Learn NUMBERS easily through conversation!

49,892 views ・ 2017-10-31

Rachel's English


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

00:00
In this American English pronunciation video, you're going to play a card game with me and
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my family and we'll study real English conversation as it happens among real Americans.
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The focus of this video is numbers.
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Two ones. Two twos. Two rooks.
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We're playing with a double deck of cards here. That means we've combined two full decks
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so there's going to be two of every kind of card. So my mom says: two ones, two twos,
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two rooks.
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So rather than saying: two one cards, two
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two cards, she's just shortening it into: two ones, two twos, making the number a noun.
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So she's making it plural because there's two of everything. Two ones. Adding a really
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light Z sound at the end. Two ones. Two twos.
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Two ones. Two twos.  Two rooks.
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But there are no sixes and sevens and half of the eights.
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Sixes and sevens and half of the eights. So here, again, we're using the number as
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a noun. And we're making it plural. Sevens and eights.
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For 'sevens', we add a light Z sound. For 'eights' we add an S sound. And for 'sixes', we add a whole syllable.
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Es— es— sixes.
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The rules for how to pronounce a plural noun were laid out in a video that I made earlier.
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Click here to see that video or you can also find the link in the description below.
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But there are no sixes and sevens and half of the eights.
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210. 210.
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How many points does...
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- 360. - Ok. Yeah. Oh.
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So here, we've just heard the numbers 210 and 360.
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Notice that the words 'hundred and' were dropped.
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You can say two hundred and ten or three hundred and sixty
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but it's probably more common in spoken English to drop that and just say
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210, 360.
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210.
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210.
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How many-- How many points does...
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- 360. - Ok. Yeah. Oh.
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-215 -20
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Two fifteen. Twenty.
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So 15, how does that sound different from 250?
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Two fifteen. Two fifty.
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Two fifteen.
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There are two clues. First stress is on ‘teen’.
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In the words that end in a zero, stress is on the first syllable.
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Fifteen. Fifty.
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Clue number two, the T in ‘teen’ is a true T because it starts a stressed syllable.
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The T in ‘fifty’ might be a true T or it might be flapped: fifty, fifty.
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Two fifteen.
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- 215 - 20
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Twenty. My dad bids even higher.
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He didn't say 220 but it's implied.
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Twenty, What happens to the T there?
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It's dropped. Americans often drop the T in this word.
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Twenty. Twenty.
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This is because the T follows an N.
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20.
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Pass.
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Pass.
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As we go around bidding here, if you want to bid higher, then you do so.
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If you don't want a bid higher and you want to drop out, then you say: pass— pass—
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Pass.
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Twenty five.
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Twenty five.
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Twenty. Again, David drops the T here: Twenty five.
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Twenty five.
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Thirty.
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Thirty. Thirty. Stress is on the first syllable
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and it's a flap T so we know it's not ‘thirteen’.
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Thirty. Thirty. The T is flapped here because
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it comes after an R before a vowel. Thirty.
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Try that: Thirty.
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Thirty.
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Pass.
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Pass.
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Oh, my mom and I both have bad hands.
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We both pass, we do not continue to bid.
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Pass.
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Pass.
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That's too cheap.
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Dad says: That's too cheap.
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He's trying to make us think he doesn't have a good hand but that he's going to bid anyway.
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He reduces the word ‘that's’ by dropping the TH.
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At's— at's— At's too cheap.
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This is a reduction you will hear Americans do sometimes.
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Listen again.
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That's too cheap. That's too cheap. That's too cheap.
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Notice the word ‘too’ is stressed and it sounds just like the number 2.
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These are homophones. They sound exactly the same. Even though they're spelled differently.
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That's too cheap.
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That's too cheap. Forty.
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Forty. He raises the bid.
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Different from 14 where stress is on the second syllable with a true T. Forty. Forty.
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Flap T because the T comes between an R and a vowel.
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Forty.
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Pass.
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Five.
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Yeah, I should have passed before.
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I should have passed before.
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Should have is often reduced to ‘shoulda’ in natural American English conversation.
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I should have passed before. Shoulda— shoulda— try that.
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A quick flap of the tongue for the D: shoulda—
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I should have passed before. Because I think….
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Because I... Okay my dad is doing a weird reduction here.
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First he's reducing ‘because’ to ‘cuz’ which is a very normal reduction.
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But then he's also dropping the TH in ‘think’ which
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is a little bit less common though I have noticed my dad definitely does this.
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Because I think— because I think— It makes it a little less clear but to a non-native listener,
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it's still perfectly understood.
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Because I think— because I think— because I think—
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because I think—
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- Enough table talk. - I think…
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‘Table Talk’. This idiom means the casual conversation that would happen at a meal
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but my family uses it to mean talking about a card game when you're playing a card game
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which you shouldn't do.
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When you're playing a game. You should keep all strategy and thoughts on the game to yourself.
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So we say ‘no table talk’ or ‘enough table talk’.
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Everyone in my family is guilty of lots of table talk.
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- Enough table talk. - I think...
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Fifty.
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Fifty.
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Now, again we have something that's not a true T: fifty,
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but more of a flap T: fifty. Dadadada—
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Now, this is an exception.
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It's not following the rules but still this is how most Americans will pronounce this word.
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Fifty. Different from ‘fifteen’
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where stress is on the second syllable and we have a true T.
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Fifty.
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And there's 360?
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Yeah!
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Three sixty.
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Again, a flap T. Sixty. d-- d-- And again this is an exception.
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It's not following the rules for the pronunciation of T.
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Sixty, three sixty.
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And there's three sixty?
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Yeah!
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Cheap!
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Pass.
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I'm gonna pass.
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I'm gonna pass.
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My dad pronounced his ‘gonna’ very quickly.
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I'm gonna pass.
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I'm gonna pass. Gonna— gonna— gonna—
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I'm gonna pass.
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I'm gonna pass.
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I'm gonna pass.
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I'm gonna pass.
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Let's go back and listen to all the numbers again.
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I'll play this section twice. Practice out loud the second time.
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Two ones. Two twos. Two rooks.
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But there are no sixes and sevens and half of the eights.
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Two ten!
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Two ten!
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-Two fifteen. -Twenty.
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Twenty five.
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Thirty.
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Forty.
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Fifty.
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And there's 360?
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Yeah!
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Five.
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Two ones. Two twos. Two rooks.
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But there are no sixes and sevens and half of the eights.
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Two ten!
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Two ten!
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-360 -Okay. Yeah. Oh.
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-Two fifteen. -Twenty.
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Twenty five.
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Thirty.
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Forty.
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Fifty.
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And there's 360?
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Yeah!
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Five.
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I had a lot of fun playing cards with my family
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and I hope you had fun learning the pronunciation of numbers
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as we studied Real English conversation.
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