Perfect English | The most important English words! 4/11

417,394 views ・ 2018-05-22

Rachel's English


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

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Today, you’re getting video 4 in the 100 most common words in English list.
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We’re going over the real pronunciation,
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not the full pronunciation,
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not the pronunciation you might have been taught,
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but the pronunciation that Americans actually use in spoken English.
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If you didn’t see video one, click here to watch it now.
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It is important to understand what we’re doing here studying reductions.
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We start this video with number 31, and yes, it’s a great reduction.
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The word OR.
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You might have learned that the pronunciation of this word is ‘or’,
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like it would rhyme with ‘more’ or the number ‘four’.
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But ‘more’ and ‘four’ are content words.
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That means they will often be stressed in a sentence, given more time.
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‘Or’ is a function word.
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That means it’s not stressed in the sentence.
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It’s not one of the most important words,
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and it’s said very quickly.
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Remember, English is a stress-timed language.
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That means all syllables are not equal in length.
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We have long syllables and short syllables,
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and speaking with that contrast is really important
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in sounding natural in American English.
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So ‘or’ isn’t pronounced
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‘or’ in conversation,
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that’s too long, it’s too clear.
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We need it to be shorter.
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It’s actually ‘or’,
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said very quickly, low in pitch.
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It can also be reduced.
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Then it’s pronounced ‘or’,
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the vowel reduces to the schwa.
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You don’t have to try to make the schwa, it gets absorbed by the R sound.
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Just make an R. Rr--
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Let’s put it in a sentence:
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Would you like white or brown rice?
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White or brown?
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Would you like white or brown rice?
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White or brown?
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white-rrr
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rr-- rr-- rr-- rr--
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Just an R sound linking these two words.
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I’m leaving Monday or Tuesday.
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Monday-rr. Monday-rr. Rr-- rr--
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Monday or Tuesday.
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Just an extra R sound between.
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Great rhythmic contrast.
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If you’re just jumping into the series,
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you may be thinking,
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how important are reductions,
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how frequent are reductions?
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Out of the 31 most common words in English that we’ve studied so far,
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only one is always stressed.
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Thirty are usually unstressed or reduced.
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So there’s your answer.
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Most common words: What’s 32?
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The indefinite article ‘an’. An.
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Unstressed, it reduces to the schwa, an-- an--
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we actually already covered that one
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when we learned about the indefinite article ‘a’ or 'a'
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back in video one of this series.
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33: Will.
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If this is the only verb in the sentence --
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I will.
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He will.
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–then it’s stressed.
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But most of the time it’s not the only verb,
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it’s used to indicate something in the future.
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I like fishing.
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That’s right now, present.
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I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.
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This is the future.
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The word ‘will’ is usually written and spoken in a contraction.
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I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.
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“I will” becomes “I’ll”,
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but I reduced it. I'll-- I'll--
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I’ll like fishing—
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just like the word “all”,
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said very quickly.
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I’ll, I’ll, I’ll.
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I’ll like fishing when I learn more about it.
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What other WILL contractions might you hear?
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You’ll, we’ll pronounce this more like ‘yull’.
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He’ll, in a sentence, this will sound more like 'hill' or ‘hull’.
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He’ll be coming by at three. He'll.
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She will. She’ll.
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This can be reduced: she'll or shull.
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She’ll have the report ready soon. She'll.
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“It will” becomes “it’ll”,
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with a Flap T.
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This is just like the word “little” without the L.
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These are both tough words,
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and I have a video on the word ‘little’
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which might make this contraction easier to pronounce.
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I’ll put a link here and in the description below.
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This schwa-L ending,
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the contraction of WILL,
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can go at the end of any third person singular noun:
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“the dog” becomes “the dog’ll”:
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The dog’ll need to be walked soon.
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“Tuesday” becomes “Tuesday’ll”.
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Tuesday’ll be better.
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“John will” becomes “John’ll”.
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John’ll be here soon.
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Note: in writing, these might show up as a misspelling, as not a word.
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But this is how we speak.
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This contraction, this reduction of will.
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If it’s a pronoun, like “she’ll”,
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then it’s not considered a misspelling.
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But this is a case where how we speak English is different from how we write it.
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It’s common to reduce, and say: John'll.
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“John’ll be here at three”
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rather than “John will be there at three.”
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We will, “We’ll”,
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You might here this as: we'll or wull.
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Two different reductions.
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We'll be late.
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We'll be late.
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“They will”, “they’ll”,
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often reduce and sound like “thull”.
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They’ll be hungry when they get here.
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Third person plural, again,
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if you write this as a contraction, it will show up as a misspelling,
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but speaking this way is very common.
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“The kids will” becomes “The kids’ll”.
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The kids’ll be tired.
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The kids’ll be tired.
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A dark L at the end of the word.
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Wow. There was a lot to talk about with the word “will”
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because of the way it contracts and reduces with so many different words!
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Number 34: My.
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A possessive pronoun.
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This is my boyfriend.
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My shirt’s too big.
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We don’t reduce it, we don’t change or drop one of the sounds,
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but it is unstressed.
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This is the word’s most common use.
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But, it can be used another way.
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It can be used as an expression or an interjection to show surprise:
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Oh my!
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Maybe it's even showing a little disapproval.
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My!
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In these cases, it would be stressed,
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it would be longer, it would have the up-down shape of stress.
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Number 35 in the 100 Most common words list: one.
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It’s a little word, but it has a lot of different uses.
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As a noun or an adjective,
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it will probably be stressed.
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For example:
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We’re looking for one teacher to join our team.
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One.
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But it can also be used as a pronoun,
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and in that case you might hear it reduced.
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Instead of “one”, it will be ‘un’.
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I need a new phone, this one’s going to die.
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This un— this un— this un—
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This one's going to die.
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This one’s going to last longer, but that one’s cheaper.
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That un—this un--
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Did you notice the pronunciation?
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This un—that un—
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nn—nn—nn--
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The apostrophe S is for the contraction IS.
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This ‘uns’, that ‘uns’.
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Now, you don’t have to pronounce this this way,
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you can say “this one’s, that one’s”.
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But you’ll definitely hear Americans occasionally reduce the word to ‘un’.
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Number 36. The word ‘all’.
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This one, I would say, is usually going to be stressed and a little longer.
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It’s most commonly used as an adjective,
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or a noun, or an adverb.
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Did you eat all the cake?
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We’ve been having all sorts of problems.
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So here we are, number 36.
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The 36th most common words in English,
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and this is only the second word that doesn’t have a reduction,
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or isn’t unstressed in some cases.
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Wow.
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The other one was “say” back at number 28.
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What does this mean?
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Many of the most common words in English
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are words that are unstressed or reduced.
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If you ignore these, you can never sound natural,
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because they are everywhere.
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And chances are, when you learned the words,
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you did not learn the reductions,
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and you did not learn how to make them unstressed.
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So we’re trying to fix that now.
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Let’s keep going, number 37. The word “would”.
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I’m actually going to also work on 67 at the same time, the word “could”.
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And I’ll throw in as a bonus,
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a word that's not on the list, the word “should”.
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Actually, as with many of the reductions on this list,
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I’ve made a video that goes over these pronunciations.
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Should I just put it in here?
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Would you like to see it?
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Should. Would.
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It is a good one, it’s useful! Let's watch!
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These words all rhyme.
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The pronunciation is simpler than it looks.
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The L is silent.
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So they all have their beginning consonant,
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the OO as in Book vowel, and the D sound.
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Should.
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Would.
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Could.
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They rhyme with 'good',
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'hood', and 'wood'.
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Yes, 'would' and 'wood' are pronounced the same.
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They're homophones.
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So this is the pronunciation of these words in full.
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But as you know, Americans like to reduce less important words in a sentence
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to make the important words stand out more
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and these are three words that can be reduced.
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As with many reductions,
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we change the vowel to the schwa and speed up the word.
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Should.
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Should.
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Would.
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Would.
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Could. Could.
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You'll hear Americans go further though and drop the D.
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I noticed I did this when I was doing a Ben Franklin exercise on some of my own speech.
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Should we get dinner?
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Yeah!
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Should we get dinner?
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One of the things I noticed is I'm dropping the D sound.
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Shou we— shou we--
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Should. Should.
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Just the SH sound and the schwa.
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The lips are flared and the teeth are together. Sshhh—
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the tongue tip is pointing up to the roof of the mouth but it's not touching it.
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Sshhhuuu—shhu—
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Then, for the schwa, everything relaxes
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and you go into the next sound: shuh-- shuh-- shuh we--
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Should we call her?
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Should we. Should we.
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I should go.
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Should go. Should go.
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I should go.
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Now, if the next sound is a vowel or a diphthong,
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I wouldn't drop the D.
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It would be too unclear to go from the schwa into another vowel.
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So for: Should I? Should I?
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For example, I make a really quick flap of the tongue for the D.
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Should I. Should I.
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Should I say that?
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Should I try it?
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Should I call him?
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If dropping the D seems like too extreme of a reduction for you, you certainly don't have to do it.
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Just keep 'should' unstressed,
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really quick: should, should, should.
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Now, let's look at 'could'.
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The K sound is made when the back part of the tongue
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comes up and touches the soft palate in the back.
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K, k, k, k.
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Could we try later?
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Could we? Could we?
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Again, just dropping the D.
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K sound, schwa, next word.
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Could we? Could we?
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Saying it with a D when the next word begins with a vowel or a dipthong .
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Could I? Could I come back later?
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Could I? Could I?
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So just a nice, short, could.
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Finally, would.
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For the W sound, the lips are in a tight circle,
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and the back part of the tongue lifts.
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Ww—ww—wuh--
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Would we want to do that?
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Would we? Would we?
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Would we want to do that?
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Or with a really quick D sound.
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Where would I go? Would I-- Would I-- Would I--
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So you can reduce these words by changing the vowel to the schwa.
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You can reduce them further by dropping the D,
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unless the next sound is a vowel or a diphthong.
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Number 38.
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Actually, we’re going to do 38 and 39 at the same because
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they’re homophones!
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What are homophones?
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Words that are spelled differently and have different meanings
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but that are pronounced exactly the same.
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38 is ‘there’
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and 39 is ‘they’re’.
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If homophones seem confusing to you,
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you’re not the only one.
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I actually have a very long video
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that goes over many homophones in American English,
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you can click here to see it, or check the video description.
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There, they’re.
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Fully pronounced, we have “there”.
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But, both of these can reduce.
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The word ‘there’ can be used lots of different ways,
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and a common way is the phrase “there is” or “there are”.
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These phrases will often be in contraction,
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“there’s” and the “there’re”.
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But these contractions can reduce when we say them.
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Then it becomes “thurs” and “thur”.
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There’s a good reason why I can’t tell you.
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There's a good reason--
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There’s, there’s, there’s.
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It has the schwa rather than the EH vowel.
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It’s said more quickly.
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The contraction “there are” gets even less clear,
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it’s really just one syllable “thur”.
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R reduces, and we lose it.
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It has the same sounds as the reduced “there”, so it blends in.
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There’re lots of reason why I can’t tell you.
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There’re lots. There're. There're.
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There’re lots of reasons.
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What about the contraction “they are”, “they’re”?
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Yes, that also reduces.
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It might not be pronounced “they’re”,
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but instead, “thur”, with the schwa.
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They’re in the kitchen.
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Thur, thur.
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They’re in the kitchen.
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And the last word for this video, number 40, “what”.
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This word can reduce.
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Fully pronounced, it’s “what”,
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and the T is a Flap T if the next word begins with a vowel or diphthong:
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what are you going to do?
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What are, what are.
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Rrrr— Flap.
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The T is a Stop T if the next word begins with a consonant:
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What were you thinking?
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What were, what were.
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Stop T.
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But, if the next word begins with a D,
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then we can reduce the word ‘what’ by dropping the T.
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Make the vowel a schwa.
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So the word ‘what’ becomes a very quick “wuh, wuh”.
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“What did” and “what do”
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are common word combinations where we do this.
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What do you think?
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What do, what do, what do.
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The word ‘what’ is simply ‘wuh’.
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What did you say?
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What did, what did, what did.
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Again, the word ‘what’ is simply ‘wuh’, wuh.
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So there they are, words 31-40,
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we had a lot of reductions in there.
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Let’s keep going down this list of the 100 most common words in English to study the pronunciation,
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and I don’t mean the full, official pronunciation,
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I mean how the word is actually used in a sentence in American English.
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Look for the next installment in this series, coming soon.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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