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

114,569 views ・ 2018-07-24

Rachel's English


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You’ve told me one of your favorite exercises is a Ben Franklin exercise,
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where we study everything about American English pronunciation
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to help you improve your listening comprehension and understand how to sound more American.
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So today, we’re going to do a Ben Franklin exercise on a monologue about the weather.
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First, we’ll listen to the full monologue, then there will be an in-depth analysis.
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After that, after you study everything about stress,
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reductions, and linking, there will be a listen and repeat section.
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This is where you get to practice out loud and see if you can imitate what I’ve done.
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First, the monologue.
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Today it’s a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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That’s thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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We’re in the middle of a heat wave, which is the opposite of a cold snap,
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and every day this week is supposed to be upper nineties.
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I know some people love the heat.
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I am not one of these people.
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Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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Now, the analysis.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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What do you hear is being the most stressed words in that little thought group?
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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I hear the stressed syllable of ‘a hundred’ and ‘Philadelphia’.
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Let me write this out.
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A hundred.
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So stress is on the first syllable of ‘hun’.
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A hundred.
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Today, it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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And I feel that I'm emphasizing the H a little bit more than normal,
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that's to add stress to that syllable, to that word.
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A hundred.
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Hundred, making the H a little stronger than normal.
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A hundred degrees.
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A hundred degrees.
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A hundred degrees.
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And I break it up a little bit. There's a little break between ‘today’ and ‘it's’.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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And then I do another little break here.
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Why did I do that?
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Well, I think I did it to add emphasis to how hot it is.
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It's a hundred degrees.
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When we put a little break before
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a segment in a thought group, it helps to add stress to it
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just like exaggerating the beginning consonant did.
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It's a hundred degrees.
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Today it's a hundred degrees.
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Today it's a hundred degrees.
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Today it's a hundred degrees in Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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This is a long word and long words can be intimidating.
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Notice the PH, which is in here twice, is pronounced as an F.
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Philadelphia.
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Phila-del-phia.
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So the syllable ‘Phil’ has a little bit of secondary stress, it's a little bit longer
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but ‘del’ has the most stress, the up-down shape of the voice,
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and that's what we can use to shape the word.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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Philadelphia.
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That's thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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That's thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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I did it again, I put a little break before the TH for ‘thirty’ and that adds stress.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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If I made it more smooth: That's thirty eight degrees.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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Then I lose some of the stress that I want to put on how hot it is.
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I want to put stress on the number: That's thirty eight degrees.
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Let's write that out too.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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That's thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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Okay, we have a couple things happening with our T's here.
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We have this first T in ‘thirty’, that's a flap T.
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And the T is a flap T when it comes between two vowels or
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when it comes after an R before a vowel like in the word ‘thirty’.
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Thirty.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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So the T in ‘eight’ is a Stop T because the next sound is a consonant.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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So we definitely don't release it, it's definitely not a True T,
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that would sound like this: Thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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And that's just more emphasis on the T.
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It's a more clear pronunciation than we would give it.
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We make it a stop.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight.
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Eight.
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Eight.
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Eight.
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Eight.
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We cut off that word by cutting off the air.
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That abrupt stop is what lets us know this was a T.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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Thirty eight degrees.
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The word ‘degrees’ ends in the Z sound and the word ‘Celsius’
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begins with the S sound.
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If I was speaking less clearly, a little bit more conversationally,
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I would have said: Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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And I would have connected the two and just made a single S sound,
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but I was being a little bit more clear here, just like up here when I said ‘a hundred degrees’,
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and then I put a little break after ‘degrees’.
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I did not connect with the same sound because I wanted
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the ‘thirty eight degrees’ to stick out of the line a little bit for stress, for emphasis.
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Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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Celsius.
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Celsius.
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First syllable stress: thirty eight degrees.
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Stress on ‘thir—’.
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Thirty eight degrees Celsius.
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And then we also have stress on that first syllable.
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Celsius.
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Celsius.
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Celsius.
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Celsius.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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One word is the most stressed there, is most clear, highest in pitch.
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What is it?
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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Heat.
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Definitely ‘heat’ has the most stress.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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And what do you notice about the T there?
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A Stop T because the next word begins with a consonant.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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So ‘mid’, a little bit of stress.
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‘Wave’ is also a stressed word. It's not as stressed as ‘heat’, that's the most stressed,
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but it is longer and more clear.
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What about these two strings of words that are not stressed?
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What do they sound like?
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Let's just listen to them on their own.
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First: We’re in the—
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What does that sound like?
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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Not very clear.
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It’s definitely not: We're in the—,
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that would be a stressed pronunciation.
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They're all unstressed, said very quickly, no gaps between the words.
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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We're in the—
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I would write this contraction ‘we’re’ with the schwa.
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Schwa R, said very quickly, not too clear:
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we’re, we’re, we’re, we’re, we’re.
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Then ‘in’: We’re in— we’re in— we’re in— we’re in— with no break,
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we’re in the—
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we’re in the—
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we’re in the—
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The word ‘the’ with no break, schwa.
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We're in the—
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we're in the—
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we're in the—
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We're in the—
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we're in the—
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we're in the—
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Then we have the words ‘of’ and ‘a’.
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Of a—
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of a—
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of a—
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Of a—
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of a—
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of a—
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of a—
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of a—
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I don't drop the V sound, and I would probably write this with the full UH as in butter rather than a schwa.
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But it’s still said quickly, it's still unstressed.
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Of a— of a— of a— of a—
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That's really different than our most stressed word ‘heat’
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which has up-down shape and is much longer.
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These strings of unstressed words are very flat in pitch,
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compared to the stressed words, and that's part of the important contrast of American English.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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So ‘heat wave’, ‘cold snap’,
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in both of those phrases, both words are stressed but the first word is the most stressed.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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So in this sentence fragment, ‘op’ and ‘cold’ and ‘snap’ are our most stressed words
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and the other words like above are less clear, flatter in pitch, unstressed.
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Let's listen to ‘which is the’.
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Which is the—
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which is the—
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which is the—
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Which is the—
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which is the—
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which is the—
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which is the—
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Now, I noticed I pronounced the word ‘the’ with a schwa.
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There is an official rule about the pronunciation of ‘the’
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and it says: when the next word begins with a vowel,
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you make that an EE vowel: the opposite.
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But I have noticed that many Americans don't do this and I did not do this here.
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I made this a schwa.
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Which is the—
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which is the—
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which is the—
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Notice the S in ‘is’ makes the Z sound.
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The letter S often makes the Z sound.
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Don't be deceived and think because you see the letter S, that it's the S sound.
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Which is the—
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Which is the—
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Opposite of a cold—
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Opposite of a cold—
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Opposite of a cold—
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So these words are all linked together.
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The T becomes a Flap T which links into the next word.
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Opposite of a—
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of a, of a, of a.
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Opposite of a cold snap—
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But all of these words link together, there's no break, there's no choppiness.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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Let's look at the ending D in ‘cold’.
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It is not released.
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That would sound like this: cold snap, cold snap, cold snap, cold ddd—.
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We don't do that. We put the tongue up into position for the D,
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and we vibrate the vocal cords: cold snap,
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and then we go right into the S sound without releasing.
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So the D sound is very subtle when it's followed by a consonant
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because we don't release it but native speakers still definitely hear that vibration in the vocal cords.
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Cold, cold, ddd, cold snap.
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Cold snap, cold snap, cold snap.
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So a ‘heat wave’ is a phrase we use when there's a period of time, a couple of days,
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where the heat reaches an extreme high,
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and a ‘cold snap’ is the exact opposite.
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We use this phrase for a period of days where the weather reaches extremely low temperatures.
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Usually, a heat wave or a cold snap
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last just a few days, maybe at most, a week.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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We're in the middle of a heat wave which is the opposite of a cold snap.
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And every day this week—
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And every day this week—
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And, and.
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I drop the D there. We almost always drop the D in this word.
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And, and.
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I don't reduce the vowel. I still make: ah, ah, ahn,
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it is common to make that a schwa, and that would sound like this:
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Nn every day this week—
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Nn every—
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Nn every—
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But I did put more of a vowel in it: and every—
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and every day—
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every day this week—
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‘Every’ the most stressed word there.
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And every day this week—
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And every day this week—
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And every day this week—
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‘Day’ and ‘week’ also a little bit longer than the unstressed word ‘this’,
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but they don't have the height of pitch that ‘every’ has.
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‘Every’ is most stressed.
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Every day this week.
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Let's listen to just these three words. Day this week.
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So you can hear the contrast of long, short, long: da da da. Da da da.
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Day this week.
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13:47
Day this week—
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Day this week—
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Day this week is supposed to be upper nineties.
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13:53
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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Let's write this out again.
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I should do a better job of writing out my numbers for these exercises.
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Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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So I put a little break here.
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Again, for emphasis.
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I want to emphasize how hot it's supposed to be.
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Upper nineties.
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Upper nineties.
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Both of those two-syllable words have first syllable stress: upper nineties.
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And notice, this is a Flap T, it comes between two vowels.
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Nineties, da, da, da, da, da.
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Nineties.
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14:35
Now, what's happening with the word ‘supposed’ in the phrase ‘supposed to’?
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Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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14:47
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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14:50
So we have ‘is supposed to’.
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‘Is’ ends in the Z.
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‘Supposed’ starts with an S.
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Now here's a case where I am linking and I'm dropping the Z.
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S is an unvoiced consonant and unvoiced consonants are considered to be strong.
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Voiced consonants like Z are weak, so when they link together, the strong consonant wins.
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So rather than saying: is supposed—
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15:17
and making a Z than an S, it's just: Isspposed—
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Isspposed— isss—
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just one single S sound.
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15:27
Is supposed to—
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is supposed to—
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15:29
is supposed to—
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Now, this word, this phrase, actually: supposed to,
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never pronounced that clearly. We do a reduction with it.
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Can you hear it?
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Is supposed to—
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is supposed to—
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is supposed to—
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Supposed to—
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15:44
supposed to—
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So it's a three-syllable word, suh— sorry it's a three-syllable phrase.
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Supposed to—
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But I turn that into a two-syllable phrase.
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15:58
Spposed to—
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So officially, this would be a ZD ending, but I make it unvoiced ST
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and when I link that into the next word that begins with a T,
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the word ‘to’ with the reduced to the schwa ‘to’.
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When I link it in, then I just make one T sound: spposed to—
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And I'm basically dropping this first syllable: Suh— po—
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I drop the vowel so it's just: Ssspose to—
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Ssspose to—
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So we do a couple things here: we reduce by instead of putting a vowel between the S and the P,
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16:43
we just put the S right up next to the P, which drops the first unstressed syllable.
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So we take the S, put it on to the stressed syllable ‘po’: sspo—,
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and then we take the ending, we make it unvoiced, and we link it directly into the T.
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Ssspose to—
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Ssspose to—
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Ssspose to—
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I actually have a video where I go over the pronunciation of ‘supposed to’ and I give some more examples.
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So I’ll link to that at the end of this video.
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17:14
But practice that with me for a moment: is supposed to—
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is supposed to—
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is supposed to—
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17:22
That's a very natural way to pronounce those three words together.
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Is supposed to—
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Is supposed to—
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17:29
Is supposed to be upper nineties.
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17:32
I know some people love the heat.
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17:34
I am not one of these people.
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17:36
Okay, then I have: I know some people love the heat.
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17:41
It's very clear there, I think, what the most stressed syllable is.
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What about in the next sentence?
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I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
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17:52
I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
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17:57
I know some people love the heat. I am not one of these people.
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18:01
I am not—
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18:04
Okay, so in both of those phrases, I bring the stressed word out even more,
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18:09
even more up-down shape, even more putting a little bit more strength on the first consonant.
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18:16
I also make a True T here at the end of ‘not’.
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18:19
That's, again, because I'm exaggerating that word.
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18:23
I'm making it even more clear than normal.
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18:26
Normally, if I was going to link that into the sentence, it would be a Stop T
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18:32
because the next word begins with a consonant.
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18:34
I know you're thinking: wait, that's the letter O, that's a vowel,
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18:39
but phonetically, it's written with the consonant: one.
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18:43
So that would be a stop T, but I'm making it a true T
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18:47
for extra emphasis, to bring it away from the rest of the sentence a little bit for stress.
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18:53
I am not one of these people.
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18:56
I am not one of these people.
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18:59
I am not one of these people.
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19:01
I am not one of these people.
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19:04
So we have a couple other words that have a little bit more length.
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19:07
I know some people love the heat.
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But it's not the same as ‘love’ which is the most stressed.
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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.
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19:24
I know some people love the heat.
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I know some people love the heat.
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19:29
I know some people love the heat.
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19:31
I am not one of these people.
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19:34
‘One’ a little bit more length.
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19:36
One of these people.
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19:39
And a little bit more length on the stressed syllable of people as well.
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19:43
I am not one of these people.
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19:47
I am not one of these people.
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19:49
I am not one of these people.
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19:52
I am not one of these people.
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19:55
Of these, of these, of these.
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19:56
Said quickly, unstressed, flatter in pitch.
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20:01
One of these—
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One of these—
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20:03
One of these people—
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20:05
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day.
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20:08
Weather like this, weather like this.
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20:11
So ‘weather’ isn't super clearly pronounced but I do stress the first syllable.
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20:17
The stressed syllable.
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20:19
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
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20:23
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
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20:26
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
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20:29
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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20:35
Stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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20:46
So those are the longest, most clear words.
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20:50
Of course, we have other stressed words: makes, want, inside, venture out, after.
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20:58
But when you have many stressed words in a sentence,
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21:02
some are going to take precedence and are going to sound more stressed
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21:05
and others will sound more unstressed
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21:08
and that's what's happening here.
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21:09
All stressed words, all nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, will not be equally stressed in a sentence.
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21:17
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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21:24
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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6600
21:31
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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21:37
Are there any reductions?
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21:40
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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6740
21:47
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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21:53
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out after the sun has set.
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22:00
I definitely hear this one: want to.
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22:02
So common to reduce that: makes me wanna, makes me wanna.
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22:08
Weather like this makes me want to stay inside.
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22:12
So these words here from ‘like’ all the way to ‘wanna’, a little flatter in pitch,
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22:19
they don't have the stressed shape of the other syllables in this sentence.
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22:25
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
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22:28
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
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22:30
Makes me want to stay inside all day—
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22:33
Makes me want to stay inside all day and only venture out—
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22:37
And only, and only.
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22:39
Dropped D in ‘and’.
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22:42
And only venture out—
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22:44
And only venture out—
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22:46
And only venture out—
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22:47
And only venture out after the Sun has set—
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22:51
And I put a little break here after ‘out’.
443
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22:53
I make that a Stop T.
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22:55
If I didn't put a break and I was linking it in,
445
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22:58
then it would be a Flap T because it would come between two vowels or diphthongs.
446
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23:02
Out after, out after.
447
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23:04
But I said: venture out after the sun is set.
448
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23:08
So I put a little break there, breaking up my longer sentence into smaller thought groups.
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23:16
And only venture out after the sun has set.
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3600
23:19
And only venture out after the sun has set.
451
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23:23
And only venture out after the sun has set.
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23:26
Sun has set, sun has set.
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23:30
So two unstressed words, flatter in pitch.
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23:33
After the sun has set.
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23:38
Contrast of stressed and unstressed, so important.
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23:42
After the sun has set.
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2100
23:44
After the sun has set.
458
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23:46
After the sun has set.
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23:49
In the next section, in the imitation section,
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23:52
I'm going to be breaking up longer sentences like this into smaller segments for you to imitate with.
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23:59
And now, the imitation exercise.
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24:02
You’ll hear each phrase three times.
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24:05
Then there will be a break for you to repeat it.
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24:07
Repeat it out loud, and try to match exactly what you hear.
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24:11
Then I’ll say it one more time, and you say it with me.
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24:14
Try not to think about what you’re saying and how to pronounce it,
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24:18
instead, just focus on imitating what you hear.
468
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24:21
It’s not a bad idea to practice this section several times.
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24:26
This is where you can really change some of your speaking habits.
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24:30
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28:12
Great job.
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28:13
If you want to see other Ben Franklin videos, check out this playlist.
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28:17
If you liked this video, please share it with a friend.
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28:21
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English
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