Learn English: How to Speak English Well | English Speaking Lesson | Rachel’s English

160,238 views

2020-07-07 ・ Rachel's English


New videos

Learn English: How to Speak English Well | English Speaking Lesson | Rachel’s English

160,238 views ・ 2020-07-07

Rachel's English


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

00:00
Today you’re transforming your spoken English by studying a scene from the movie
0
0
4620
00:04
Brittany Runs a Marathon, with me. She just had a job interview, she didn't get the job.
1
4620
6320
00:10
But she gets a lead on her next job. We're going to go in-depth with the English used in this scene.
2
10940
6100
00:17
What happens to the T in interview?
3
17040
2180
00:19
When you study a scene like this, you’ll be able to understand American movies and TV effortlessly
4
19220
5260
00:24
without subtitles. The best part is, not only do you get to learn and study with the video,
5
24480
5860
00:30
you get to train with the training section in this video, audio.
6
30340
4080
00:34
So that you can start to make a habit of all of these tricks you're learning.
7
34420
4100
00:38
You know, if you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
8
38520
2980
00:41
We’re doing this all summer, we started in June and we're going through August, stick with me
9
41500
5000
00:46
every Tuesday, they’re all great scenes, and there’s going to be so much to learn that can transform
10
46500
5940
00:52
the way you understand and speak English.
11
52440
3100
00:55
And as always, if you like this video, or you learn something new, please like and subscribe with notifications.
12
55540
7740
01:07
You’re going to watch the clip, then we’re going to do a full pronunciation analysis together.
13
67440
5380
01:12
This is going to help so much with your listening comprehension when it comes to watching
14
72820
4480
01:17
English movies in TV. But there’s going to be a training section.
15
77300
4660
01:21
You’re going to take what you’ve just learned and practice repeating it, doing a reduction,
16
81960
4960
01:26
flapping a T just like you learned in the analysis. Okay, here’s the scene.
17
86920
4980
01:31
I'm so sorry.
18
91900
1440
01:33
No, it's fine. It's just I keep interviewing at places and no one thinks I'm the right fit.
19
93340
7180
01:40
Oh my goodness who is this gentleman?
20
100520
3840
01:44
Oh, this is a foster.
21
104360
1920
01:46
You know, if you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
22
106280
2840
01:49
She owns a company. They do house sitting and pet sitting.
23
109120
3380
01:52
And now, the analysis.
24
112500
2400
01:54
I'm so sorry.
25
114900
1220
01:56
Okay so we hear someone off-camera say: I'm so sorry.
26
116120
4500
02:00
I'm so sorry.
27
120620
4180
02:04
I'm so sorry. Mmm so, I'm so sorry. And sorr-- both have a little bit of that up-down shape of stress.
28
124800
11040
02:15
The word I'm is reduced. It's really just the M sound, isn't it? Mmm so, mmm so, mmm so.
29
135840
7480
02:23
The M sound hooked right on to the S. I'm so sorry.
30
143320
4920
02:28
I'm so sorry.
31
148240
4580
02:32
No, it's fine. It's just I keep--
32
152820
2460
02:35
So she does a little break here, after the word keep, breaking that up into another thought group.
33
155280
5180
02:40
So let's look at this first thought group.
34
160460
2860
02:43
No, it's fine.
35
163320
3840
02:47
No, it's fine. Both of those have more volume.
36
167160
4220
02:51
No, it's fine.
37
171380
3140
02:54
No, it's fine.
38
174520
3700
02:58
It's just I keep--
39
178220
1240
02:59
and then the second part, we have two peaks on just and keep, but they're definitely lower. Uhhhh. Uhhh.
40
179460
9700
03:09
No, it's fine. It's just I keep--
41
189160
3640
03:12
No, it's fine. It's just I keep--
42
192800
2400
03:15
No, it's fine. It's just I keep--
43
195200
2500
03:17
No, it's fine. It's just I keep--
44
197700
2100
03:19
No, it's fine. We have an OH diphthong in no,
45
199800
5480
03:25
linking into an IH vowel. When the Oh diphthong links into another vowel or diphthong,
46
205280
6080
03:31
can definitely feel like we passed through a W sound,
47
211360
2940
03:34
the glide consonant. No it's, so you can almost think of this word as being wits, wits, no it's, no it's, No, it's fine.
48
214300
9020
03:43
That might help you link those together more smoothly. No, it's fine. And we have all of these sounds T, S, and F.
49
223320
8000
03:51
No, it's fine.
50
231320
2600
03:53
No, it's fine.
51
233920
3780
03:57
It's just I keep--
52
237700
1280
03:58
Fine. It's just-- fine. It's-- the ending N links right into the beginning vowel of IH.
53
238980
7440
04:06
And there's no break even though grammatically, that would be written as another sentence probably.
54
246420
4920
04:11
There's no break in sound so it still links together. No, it's fine. It's--
55
251340
5520
04:16
No, it's fine. It's--
56
256860
4480
04:21
It's just I keep, it's just I. So we have an ST cluster here followed by the AI diphthong. We do make that T.
57
261340
8800
04:30
If the next word was something that began with a consonant, then we would drop it.
58
270140
5360
04:35
But when it begins with a vowel or diphthong, we do tend to say it and link it in.
59
275500
3900
04:39
It's just I, juh uh uh, not really uh, not really just, but more juh uh uh uh, less jaw drop.
60
279400
10460
04:49
It's just I, I almost even write that as the schwa even though I am putting some length on it.
61
289860
5840
04:55
But it has less jaw drop than ah, uh, it's just, it's just I keep.
62
295700
8120
05:03
It's just I keep,
63
303820
4360
05:08
I keep, puts her lips together for the P, it's a stop consonant,
64
308180
5320
05:13
but she doesn't release it she doesn't say: keep, keep, she says: I keep.
65
313500
5480
05:18
I keep,
66
318980
3100
05:22
And that stop signifies the P. I see her lips go together but she doesn't release a puff of air.
67
322080
6300
05:28
I keep,
68
328380
2820
05:31
interviewing at places and--
69
331200
1880
05:33
Interviewing at places and, another break here, breaking it up into another thought group.
70
333080
6240
05:39
Interviewing, stress on the first syllable there. Interviewing at places and--
71
339320
7400
05:46
Interviewing at places and--
72
346720
2180
05:48
Interviewing at places and--
73
348900
1960
05:50
Interviewing at places and--
74
350860
1800
05:52
We have some reductions here. Even though interviewing is
75
352660
3540
05:56
the stressed word, one of the stressed words,
76
356200
2580
05:58
the T is dropped, very common to do that in words with INTER, like internet.
77
358780
6560
06:05
Also in general, when a T comes after an N, it's not uncommon to drop it,
78
365340
4260
06:09
like in the word center. You might hear that as center,
79
369600
2920
06:12
and then of course, interview, international, internet. Very common to drop that T.
80
372520
5520
06:18
Interviewing,
81
378040
2780
06:20
at places and.
82
380820
1300
06:22
Interviewing at, at at at.
83
382120
3700
06:25
Do you notice the pronunciation of at? It's not at, its it ut ut,
84
385820
5200
06:31
Schwa, Stop T, stop T because the next word begins with a consonant.
85
391020
4960
06:35
Interviewing at places.
86
395980
3220
06:39
Interviewing at places, interviewing at places, interviewing at places
87
399200
4340
06:43
and--
88
403540
700
06:44
Places and-- places and-- Okay so the ending S in places is a Z sound and that links into,
89
404240
8960
06:53
I would write it as schwa N,
90
413200
2240
06:55
the reduction of and, places and, zan zan zan zan. Places and--
91
415440
5880
07:01
Places and--
92
421320
4120
07:05
no one thinks I'm the right fit.
93
425440
2140
07:07
What are our most stressed words in this last thought group here?
94
427700
3920
07:11
No one thinks I'm the right fit.
95
431620
2360
07:13
No one thinks I'm the right fit.
96
433980
2260
07:16
No one thinks I'm the right fit.
97
436240
2240
07:18
No one, a little bit of stress there, no one thinks I'm the right fit.
98
438480
8760
07:27
I would say thinks and fit have the most up down shape. No and right have a little.
99
447240
5700
07:32
No one, no one, no one.
100
452940
2860
07:35
No one,
101
455800
2500
07:38
Make sure those really link together, it's the OH diphthong.
102
458300
4040
07:42
No one, and then the word one, W, UH as in butter, N. No one, no one.
103
462340
8360
07:50
No one,
104
470700
2440
07:53
No one thinks.
105
473140
2020
07:55
No one thinks,
106
475160
2800
07:57
I'm the right fit.
107
477960
1760
07:59
No one thinks I'm the, I'm the, I'm the. Two words that are less stressed, lower in pitch.
108
479720
9660
08:09
I'm the,
109
489380
2800
08:12
So two unstressed words, and then the stressed word right, I'm the, I'm the, I'm the, I'm the right.
110
492180
5820
08:18
I'm the right,
111
498000
2560
08:20
fit.
112
500560
860
08:21
And we do have a stop T there because the next word begins with a consonant fit.
113
501420
5880
08:27
Now let's look at our ending T here. It's a true T, she definitely releases it. Let's take a listen.
114
507300
5400
08:33
Fit.
115
513580
3160
08:36
It's very common to make an ending word like that with a stop T at the end of a thought group.
116
516740
5340
08:42
Fit, fit, instead of: fit fit, but she's really emphasizing it to say that someone's not the right fit.
117
522080
8840
08:50
Means they wouldn't work well at a job at an organization on a project
118
530920
4040
08:54
because of the other people or things in place.
119
534960
3760
08:58
So it's a way to tell someone no without criticizing them too much. They're just not the right fit.
120
538720
6680
09:05
Fit..
121
545400
3220
09:08
And so she's been hearing that a lot. She's feeling not very good about it.
122
548620
4980
09:13
And so she's stressing that word a little bit more by doing the True T pronunciation.
123
553600
5460
09:19
Right fit.
124
559060
1700
09:20
Right fit.
125
560760
4600
09:25
Oh my goodness who is--
126
565360
2300
09:27
Okay, so now, her pitch goes up really high. Oh my goodness.
127
567660
4200
09:31
She's very excited to have a moment with the dog.
128
571860
3940
09:35
Oh my goodness,
129
575800
5560
09:41
See if you can imitate that when you're working with the audio. Oh my goodness!
130
581360
5340
09:46
Oh my goodness!
131
586700
2000
09:48
Oh my goodness!
132
588700
2040
09:50
Oh my goodness!
133
590740
1640
09:52
Oh and good have the most stress there.
134
592380
4820
09:57
Oh my goodness!
135
597200
2040
09:59
Oh my goodness!
136
599240
1920
10:01
Oh my goodness!
137
601160
1700
10:02
Goodness. Something interesting is happening here she's dropping the D,
138
602860
5040
10:07
goodness, I’ve definitely heard that happen before,
139
607900
3660
10:11
so instead of goodness, it's goodness, goodness, goodness.
140
611560
5980
10:17
When you think about it, the tongue position for the D, ddd, with the tongue tip up, is really similar to the N, nnn.
141
617540
7760
10:25
Also with the tongue tip up, maybe that's why it's dropped.
142
625300
2860
10:28
At any rate, you can drop it too here when you're imitating this.
143
628160
3400
10:31
Oh my goodness!
144
631560
2640
10:34
Oh my goodness!
145
634200
1940
10:36
Oh my goodness!
146
636140
2000
10:38
Oh my goodness!
147
638140
1600
10:39
Also rather than the EH vowel in goodness, it's really more of an IH. Goodness. Goodness.
148
639740
7980
10:47
So she's playing with this word a little bit.
149
647720
2680
10:50
Oh my goodness!
150
650400
1900
10:52
Oh my goodness!
151
652300
1980
10:54
Oh my goodness who is this gentleman?
152
654280
3720
10:58
Who is this-- still that really high pitch.
153
658000
4580
11:02
Who is this gentleman?
154
662580
4600
11:07
Who is this gentleman?
155
667180
2540
11:09
Who is this gentleman?
156
669720
2500
11:12
Who is this gentleman?
157
672220
2460
11:14
Who is this gentleman?
158
674680
3280
11:17
Do you notice the T in gentlemen? Gentlemen. Ladies and gentlemen.
159
677960
6800
11:24
No T there. Again, T after N just like in interviewing, internet, gentleman, no T, T is dropped.
160
684760
13700
11:38
Gentleman?
161
698460
4100
11:42
Also notice in the word a man, the syllable man, it's not AA, it's a schwa. Gentleman, man, man, man, man.
162
702560
7960
11:50
Try not to even put a vowel in there. It's an unstressed syllable. It should not be man. Man, man, gentlemen.
163
710520
6380
11:56
Gentleman?
164
716900
3880
12:00
Oh, this is a foster.
165
720780
2020
12:02
This is a foster. Oh, this is a foster.
166
722800
7160
12:09
So again, her intonation is a little bit higher than normal. This is not a conversational intonation.
167
729960
6060
12:16
This is like: oh my goodness, what a cute dog intonation. Lifted.
168
736020
6160
12:22
This is a foster. You would never have an normal conversation with somebody at this pace,
169
742180
6740
12:28
at this pitch, but this pitch being higher shows a different emotional state. This is a foster.
170
748920
8620
12:37
This is a foster.
171
757540
2000
12:39
This is a foster.
172
759540
2160
12:41
This is a foster.
173
761700
1900
12:43
Everything links together. This is a, the ending S of this goes right into the IH vowel of is.,
174
763600
8200
12:51
the ending z of is goes right into the schwa, UH, which goes right into the F.
175
771800
6380
12:58
This is a foster.
176
778180
6180
13:04
This is a foster. And actually her pitch goes up in the end after that.
177
784360
5440
13:09
Foster. After that up-down shape.
178
789800
4680
13:14
And it does because she's gonna keep going. She could have made it go down, but by making it go up,
179
794480
5340
13:19
she's like wait, I have an idea, I want to say more.
180
799820
3520
13:23
This is a foster.
181
803340
5920
13:29
You know, if you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
182
809260
3040
13:32
You know,
183
812300
5540
13:37
More stress on know, the word you, you're probably noticing it's not you, it's ya, a reduction,
184
817840
6960
13:44
you know, you know.
185
824800
2860
13:47
You know,
186
827660
3160
13:50
if you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
187
830820
2500
13:53
What are our peaks of stress in this next phrase?
188
833320
3740
13:57
If you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
189
837060
2680
13:59
If you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
190
839740
2640
14:02
If you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
191
842380
2640
14:05
If you like, if you like, The F
192
845020
5680
14:10
linking right into the JU diphthong. It almost sounds like we can hear the word few in there.
193
850700
4980
14:15
If you like animals. Stress on an--, now this is not a pure AA.
194
855680
9340
14:25
If you look it up the dictionary, it's written with the AA symbol
195
865020
4240
14:29
but when AA gets followed by N, it's not pure anymore.
196
869260
3360
14:32
Jaw doesn't drop quite as much, the back of the tongue relaxes, so we have a little bit of an UH vowel in between.
197
872620
6820
14:39
AAUH, animals, animals, animals.
198
879440
8140
14:47
Animals,
199
887580
2420
14:50
I should refer you to my sister.
200
890000
1680
14:51
I should refer you to my sister. A little bit of stress on I, refer, second syllable stress there.
201
891680
7160
14:58
I should refer you to my sister.
202
898840
4440
15:03
First syllable stress on sister. That has some of that up-down shape too.
203
903280
4440
15:07
The word should, not pronounced should, it's pronounced: should should.
204
907720
6200
15:13
Unstressed, reduced, it’s the schwa,
205
913920
3100
15:17
and we can drop that D, I do hear it very faintly before the R. Should, should, should, should.
206
917020
6300
15:23
Should refer, should refer. Now, the word refer has a schwa in that first unstressed syllable, re-fer.
207
923320
10060
15:33
So don't make that REE. Refer, refer, but re re re refer, refer.
208
933380
6580
15:39
I should refer,
209
939960
2720
15:42
Refer you to my. Refer you dadada. Flap T schwa for the word to. Refer you to my sister.
210
942680
11900
15:54
Refer you to my sister.
211
954580
4540
15:59
She owns a company.
212
959120
1100
16:00
What's her stress here?
213
960220
1980
16:02
She owns a company.
214
962200
4280
16:06
She owns a company.
215
966480
5140
16:11
She and com-- our most stressed syllables there.
216
971620
4140
16:15
She owns, okay she ends in EE, owns begins with the OH diphthong.
217
975760
7300
16:23
When a word that ends in EE links in to a word that begins with a vowel or diphthong,
218
983060
4940
16:28
that can be hard for some people to link really smoothly, she owns. It might help if you think of a Y
219
988000
8160
16:36
being in front of the word owns, she owns.
220
996160
3540
16:39
She owns,
221
999700
2600
16:42
a company.
222
1002300
780
16:43
She owns a company. Endings Z of owns linking right into the schwa.
223
1003080
6320
16:49
She owns a, which links right into the K sound of company.
224
1009400
5680
16:55
Company. Now, this is a letter A, compa-- but that should be a schwa. Pany, Pany, Pany, Pany, Pany.
225
1015080
9060
17:04
These two unstressed syllables should be really simple. Pany, Pany, Pany, Pany,
226
1024140
5620
17:09
low in pitch, less fully pronounced. Compared to com, com, company, company, company.
227
1029760
9480
17:19
She owns a company.
228
1039240
2140
17:21
She owns a company.
229
1041380
4220
17:25
They do house-sitting and pet sitting.
230
1045600
2000
17:27
They do, a little pause there, tiny little break. They do, they do, they do, they do, they do.
231
1047740
10140
17:37
Those both have a little bit of a stress feel to me.
232
1057880
3500
17:41
They do, they do, they do house-sitting and pet sitting.
233
1061380
4600
17:45
House sitting and pet sitting.
234
1065980
2880
17:48
Little tiny break there. House sitting, house sitting and pet sitting.
235
1068860
8140
17:57
Okay, so maybe you notice the T's, the double T's in sitting, those are flap T's. House sitting, pet sitting.
236
1077000
9340
18:06
Dadadada. Sitting, sitting, sitting, sitting.
237
1086340
3700
18:10
House sitting. Do you notice that those two words are just linking together with a single S sound?
238
1090040
5980
18:16
House sitting. House sitting.
239
1096020
3420
18:19
House sitting,
240
1099440
3440
18:22
and pet sitting.
241
1102880
1120
18:24
House sitting. The word and reduced, the D is dropped, I don't think the vowel reduces, I think it's still AA, but it's
242
1104000
8340
18:32
unstressed, subtle, and, and, and, and, and pet sitting. And, and.
243
1112340
7460
18:39
And pet sitting.
244
1119800
3420
18:43
And pet sitting. And it links right, the N links right into the P. And pet sitting, pet sitting.
245
1123220
7240
18:50
Little stop there to show the T, stop T because the next word begins with a consonant.
246
1130460
4980
18:55
Pet sitting. So these two words are related to the word babysitting, which just means to take care of.
247
1135440
9160
19:04
If you're house-sitting, then you're taking care of someone's house, probably living there while they're gone
248
1144600
6640
19:11
if they want...they don't they want their house to be empty.
249
1151240
3540
19:14
Pet sitting as well.
250
1154780
2000
19:16
And pet sitting.
251
1156780
3520
19:20
You go to someone's house, you take care of their pet while they're on vacation, or
252
1160300
4740
19:25
maybe that pet lives with you while they're gone. Oh I have a dog at my house, I'm pet sitting for my friend.
253
1165040
6080
19:31
House sitting. Pet Sitting. Babysitting.
254
1171120
3480
19:34
House sitting and pet sitting.
255
1174600
2140
19:36
House sitting and pet sitting.
256
1176740
1980
19:38
House sitting and pet sitting.
257
1178720
2020
19:40
Okay, let's listen to this whole conversation one more time.
258
1180740
3160
19:43
I'm so sorry.
259
1183900
1540
19:45
No, it's fine. It's just I keep interviewing at places and no one thinks I'm the right fit.
260
1185440
7440
19:52
Oh my goodness who is this gentleman?
261
1192880
3300
19:56
Oh, this is a foster.
262
1196180
2040
19:58
You know, if you like animals, I should refer you to my sister.
263
1198220
2900
20:01
She owns a company. They do house sitting and pet sitting.
264
1201120
3520
20:04
Now for the fun part,
265
1204640
1560
20:06
you’ll look at the notes we took together and you’ll hear a part of the conversation on a loop three times.
266
1206200
5680
20:11
Then there’s a space for you to repeat.
267
1211880
2340
20:14
For example, you’ll hear this:
268
1214220
2120
20:16
Maybe so, sir.
269
1216340
3400
20:19
Then you’ll repeat it: Maybe so, sir. Try to imitate everything about this exactly so when you see this,
270
1219840
8000
20:29
then you’ll repeat it. Maybe so, sir.
271
1229520
3260
20:32
That’s from Top Gun: Maverick which was the first movie we studied in this summer series.
272
1232780
5660
20:38
You’ll also have the opportunity to listen and repeat in slow motion.
273
1238440
3900
20:42
This will be important for you if you’re more of a beginner,
274
1242340
2600
20:44
or if you’re having a hard time focusing on linking or the melody.
275
1244940
5040
20:49
Maybe you’ll want to do it both ways, but the important thing is here is your opportunity
276
1249980
5000
20:54
to take what you learned and put it into your body and your own habit.
277
1254980
5060
21:00
That’s what’s going to transform your speaking.
278
1260040
2780
21:02
You might do well to work with the audio section of this video every day for a week.
279
1262820
4580
21:07
Imitating the rhythm and the simplifications will get easier each time you do it.
280
1267400
5340
21:12
If you can’t keep up with the native speaker, do the slow-motion imitation.
281
1272740
4600
21:17
Okay, here’s our audio training section.
282
1277340
2980
28:08
Don’t forget to come back and do this audio again tomorrow and the next day.
283
1688400
4640
28:13
You want to build habits here, so you don’t need to think about it so much when you’re speaking in conversation,
284
1693040
5820
28:18
you can focus on the words and not the expression or pronunciation.
285
1698860
4260
28:23
Don’t forget, this is part of a series, all summer long, 13 videos, 13 scenes for movies, check out each one,
286
1703120
7180
28:30
learn something new each time.
287
1710300
2280
28:32
I make new videos on the English language every Tuesday and I’d love to have you back here again.
288
1712580
5360
28:37
Please subscribe with notifications and continue your studies right now with this video.
289
1717940
5540
28:43
And if you love this video, share it with a friend.
290
1723480
2540
28:46
That’s it guys and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
291
1726020
4540
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7