English Conversation

60,241 views ・ 2018-01-09

Rachel's English


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

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You guys love Ben Franklin videos.
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They're one of the best ways for you to improve listening comprehension
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and learn tricks to sound more natural when speaking English, like using specific reductions.
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This January, you're getting five all new Ben Franklin videos
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where we do a full analysis of real American English conversations.
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Today's topic, word game.
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Let's get started with this analysis.
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First, the whole conversation.
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Team two, listen up.
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- I'm looking at you. - Woot, woot!
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Three, two, one.
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Okay. This is something that you use to sweep the floor, and you plug it in.
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- Broom. - No, you plug it in. Vacuum.
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- Uh, it’s two words. - Vacuum cleaner.
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Now, the analysis.
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Team two, listen up.
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Team two, listen up.
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So we had divided our family into two teams
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and both ‘team’ and ‘two’ are stressed. Team two.
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But ‘two’ is the most stressed because
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that is the part that makes it different from team one.
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And actually, I wrote that poorly. That should look like this. Team two.
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In English, we don't want choppy words within a thought group.
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We don't want them to feel separate.
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We always want them to feel very connected.
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The intonation, the pitch, always changes smoothly.
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Team two. So the ending M right into the T with no break.
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Team two, listen up.
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Team two.
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Team two.
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Team two, listen up.
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Again here, it links together.
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Smooth: Listen up.
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The T in listen is always silent.
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The ending N linking into the beginning vowel.
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Nup— listen up.
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Listen up.
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Listen up.
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Listen up.
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What's going on with the P here? I'm not releasing it. Up. Ppp--
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I'm not releasing it with a puff of air, my lips closed, that cuts off the sound, that's the stop part of the stop consonant.
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But then they don't open releasing the air.
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This is fairly normal. It's fairly common to drop the release part of a stop consonant
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when it comes at the end of a thought group. Listen up.
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You can see my lips come together.
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Listen up.
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That gives the idea of the P and then that's it.
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I move on to my next phrase.
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‘Listen up’ is a phrasal verb.
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How is it different from ‘listen’?
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It's something you would use if you're trying to get the attention of someone or even more often, of a group of people.
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This is something you might say if you feel like people have not been paying attention
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and now you really need them to.
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You're saying: I need everyone's attention because what I'm about to say is really important.
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Listen up. Listen up.
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Listen up. Listen up. Listen up.
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I'm looking at you.
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I'm looking at you.
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I say this right as someone on my team cheers me on with a little high-pitched: woot woot!
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That's just something, a phrase you might use
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to show excitement or to cheer someone on in a competition.
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I'm looking at you.
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I'm looking at you.
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I'm looking at you.
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So I say I'm looking at you.
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‘Look’ and ‘you’ get the most stress in this phrase.
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A couple things happen here. First of all,
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well, we have the contraction ‘I am’ to I'm
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which is said quickly: I’m. I'm. I'm looking— I'm looking—
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‘Look’ being the stressed syllable there, then I changed the NG sound, I just make it an N sound. Lookin.
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So I make the sound at the front of my mouth with the front of my tongue
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rather than at the back of my mouth with the back of my tongue.
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I'm looking at you. Lookin.
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I'm looking at you. I'm looking at you. I'm looking at you.
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This is a little bit more casual of a pronunciation
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and we definitely change the NG to the N
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quite a bit in -ing words but I don't recommend doing it all the time.
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There's definitely such thing as doing it too much.
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We tend to do it more with the -ing words that are the most common.
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What's going on with ‘at you’?
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First of all, I reduce the vowel in ‘at’ so it's: uh- uh- uh- the schwa.
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Then we hear a CH sound. Where's that coming from?
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When a word ends in a T and the next word is ‘you’ or ‘your’,
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it's not uncommon to combine those to link them together with a CH sound: choo— choo—
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at you— at you—
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I’m looking at you.
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at you— at you— I’m looking at you.
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I must have thought that somebody on my team had not been paying very good attention because I say ‘listen up’
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which means what I’m saying next really matters,
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I’m about to start, and then I say ‘I’m looking at you.’
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specifically calling out someone on my team.
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I’m looking at you.
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Three. Two. One.
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Then my nephew gives me a countdown for the timer.
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Three separate content words.
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Three.
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Two.
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One.
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All with an up-down shape of stress.
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Three. Two. One.
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We never want flat pitches in our stressed words.
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This up-down shape of stress, this change of pitch of intonation,
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is what marks a stressed syllable. It's very natural American English to do this.
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Three. Two. One.
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Three. Two. One.
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Three. Two. One.
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Okay this is something that you use…
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Okay this is something--
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So the words ‘this’ and ‘is’, they would usually be said very quickly.
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This is something—
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but as I read it, I'm still thinking about what to say,
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so they get made longer. This is—
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They're both turned into stressed syllables but this is not how it would normally be pronounced.
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‘This is’ becomes: this is— this is— this is something— this is something—
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That's the change that's important in conversational American English.
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Now here of course it's not quite conversational. This is different. I'm playing a game
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and I'm taking more time as I'm thinking on the spot.
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That means thinking without prior preparation about what to say.
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This is something—
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This is something—
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This is something that you use—
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Something that you use—
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So here we have a T followed by ‘you’. I do not make it a CH.
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I make it a Stop T: that you use—
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but I do reduce the AH vowel.
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‘That’ becomes: that— that— that—
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This helps me say this word more quickly.
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That you use--
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That you use--
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That you use--
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That you use to sweep the floor.
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To sweep the floor--
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Okay, another example of an over pronunciation of a word.
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The word ‘to’ almost never pronounced this way in conversational English. To.
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Why did I do that? I was thinking of what is the right word to say.
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So in conversational English, it would be: to sweep—
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to— to— to—
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The OO vowel reduces to the schwa: to sweep— to sweep— to sweep the floor—
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to sweep the floor—
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to sweep the floor—
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to sweep the floor and you plug it in.
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To sweep the floor and you plug it in.
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Sweep.
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Floor.
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To sweep the floor.
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Sweep the floor. Sweep the floor.
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Listen to these three words and pay attention to the stress pattern. It's long, short, long.
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Sweep the floor. Sweep the floor. Sweep the floor.
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Sweep the floor.
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So the word ‘the’ doesn't have this up-down shape of stress. It's flatter and it’s said very quickly.
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the-- the-- the--
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Sweep the-- sweep the-- sweep the floor and you plug it in.
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And you plug it in— and—
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Drop the D so even though I hold this word out a little bit as I think
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and I don't reduce the vowel, the vowel is still ah.
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I do drop the D, just a very common reduction of that word.
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You plug it in—
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And you plug it in-- And you plug it in-- And you plug it in--
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So here we have three words: plug it in,
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where you have two links of ending consonant to beginning vowel: plug it— git— git—
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So you can think of the ending consonant G
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as beginning the next word git— git— plug it— plug it— plug it—
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That may help you link.
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It in— it in— it in—
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Here, again, we link the ending T right into the vowel IH and it changes to a flap T.
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Why does it do that? Because it comes between two vowels.
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It in— it in— it in—
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plug it in— plug it in—
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plug it in— plug it in— plug it in—
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‘Plug in’ is a phrasal verb and we use this with electronics or things that charge,
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where you have the plug and you either insert it into the socket in the wall,
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or maybe you're inserting the plug into the device itself like your phone.
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This is the phrasal verb to ‘plug in’.
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Plug it in— plug it in— plug it in—
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People guess broom. Broom.
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No, you don't plug a broom in.
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This was my, my main clue: sweep.
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Of course people are going to guess broom but when I said plug it in,
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remember this has to do with electronics, so that was my big clue. It's not a broom.
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No, you plug it in.
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Okay so there's some shouting here. I say ‘no, you plug it in.’ no. No.
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Just like ‘Three. Two. One.’, it's a one word thought group, and it has that up-down shape. No.
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Then I say ‘you plug it in’
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as people are yelling and again we have this nice linking ending G into the beginning vowel
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and then the flap T to link these two words. Plug it in.
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And as I do that, they get, they get the idea.
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‘Vacuum’, they yell.
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- Broom. - Vacuum!
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- Broom. - Vacuum!
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- Broom. - Vacuum!
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But I need to get them to say ‘vacuum cleaner’ so I give them one more clue.
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- Broom. - Vacuum!
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Uh, it’s two words.
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It's two words.
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'Two words' stress there.
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'The word ‘it's’ lower in pitch, flatter, faster.
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Two words.
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Two words. Two words.
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- Two words. - Vacuum cleaner.
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Vacuum cleaner. Vacuum cleaner.
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So now they're stressing ‘clean’ because that’s what makes the word different from vacuum.
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Although normally, in a compound word like this, it's the first word that is stressed,
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so that would be: vacuum cleaner.
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Other examples of compound words: eyeball.
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First word is stressed.
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Mailman.
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First word is stressed.
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Basketball.
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First word is stressed. In this case, well as always, it's only the stressed syllable.
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So bas— basketball.
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The first syllable is stressed.
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Compound words, first word is stressed.
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Let's listen to the whole conversation one more time.
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Team two, listen up.
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-I'm looking at you. -Woot, woot!
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Three, two, one.
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Okay. This is something that you use to sweep the floor, and you plug it in.
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- Broom. - No, you plug it in. Vacuum.
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- Uh, it’s two words. - Vacuum cleaner.
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That analysis is really fun and helpful, right?
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Click here to see other Ben Franklin videos on my YouTube channel.
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But if you’re ready to go even further, even bigger,
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I challenge you this January, to start the new year off right with a new commitment to your English Studies.
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Join my online school, Rachel’s English Academy.
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There, you will find tons of Ben Franklin speech analysis videos just like this one
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that you can’t get anywhere else.
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They’re longer, they cover more conversation, and I add more each month.
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You have to have the interest.
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You have to make the time to watch the videos, to work with the audio. Can you do this?
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To help you get in the door, to help you get started,
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I’m offering a discount for the month of January.
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