820
2980
00:49
Today it’s a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
11
49800
2640
00:52
That’s thirty eight degrees Celsius.
12
52440
2680
00:55
We’re in the middle of a heat wave, which is the opposite of a cold snap,
13
55120
3840
00:58
and every day this week is supposed to be upper nineties.
14
58960
3800
01:02
I know some people love the heat.
15
62760
2320
01:05
I am not one of these people.
16
65080
2620
01:07
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
17
67700
7000
01:14
Now, the analysis.
18
74700
1980
01:16
19
76680
2760
01:19
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
20
79440
2900
01:22
What do you hear is being the most stressed words in that little thought group?
21
82340
4280
01:26
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
22
86620
2760
01:29
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
23
89380
2940
01:32
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
24
92320
2760
01:35
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
25
95080
4560
01:39
I hear the stressed syllable of ‘a hundred’ and ‘Philadelphia’.
26
99640
4880
01:44
Let me write this out.
27
104520
4320
01:48
A hundred.
28
108840
1340
01:50
So stress is on the first syllable of ‘hun’.
29
110180
2540
01:52
A hundred.
30
112720
1620
01:54
Today, it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
31
114340
3380
01:57
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
32
117720
2740
02:00
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
33
120460
2900
02:03
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
34
123360
3000
02:06
And I feel that I'm emphasizing the H a little bit more than normal,
35
126360
3540
02:09
that's to add stress to that syllable, to that word.
36
129900
3080
02:12
A hundred.
37
132980
1400
02:14
Hundred, making the H a little stronger than normal.
38
134380
4560
02:18
A hundred degrees.
39
138940
1480
02:20
A hundred degrees.
40
140420
1420
02:21
A hundred degrees.
41
141840
1180
02:23
And I break it up a little bit. There's a little break between ‘today’ and ‘it's’.
42
143020
3780
02:26
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
43
146800
4080
02:30
And then I do another little break here.
44
150880
2340
02:33
Why did I do that?
45
153220
1520
02:34
Well, I think I did it to add emphasis to how hot it is.
46
154740
5400
02:40
It's a hundred degrees.
47
160140
2000
02:42
When we put a little break before
48
162140
2560
02:44
a segment in a thought group, it helps to add stress to it
49
164700
3700
02:48
just like exaggerating the beginning consonant did.
50
168400
3960
02:52
It's a hundred degrees.
51
172360
2460
02:54
Today it's a hundred degrees.
52
174820
2060
02:56
Today it's a hundred degrees.
53
176880
2140
02:59
Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
54
179020
2880
03:01
Philadelphia.
55
181900
1180
03:03
This is a long word and long words can be intimidating.
56
183080
4120
03:07
Notice the PH, which is in here twice, is pronounced as an F.
57
187200
4240
03:11
Philadelphia.
58
191440
1600
03:13
Phila-del-phia.
59
193040
3160
03:16
So the syllable ‘Phil’ has a little bit of secondary stress, it's a little bit longer
60
196200
5460
03:21
but ‘del’ has the most stress, the up-down shape of the voice,
61
201660
4680
03:26
and that's what we can use to shape the word.
62
206340
2640
03:28
Philadelphia.
63
208980
1500
03:30
Philadelphia.
64
210480
1800
03:32
Philadelphia.
65
212280
3020
03:35
Philadelphia.
66
215300
1620
03:36
Philadelphia.
67
216920
1340
03:38
Philadelphia.
68
218260
1520
03:39
Philadelphia.
69
219780
880
03:40
That's thirty eight degrees Celsius.
70
220660
2500
03:43
That's thirty eight degrees Celsius.
71
223160
3140
03:46
That's thirty eight degrees.
72
226300
1980
03:48
I did it again, I put a little break before the TH for ‘thirty’ and that adds stress.
73
228280
6980
03:55
That's thirty eight degrees.
74
235260
2380
03:57
If I made it more smooth: That's thirty eight degrees.
75
237640
3220
04:00
That's thirty eight degrees.
76
240860
2000
04:02
Then I lose some of the stress that I want to put on how hot it is.
77
242860
4200
04:07
I want to put stress on the number: That's thirty eight degrees.
78
247060
5200
04:12
Let's write that out too.
79
252260
3560
04:15
That's thirty eight degrees.
80
255820
2060
04:17
That's thirty eight degrees.
81
257880
2000
04:19
That's thirty eight degrees.
82
259880
2460
04:22
Thirty eight degrees.
83
262340
1400
04:23
Okay, we have a couple things happening with our T's here.
84
263740
4140
04:27
We have this first T in ‘thirty’, that's a flap T.
85
267880
6240
04:34
And the T is a flap T when it comes between two vowels or
86
274120
4040
04:38
when it comes after an R before a vowel like in the word ‘thirty’.
87
278160
4460
04:42
Thirty.
88
282620
1100
04:43
Thirty eight degrees.
89
283720
1720
04:45
So the T in ‘eight’ is a Stop T because the next sound is a consonant.
90
285440
7320
04:52
Thirty eight degrees.
91
292760
1700
04:54
So we definitely don't release it, it's definitely not a True T,
92
294460
3580
04:58
that would sound like this: Thirty eight degrees.
93
298040
3480
05:01
Thirty eight degrees.
94
301520
1680
05:03
And that's just more emphasis on the T.
95
303200
2360
05:05
It's a more clear pronunciation than we would give it.
96
305560
3040
05:08
We make it a stop.
97
308600
1480
05:10
Thirty eight degrees.
98
310080
1800
05:11
Thirty eight.
99
311880
760
05:12
Eight.
100
312640
520
05:13
Eight.
101
313160
500
05:13
Eight.
102
313660
520
05:14
Eight.
103
314180
780
05:14
We cut off that word by cutting off the air.
104
314960
2580
05:17
That abrupt stop is what lets us know this was a T.
105
317540
4920
05:22
Thirty eight degrees.
106
322460
2640
05:25
Thirty eight degrees.
107
325100
1620
05:26
Thirty eight degrees.
108
326720
1640
05:28
Thirty eight degrees.
109
328360
1520
05:29
The word ‘degrees’ ends in the Z sound and the word ‘Celsius’
110
329880
4320
05:34
begins with the S sound.
111
334200
2040
05:36
If I was speaking less clearly, a little bit more conversationally,
112
336240
4040
05:40
I would have said: Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
113
340280
3240
05:43
And I would have connected the two and just made a single S sound,
114
343520
4600
05:48
but I was being a little bit more clear here, just like up here when I said ‘a hundred degrees’,
115
348120
6140
05:54
and then I put a little break after ‘degrees’.
116
354260
2620
05:56
I did not connect with the same sound because I wanted
117
356880
3520
06:00
the ‘thirty eight degrees’ to stick out of the line a little bit for stress, for emphasis.
118
360400
7640
06:08
Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
119
368040
2640
06:10
Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
120
370680
2560
06:13
Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
121
373240
2660
06:15
Celsius.
122
375900
1280
06:17
Celsius.
123
377180
1040
06:18
First syllable stress: thirty eight degrees.
124
378220
3920
06:22
Stress on ‘thir—’.
125
382140
1760
06:23
Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
126
383900
3500
06:27
And then we also have stress on that first syllable.
127
387400
3720
06:31
Celsius.
128
391120
2200
06:33
Celsius.
129
393320
1480
06:34
Celsius.
130
394800
1640
06:36
Celsius.
131
396440
1200
06:37
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
132
397640
2140
06:39
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
133
399780
2560
06:42
One word is the most stressed there, is most clear, highest in pitch.
134
402340
6800
06:49
What is it?
135
409140
2000
06:51
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
136
411140
2380
06:53
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
137
413520
2700
06:56
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
138
416220
2340
06:58
Heat.
139
418560
960
06:59
Definitely ‘heat’ has the most stress.
140
419520
2320
07:01
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
141
421840
2340
07:04
And what do you notice about the T there?
142
424180
2860
07:07
A Stop T because the next word begins with a consonant.
143
427040
4780
07:11
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
144
431820
2480
07:14
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
145
434300
2580
07:16
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
146
436880
2420
07:19
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
147
439300
2280
07:21
So ‘mid’, a little bit of stress.
148
441580
2340
07:23
‘Wave’ is also a stressed word. It's not as stressed as ‘heat’, that's the most stressed,
149
443920
5100
07:29
but it is longer and more clear.
150
449020
1940
07:30
What about these two strings of words that are not stressed?
151
450960
5240
07:36
What do they sound like?
152
456200
1420
07:37
Let's just listen to them on their own.
153
457620
2000
07:39
First: We’re in the—
154
459620
2220
07:41
What does that sound like?
155
461840
2380
07:44
We're in the—
156
464220
1180
07:45
We're in the—
157
465400
1220
07:46
We're in the—
158
466620
620
07:47
We're in the—
159
467240
920
07:48
We're in the—
160
468160
780
07:48
We're in the—
161
468940
1340
07:50
Not very clear.
162
470280
1160
07:51
It’s definitely not: We're in the—,
163
471440
2700
07:54
that would be a stressed pronunciation.
164
474140
2000
07:56
They're all unstressed, said very quickly, no gaps between the words.
165
476140
4520
08:00
We're in the—
166
480660
580
08:01
We're in the—
167
481240
600
08:01
We're in the—
168
481840
500
08:02
We're in the—
169
482340
1720
08:04
We're in the—
170
484060
1200
08:05
We're in the—
171
485260
1200
08:06
We're in the—
172
486460
700
08:07
I would write this contraction ‘we’re’ with the schwa.
173
487160
5240
08:12
Schwa R, said very quickly, not too clear:
174
492400
3380
08:15
we’re, we’re, we’re, we’re, we’re.
175
495780
2500
08:18
Then ‘in’: We’re in— we’re in— we’re in— we’re in— with no break,
176
498280
5140
08:23
we’re in the—
177
503420
640
08:24
we’re in the—
178
504060
540
08:24
we’re in the—
179
504600
780
08:25
The word ‘the’ with no break, schwa.
180
505380
3480
08:28
We're in the—
181
508860
600
08:29
we're in the—
182
509460
500
08:29
we're in the—
183
509960
1640
08:31
We're in the—
184
511600
640
08:32
we're in the—
185
512240
1720
08:33
we're in the—
186
513960
500
08:34
Then we have the words ‘of’ and ‘a’.
187
514460
3080
08:37
Of a—
188
517540
1040
08:38
of a—
189
518580
900
08:39
of a—
190
519480
740
08:40
Of a—
191
520220
500
08:40
of a—
192
520720
500
08:41
of a—
193
521220
500
08:41
of a—
194
521720
500
08:42
of a—
195
522220
1020
08:43
I don't drop the V sound, and I would probably write this with the full UH as in butter rather than a schwa.
196
523240
7000
08:50
But it’s still said quickly, it's still unstressed.
197
530240
3220
08:53
Of a— of a— of a— of a—
198
533460
2560
08:56
That's really different than our most stressed word ‘heat’
199
536020
3600
08:59
which has up-down shape and is much longer.
200
539620
3960
09:03
These strings of unstressed words are very flat in pitch,
201
543580
5020
09:08
compared to the stressed words, and that's part of the important contrast of American English.
202
548600
5740
09:14
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
203
554340
2580
09:16
We're in the middle of a heat wave.
204
556920
2580
09:19
We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
205
559500
4060
09:23
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
206
563560
2500
09:26
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
207
566060
6240
09:32
So ‘heat wave’, ‘cold snap’,
208
572300
2740
09:35
in both of those phrases, both words are stressed but the first word is the most stressed.
209
575040
6260
09:41
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
210
581300
2420
09:43
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
211
583720
2380
09:46
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
212
586100
2280
09:48
So in this sentence fragment, ‘op’ and ‘cold’ and ‘snap’ are our most stressed words
213
588380
6560
09:54
and the other words like above are less clear, flatter in pitch, unstressed.
214
594940
5540
10:00
Let's listen to ‘which is the’.
215
600480
3980
10:04
Which is the—
216
604460
1280
10:05
which is the—
217
605740
1240
10:06
which is the—
218
606980
960
10:07
Which is the—
219
607940
780
10:08
which is the—
220
608720
840
10:09
which is the—
221
609560
640
10:10
which is the—
222
610200
1280
10:11
Now, I noticed I pronounced the word ‘the’ with a schwa.
223
611480
4120
10:15
There is an official rule about the pronunciation of ‘the’
224
615600
3740
10:19
and it says: when the next word begins with a vowel,
225
619340
2900
10:22
you make that an EE vowel: the opposite.
226
622240
4160
10:26
But I have noticed that many Americans don't do this and I did not do this here.
227
626400
5000
10:31
I made this a schwa.
228
631400
1340
10:32
Which is the—
229
632740
680
10:33
which is the—
230
633420
640
10:34
which is the—
231
634060
1280
10:35
Notice the S in ‘is’ makes the Z sound.
232
635340
3400
10:38
The letter S often makes the Z sound.
233
638740
2880
10:41
Don't be deceived and think because you see the letter S, that it's the S sound.
234
641620
5400
10:47
Which is the—
235
647020
1260
10:48
Which is the—
236
648280
1440
10:49
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
237
649720
2300
10:52
Opposite of a cold—
238
652020
1320
10:53
Opposite of a cold—
239
653340
1400
10:54
Opposite of a cold—
240
654740
1460
10:56
So these words are all linked together.
241
656200
2100
10:58
The T becomes a Flap T which links into the next word.
242
658300
4560
11:02
Opposite of a—
243
662860
1180
11:04
of a, of a, of a.
244
664040
1440
11:05
Opposite of a cold snap—
245
665480
2480
11:07
But all of these words link together, there's no break, there's no choppiness.
246
667960
5300
11:13
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
247
673260
2400
11:15
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
248
675660
2340
11:18
Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
249
678000
2340
11:20
Let's look at the ending D in ‘cold’.
250
680340
3120
11:23
It is not released.
251
683460
1440
11:24
That would sound like this: cold snap, cold snap, cold snap, cold ddd—.
252
684900
6940
11:31
We don't do that. We put the tongue up into position for the D,
253
691840
3500
11:35
and we vibrate the vocal cords: cold snap,
254
695340
6000
11:41
and then we go right into the S sound without releasing.
255
701340
2900
11:44
So the D sound is very subtle when it's followed by a consonant
256
704240
5220
11:49
because we don't release it but native speakers still definitely hear that vibration in the vocal cords.
257
709460
6060
11:55
Cold, cold, ddd, cold snap.
258
715520
4340
11:59
Cold snap, cold snap, cold snap.
259
719860
4400
12:04
So a ‘heat wave’ is a phrase we use when there's a period of time, a couple of days,
260
724260
5880
12:10
where the heat reaches an extreme high,
261
730140
2940
12:13
and a ‘cold snap’ is the exact opposite.
262
733080
2600
12:15
We use this phrase for a period of days where the weather reaches extremely low temperatures.
263
735680
6940
12:22
Usually, a heat wave or a cold snap
264
742620
2720
12:25
last just a few days, maybe at most, a week.
265
745340
3880
12:29
We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
266
749220
3780
12:33
We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
267
753000
3940
12:36
We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
268
756940
3900
12:40
And every day this week—
269
760840
1900
12:42
And every day this week—
270
762740
2340
12:45
And, and.
271
765080
1240
12:46
I drop the D there. We almost always drop the D in this word.
272
766320
4000
12:50
And, and.
273
770320
1600
12:51
I don't reduce the vowel. I still make: ah, ah, ahn,
274
771920
5680
12:57
it is common to make that a schwa, and that would sound like this:
275
777600
3300
13:00
Nn every day this week—
276
780900
1540
13:02
Nn every—
277
782440
740
13:03
Nn every—
278
783180
1020
13:04
But I did put more of a vowel in it: and every—
279
784200
2900
13:07
and every day—
280
787100
1940
13:09
every day this week—
281
789040
2160
13:11
‘Every’ the most stressed word there.
282
791200
3600
13:14
And every day this week—
283
794800
2080
13:16
And every day this week—
284
796880
2100
13:18
And every day this week—
285
798980
1880
13:20
‘Day’ and ‘week’ also a little bit longer than the unstressed word ‘this’,
286
800860
4960
13:25
but they don't have the height of pitch that ‘every’ has.
287
805820
4120
13:29
‘Every’ is most stressed.
288
809940
2040
13:31
Every day this week.
289
811980
2020
13:34
Let's listen to just these three words. Day this week.
290
814000
3840
13:37
So you can hear the contrast of long, short, long: da da da. Da da da.
291
817840
7760
13:45
Day this week.
292
825600
1640
13:47
Day this week—
293
827240
1340
13:48
Day this week—
294
828580
1220
13:49
Day this week is supposed to be upper nineties.
295
829800
3540
13:53
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
296
833340
2880
13:56
Let's write this out again.
297
836220
1500
13:57
I should do a better job of writing out my numbers for these exercises.
298
837720
6300
14:04
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
299
844020
2980
14:07
So I put a little break here.
300
847000
1680
14:08
Again, for emphasis.
301
848680
1900
14:10
I want to emphasize how hot it's supposed to be.
302
850580
3940
14:14
Upper nineties.
303
854520
2060
14:16
Upper nineties.
304
856580
3280
14:19
Both of those two-syllable words have first syllable stress: upper nineties.
305
859860
6160
14:26
And notice, this is a Flap T, it comes between two vowels.
306
866020
4800
14:30
Nineties, da, da, da, da, da.
307
870820
2960
14:33
Nineties.
308
873780
1760
14:35
Now, what's happening with the word ‘supposed’ in the phrase ‘supposed to’?
309
875540
6240
14:41
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
310
881780
2640
14:44
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
311
884420
2740
14:47
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
312
887160
2960
14:50
So we have ‘is supposed to’.
313
890120
3020
14:53
‘Is’ ends in the Z.
314
893140
1480
14:54
‘Supposed’ starts with an S.
315
894620
3200
14:57
Now here's a case where I am linking and I'm dropping the Z.
316
897820
3620
15:01
S is an unvoiced consonant and unvoiced consonants are considered to be strong.
317
901440
6700
15:08
Voiced consonants like Z are weak, so when they link together, the strong consonant wins.
318
908140
6180
15:14
So rather than saying: is supposed—
319
914320
3280
15:17
and making a Z than an S, it's just: Isspposed—
320
917600
4120
15:21
Isspposed— isss—
321
921720
2340
15:24
just one single S sound.
322
924060
2960
15:27
Is supposed to—
323
927020
1180
15:28
is supposed to—
324
928200
1040
15:29
is supposed to—
325
929240
880
15:30
Now, this word, this phrase, actually: supposed to,
326
930120
4600
15:34
never pronounced that clearly. We do a reduction with it.
327
934720
3500
15:38
Can you hear it?
328
938220
1640
15:39
Is supposed to—
329
939860
1020
15:40
is supposed to—
330
940880
1280
15:42
is supposed to—
331
942160
820
15:42
Supposed to—
332
942980
1560
15:44
supposed to—
333
944540
2760
15:47
So it's a three-syllable word, suh— sorry it's a three-syllable phrase.
334
947300
5200
15:52
Supposed to—
335
952500
2820
15:55
But I turn that into a two-syllable phrase.
336
955320
2720
15:58
Spposed to—
337
958040
2480
16:00
So officially, this would be a ZD ending, but I make it unvoiced ST
338
960520
8160
16:08
and when I link that into the next word that begins with a T,
339
968680
4420
16:13
the word ‘to’ with the reduced to the schwa ‘to’.
340
973100
3500
16:16
When I link it in, then I just make one T sound: spposed to—
341
976600
6440
16:23
And I'm basically dropping this first syllable: Suh— po—
342
983040
6360
16:29
I drop the vowel so it's just: Ssspose to—
343
989400
6140
16:35
Ssspose to—
344
995540
1520
16:37
So we do a couple things here: we reduce by instead of putting a vowel between the S and the P,
345
997060
5960
16:43
we just put the S right up next to the P, which drops the first unstressed syllable.
346
1003020
5540
16:48
So we take the S, put it on to the stressed syllable ‘po’: sspo—,
347
1008560
6020
16:54
and then we take the ending, we make it unvoiced, and we link it directly into the T.
348
1014580
5400
16:59
Ssspose to—
349
1019980
1180
17:01
Ssspose to—
350
1021160
1180
17:02
Ssspose to—
351
1022340
1380
17:03
I actually have a video where I go over the pronunciation of ‘supposed to’ and I give some more examples.
352
1023720
7840
17:11
So I’ll link to that at the end of this video.
353
1031560
3080
17:14
But practice that with me for a moment: is supposed to—
354
1034640
4400
17:19
is supposed to—
355
1039040
1240
17:20
is supposed to—
356
1040280
2160
17:22
That's a very natural way to pronounce those three words together.
357
1042440
4840
17:27
Is supposed to—
358
1047280
1380
17:28
Is supposed to—
359
1048660
940
17:29
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
360
1049600
2500
17:32
I know some people love the heat.
361
1052100
2320
17:34
I am not one of these people.
362
1054420
2460
17:36
Okay, then I have: I know some people love the heat.
363
1056880
4300
17:41
It's very clear there, I think, what the most stressed syllable is.
364
1061180
3680
17:44
What about in the next sentence?
365
1064860
2920
17:47
I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
366
1067780
4920
17:52
I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
367
1072700
4720
17:57
I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
368
1077420
4360
18:01
I am not—
369
1081780
2660
18:04
Okay, so in both of those phrases, I bring the stressed word out even more,
370
1084440
4560
18:09
even more up-down shape, even more putting a little bit more strength on the first consonant.
371
1089000
7600
18:16
I also make a True T here at the end of ‘not’.
372
1096600
3220
18:19
That's, again, because I'm exaggerating that word.
373
1099820
3500
18:23
I'm making it even more clear than normal.
374
1103320
3620
18:26
Normally, if I was going to link that into the sentence, it would be a Stop T
375
1106940
5540
18:32
because the next word begins with a consonant.
376
1112480
2300
18:34
I know you're thinking: wait, that's the letter O, that's a vowel,
377
1114780
4500
18:39
but phonetically, it's written with the consonant: one.
378
1119280
4660
18:43
So that would be a stop T, but I'm making it a true T
379
1123940
3460
18:47
for extra emphasis, to bring it away from the rest of the sentence a little bit for stress.
380
1127400
5600
18:53
I am not one of these people.
381
1133000
3580
18:56
I am not one of these people.
382
1136580
2520
18:59
I am not one of these people.
383
1139100
2740
19:01
I am not one of these people.
384
1141840
2360
19:04
So we have a couple other words that have a little bit more length.
385
1144200
3020
19:07
I know some people love the heat.
386
1147220
5480
19:12
But it's not the same as ‘love’ which is the most stressed.
387
1152700
4540
19:17
And I give a light True T here at the end. It would also be very common to make that a Stop T.
388
1157240
6940
19:24
I know some people love the heat.
389
1164180
2520
19:26
I know some people love the heat.
390
1166700
2640
19:29
I know some people love the heat.
391
1169340
2120
19:31
I am not one of these people.
392
1171460
2680
19:34
‘One’ a little bit more length.
393
1174140
2240
19:36
One of these people.
394
1176380
3220
19:39
And a little bit more length on the stressed syllable of people as well.
395
1179600
4020
19:43
I am not one of these people.
396
1183620
3520
19:47
I am not one of these people.
397
1187140
2720
19:49
I am not one of these people.
398
1189860
2560
19:52
I am not one of these people.
399
1192420
2720
19:55
Of these, of these, of these.
400
1195140
1720
19:56
Said quickly, unstressed, flatter in pitch.
401
1196860
4940
20:01
One of these—
402
1201800
760
20:02
One of these—
403
1202560
1060
20:03
One of these people—
404
1203620
1520
20:05
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day.
405
1205140
3300
20:08
Weather like this, weather like this.
406
1208440
3320
20:11
So ‘weather’ isn't super clearly pronounced but I do stress the first syllable.
407
1211760
5640
20:17
The stressed syllable.
408
1217400
1840
20:19
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
409
1219240
4420
20:23
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
410
1223660
2760
20:26
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
411
1226420
2920
20:29
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
412
1229340
6400
20:35
Stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
413
1235740
10680
20:46
So those are the longest, most clear words.
414
1246420
3840
20:50
Of course, we have other stressed words: makes, want, inside, venture out, after.
415
1250260
8060
20:58
But when you have many stressed words in a sentence,
416
1258320
4140
21:02
some are going to take precedence and are going to sound more stressed
417
1262460
3480
21:05
and others will sound more unstressed
418
1265940
2500
21:08
and that's what's happening here.
419
1268440
1520
21:09
All stressed words, all nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, will not be equally stressed in a sentence.
420
1269960
7920
21:17
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
421
1277880
6640
21:24
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
422
1284520
6600
21:31
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
423
1291120
6580
21:37
Are there any reductions?
424
1297700
2620
21:40
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
425
1300320
6740
21:47
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
426
1307060
6600
21:53
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
427
1313660
6480
22:00
I definitely hear this one: want to.
428
1320140
2800
22:02
So common to reduce that: makes me wanna, makes me wanna.
429
1322940
5640
22:08
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
430
1328580
3560
22:12
So these words here from ‘like’ all the way to ‘wanna’, a little flatter in pitch,
431
1332140
7700
22:19
they don't have the stressed shape of the other syllables in this sentence.
432
1339840
5360
22:25
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
433
1345200
3060
22:28
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
434
1348260
2580
22:30
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
435
1350840
2580
22:33
Makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out—
436
1353420
3780
22:37
And only, and only.
437
1357200
2640
22:39
Dropped D in ‘and’.
438
1359840
2160
22:42
And only venture out—
439
1362000
2180
22:44
And only venture out—
440
1364180
1920
22:46
And only venture out—
441
1366100
1880
22:47
And only venture out after the Sun has set—
442
1367980
3340
22:51
And I put a little break here after ‘out’.
443
1371320
2420
22:53
I make that a Stop T.
444
1373740
2000
22:55
If I didn't put a break and I was linking it in,
445
1375740
2580
22:58
then it would be a Flap T because it would come between two vowels or diphthongs.
446
1378320
4440
23:02
Out after, out after.
447
1382760
2220
23:04
But I said: venture out after the sun is set.
448
1384980
3420
23:08
So I put a little break there, breaking up my longer sentence into smaller thought groups.
449
1388400
7780
23:16
And only venture out after the sun has set.
450
1396180
3600
23:19
And only venture out after the sun has set.
451
1399780
3520
23:23
And only venture out after the sun has set.
452
1403300
3560
23:26
Sun has set, sun has set.
453
1406860
3640
23:30
So two unstressed words, flatter in pitch.
454
1410500
3440
23:33
After the sun has set.
455
1413940
4760
23:38
Contrast of stressed and unstressed, so important.
456
1418700
3920
23:42
After the sun has set.
457
1422620
2100
23:44
After the sun has set.
458
1424720
2260
23:46
After the sun has set.
459
1426980
2180
23:49
In the next section, in the imitation section,
460
1429160
3160
23:52
I'm going to be breaking up longer sentences like this into smaller segments for you to imitate with.
461
1432320
7460
23:59
And now, the imitation exercise.
462
1439780
2660
24:02
You’ll hear each phrase three times.
463
1442440
2580
24:05
Then there will be a break for you to repeat it.
464
1445020
2800
24:07
Repeat it out loud, and try to match exactly what you hear.
465
1447820
3800
24:11
Then I’ll say it one more time, and you say it with me.
466
1451620
3360
24:14
Try not to think about what you’re saying and how to pronounce it,
467
1454980
3440
24:18
instead, just focus on imitating what you hear.
468
1458420
3280
24:21
It’s not a bad idea to practice this section several times.
469
1461700
4300
24:26
This is where you can really change some of your speaking habits.
470
1466000
4100
24:30
471
1470100
222640
28:12
Great job.
472
1692740
1100
28:13
If you want to see other Ben Franklin videos, check out this playlist.
473
1693840
3940
28:17
If you liked this video, please share it with a friend.
474
1697780
3640
28:21
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English
475
1701420
4240
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