Animal Idioms! Conversational American English with JenniferESL

66,147 views ・ 2015-11-10

Rachel's English


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

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Hi everybody! This video is going to be a little different from what you’re used to
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seeing on Rachel’s English. This is a compilation video where I’m taking several of my videos
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and combining them into one longer video on a single topic. What’s really exciting is
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that we have another teacher helping with this video. Jennifer of JenniferESL. She’s
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been a popular YouTube English teacher since 2007 and I’m really excited that she’s
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helping with this video.
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Today’s topic: animal idioms.
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People are always asking me for more videos on idioms. So today you’re going to learn
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a lot, all related to animals: chickens, horses, and monkeys. All of these idioms are familiar
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to Americans, and used in conversational English.
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Let’s get started hearing from teacher JenniferESL on idioms relating to chickens.
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In our first set of expressions related to chickens, we have two nouns. The first, chicken.
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A chicken is a coward. If someone says ‘don’t be a chicken’, they’re saying, ‘don’t
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be a coward’, don’t be scared. We can say this in a teasing way, as a joke. But,
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because chicken means coward, it’s an insult. It can be offensive, so be careful.
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The second is a noun phrase, pecking order. Pecking order. To peck is an action that chickens
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do with their beak, their mouth part. They can peck at the ground. Peck, peck, peck.
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Pecking order refers to behavior within a group. Not a group of chickens, but a group
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of people. Pecking order is hierarchy, it’s everyone’s status within a group. If we
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ask, “What’s the pecking order?”, we’re asking what’s the ranking within a particular
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social group.
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In our second set of expressions related to chickens, we have four verbs. The first, chicken
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out. Chicken out. I already explained that a chicken is a coward. So to ‘chicken out’
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is to decide not to do something because you’re a coward. So if you chickened out, you didn’t
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do something because you were too afraid.
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Next, flew the coop, usually said in the past tense. Flew the coop. A coop is a structure
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where we keep chickens. It’s where they live. If the chickens flew the coop, they
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got out. If someone flew the coop, they left, they’re gone for good. And it usually implies
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some sort of escape to freedom.
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Next, run around like a chicken with its head cut off. It’s a very colorful and maybe
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not-so-pleasant. But to run around like a chicken with its head cut off means that someone
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is going around in a crazy rush with little direction and no clear thinking. They’re
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very stressed and worried. They’re running around like a chicken with it’s head cut
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off.
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And last, we have ‘walk on egg shells’, often used in the progressive, walking on
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eggshells. Egg shells break, they crack easily. If you’re trying not to crack these eggshells,
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you’re walking carefully. If you’re walking on eggshells, you’re trying to be very careful.
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You’re afraid that maybe something you say or something that you do could offend or upset
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someone. So if you’re walking on eggshells, you’re being very careful not to upset anyone.
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One time I got to see a chicken being slaughtered, so I literally got to see a chicken run around
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with it’s head cut off. It was pretty out of control. Thanks so much to Jennifer for
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teaching us those idioms. They’re all idioms that are well-known and used, so don’t chicken
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out, do try using them in speech.
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Because people used to use horses a lot for work and transportation, there are a lot of
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horse idioms. One night a couple of years ago, I was wearing a big horse mask in lower
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Manhattan and got inspired with my friends to come up with as many horse idioms as we
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could.
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Would you believe we came up with almost 20 phrases and idioms that use the word horse,
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or somehow reference horses. And, I’m sure there are more.
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>>Get off your high horse. >> Get off your high horse. That’s a perfect one.
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>> Lori ... >> Stop horsing around.
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>> These are, you have so many idioms! >> Yeah, I’m cheating.
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Get off your high horse. To be on a ‘high horse’ is to have an attitude of arrogance,
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of self-righteousness. ‘Get off your high horse’ means, stop being so arrogant. You
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have a couple options with the T in ‘get’. You can either make it a flap T, connecting
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it to the word ‘off’, get off, get off. Or, if you’re really emphasizing and going
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to make a pause, you can make it a stop T. Get off. Get off your high horse. Stop horsing
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around. Horsing around is rough or rowdy play, usually in good fun. My mom often accused
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my brother and I of horsing around.
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>> Horse idioms. We have: don’t look a gift horse in the mouth…
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>> …you can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink,
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>> …hoofing it.
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Don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. This means, don’t be ungrateful or suspicious
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when someone gives you something. A friend said this to me recently when I was talking
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about an offer that I got from someone to help me with my business. And I was a little
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suspicious. He said, “You know, Rachel, don’t look a gift horse in the mouth.”
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You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink. This basically means, you can’t
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make people do what they don’t want to do. Let’s talk a little bit about the pronunciation.
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You can lead a horse. So the main verb here is the word ‘lead’. That means ‘can’
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is a helping verb. So we don’t want to say ‘can’. We instead want to reduce that
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word to ‘kn’, ‘kn’. You can lead. You can lead a horse to water. But you can’t
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make it drink. You might hear a CH sound happening between ‘but’ and ‘you’, but you,
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but you. This can happen when the T is followed by the Y consonant, but you, but you. But
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you can’t make it drink. You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink.
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Hoofing it means to be moving really fast, to be running somewhere. For example, I hoofed
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it to work because I overslept. Note that the double-O here is pronounced as the UH
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vowel, just like cook, book, and Brooklyn.
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>> Straight from the horse’s mouth. >> Making hay.
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>> A charlie horse.
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Straight from the horse’s mouth means that you’ve something from the most authoritative
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or dependable source. For example:
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>> Did you hear Jane is quitting her job? >> No way. Where did you hear that?
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>> From Jane herself. Straight from the horse’s mouth.
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Making hay, or, making hay while the sun shines. This is to make the most of current opportunities.
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If you put doing something off, you may loose the opportunity to do it. For example, let’s
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make hay and go for a run before it starts raining again.
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A charlie horse. This phrase is used for muscle cramps in the legs. You might hear this phrase
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as you watch the Olympics this summer.
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>> I could eat a horse. >> I’m so hungry I could eat a horse. That’s
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true. >> Did we say don’t beat a dead horse? Don’t
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beat a dead horse.
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I could eat a horse. Well, this means, of course, that you’re very very hungry. Notice
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the T at the end of the word ‘eat’ links to the next word, a, a schwa sound, so it’s
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a flap T or a light D sound. Eat a, eat a, eat a. I could eat a horse.
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>> Rachel, are you hungry? >> Yeah, I skipped lunch, so I could eat a
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horse.
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Don’t beat a dead horse. You might say this to someone who can’t let a situation go.
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If you think someone needs to accept things as they are, and they just keep talking about
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‘what if?’, ‘what if?’, then you might say: Look, don’t beat a dead horse. It’s
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done. >> Don’t put the cart before the horse.
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>> That’s a horse of a different color.
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Don’t put the cart before the horse. This means be patient and do things the right way,
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in the right order. Sometimes it’s very tempting to do things out of order and skip
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ahead. But it doesn’t always get the best results. Someone might say to you: do it right,
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don’t put the cart before the horse.
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A horse of a different color. That is when you bring something up that is unlike that
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which you are already talking about. For example, to me, writing and spelling are easy. But
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math, that’s a horse of a different color. Meaning, to me, math is very hard.
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>> Oh, there are so many idioms with ‘horse’! >> Hold your horses!
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>> Hold your horses! >> That’s a great one.
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Hold your horses. That means hold on, be patient, stop what you’ve just started. It’s among
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the most common of these horse idioms. Notice I’mreducing the word ‘your’ to ‘yer’,
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‘yer’. Hold your horses.
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>> This is a one-horse town. Put a horse out to pasture.
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A one-horse town is a small, maybe insignificant town. For example, he’s very overwhelmed
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by the city, he comes from a one-horse town.
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To put a horse out to pasture. This is when a racing horse is retired, but it can also
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be used with people, when someone is forced to retire. For example, Larry is past retirement
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age. I think it’s time to put him out to pasture.
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>> Wild horses couldn’t drag him away. >> Oh that’s a good one. I use that sometimes.
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My friend used that once recently. Wild horses couldn’t drag him away. This
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is said when someone is very engrossed in or committed to something. Nothing can persuade
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him or her to leave or stop doing that thing. For example,
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>> Are you watching the Mad Men Finale tonight? >> Yes, wild horses couldn’t drag me away.
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>> A dark horse candidate, for example.
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A dark horse is someone who is more or less unknown who emerges to a place of prominence
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or importance, usually in a competition. This is used quite a bit to describe a candidate
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in politics.
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After doing our idiom research, we went out to dinner, and then made our way home. Although,
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I can’t really recommend riding a bike in the horse mask, because essentially, I could
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not see a thing out of it.
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And finally, a few monkey idioms. At the YouTube space in Los Angeles, I found a monkey suit,
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and couldn’t resist going over a few monkey idioms in costume.
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To begin, let’s go over the pronunciation of the word ‘monkey’. This is a two-syllable
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word with stress on the first syllable. DA-da, monkey. It begins with the M consonant sound,
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where the lips come together. MMmmmo-. Then we have the UH as in BUTTER sound. This is
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a completely relaxed sound. So, your tongue should be forward and relaxed, uh, uh, a little
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bit of jaw drop, and your lips should be completely relaxed. MMmmmo-. Because this is a stressed
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syllable, it should have the up-down shape of a stressed syllable in the voice. Mo-,
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mon-.
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Now we have the NG sound. The reason why the letter N is representing the NG sound is because
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the next sound is the K, and they’re made in the same spot. So, to make the NG sound,
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the tongue tip is here, touching behind the bottom front teeth, and the back part of the
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tongue reaches up and touches the soft palate. The soft palate is lowered here because it’s
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a nasal consonant, ng, ng-k. Then, to make the K, you just release the tongue down, monk-,
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-k-. The soft palate will close for that. Then we go into the EE as in SHE vowel. Monkey.
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Since it’s in an unstressed syllable, it should be very short and low in pitch, -key,
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-key, -key. Monkey.
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Let’s get into some idioms. First, ‘fun as a barrel of monkeys’. This means something
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that’s really fun, kind of like this video. But I usually use it sarcastically, which
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means that I am explaining something that is not at all fun. For example, I’m going
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to the dentist to have a cavity filled. Fun as a barrel of monkeys. The stress pattern
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for this phrase is DA-da-da-DA-da. Barrel of monkeys. So, in many cases we’ll reduce
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the word ‘of’ to just have the schwa sound, no consonant at all. Barrel of, DA-da-da,
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Barrel of. Barrel of monkeys. Now here we’re making ‘monkey’ plural, so the S will
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be a Z sound, zz, because the sound before was a vowel. Monkeys, monkeys. So just a very
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quick, soft Z sound at the end there. Barrel of monkeys.
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Monkey business. This can mean silliness. So you might say to a room full of rowdy kids,
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‘Enough with the monkey business’. But, it can also mean dishonest behavior. Monkey
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business. DA-da-DA-da. So, the first syllable of ‘business’ is also stressed. This stressed
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syllable has the IH as in SIT vowel, bu-, bu-, and the first S here represents the Z
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sound. Bus-, business. The second syllable, since it’s unstressed, should be very quick,
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-ness, -ness, -ness. Business. Monkey business.
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Monkey suit. That’s what I’m wearing! That’s the literal meaning. But there’s
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also an idiomatic meaning, and that’s a tuxedo or other formal evening wear for men.
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Monkey suit. DA-da-da. Monkey suit. So, the word ‘suit’ has the S consonant sound.
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The letters U-I represent the OO as in BOO vowel, and we finish with a Stop T. Monkey
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suit, monkey suit. Monkey on my back. This is a problem or something
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that’s really stressful that’s taking a long time to resolve or won’t go away.
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For example, my friend is going through a nasty divorce. It’s a monkey on his back.
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The stress pattern is DA-da-da-da-DA. Monkey on his back. So, ‘back’ is stressed. The
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words ‘on’, and the next function word, whether it’s ‘my’, ‘your’, ‘his’,
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or ‘her’, will be unstressed. So, ‘on my’, ‘on my’, those two words will be
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really quick, low in pitch, and not too clear, on my, on my. Or, it could be ‘on your’,
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‘on your’. Notice I’m reducing the word ‘your’ to ‘yer’. We’ve already made
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a video about that, so check it out. ‘On his’ or ‘on her’. In both of those cases,
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we’ll probably drop the H. On his, on his, monkey on his back. Or, on her, on her, monkey
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on her back. Check out this video on Dropping the H Reductions.
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Have you ever heard someone say “I’m going to go ape.” That means to get really angry.
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For example, if she screws up my car, I’m going to go ape. Both ‘go’ and ‘ape’
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are stressed, so the stress pattern is DA-DA. Go ape. We have the G consonant sound and
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the OH as in NO diphthong. Sometimes my students don’t round their lips enough for the second
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half of this diphthong, go, go, so make sure you do that. Ape. It begins with the AY as
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in SAY diphthong. Make sure you drop your jaw enough for the first sound of that diphthong,
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a-, a-pe. And finally, the P sound, ape. Go ape.
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Not all rodents are cute, but this one is. This is from my children’s collection of
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stuffed animals and hand puppets. I’m not even certain if this is a mouse or a rat,
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but seeing it reminds me of an idiom we have in English, rat race. ‘Rat race’ refers
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to the daily struggle to be successful at work where there’s competition and pressure
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to produce. One day after the other you go through this routine hoping to come out on
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top. But really, you’re one of thousands. ‘Rat race’ refers to this whole situation.
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Many complain about the rat race and say they hate the rat race. Some think about quitting
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the rat race. Others actually leave the rat race behind. They change jobs or they change
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their lifestyle. Maybe they retire early, or move out to the country where life is more
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peaceful.
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You’ve just learned a lot of idioms. Challenge to you: come up with a sentence for one of
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the idioms you learned in this video and put it in the comments below.
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Special thanks to Jennifer for her contribution to this video.
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That’s all for now. Thanks for joining Rachel and me for this special lesson. Happy studies
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to all.
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She has a huge collection of videos here on YouTube where she teachers grammar, vocabulary,
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and other skills. You can check out her lessons by clicking here or in the description below.
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Be sure to subscribe. Check out the exercises page on her website where she creates interactive
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exercises to help solidify what you’ve learned in the videos. Also, Jennifer teaches on WizIQ.
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Click here to see her schedule.
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And don’t forget to sign up for my mailing list, if you haven’t already, for free weekly
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emails full of English lessons and stories on American culture.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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