REHEMA ELLIS -- Interview a Broadcaster! -- American English Pronunciation

130,287 views ・ 2014-01-02

Rachel's English


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Hey guys, welcome to the new Rachel's English mini series, Interview a Broadcaster!
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>> Hey everyone. I'm here with Rehema Ellis. Could you tell my audience what you do?
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>> I'm a broadcast journalist. I'm the chief education correspondent for NBC News.
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>> Great! Well, I don't know if you're aware of this, but another term for the
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standard American accent is 'broadcaster English'. So people all over the world are
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looking to those in America who deliver the news as a standard for how to speak
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American English. So I'm curious, where are you from? Did you have to change anything
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about the way you speak when you got interested in this field?
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>> Well, I was born in North Carolina, so they have a southern accent,
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I was raised in Boston where they have a Boston accent. >> Yes.
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>> But I have neither. I'm not quite sure how that happened >> Okay.
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because both my parents did have southern accents.
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>> Interesting. >> But I don't.
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N'T contractions can be a real challenge for non-native speakers because native speakers
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don't release the T. We make an N sound and cut it short.
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Don't, doesn't can't, for example. Did you hear how Ms. Ellis said 'don't'?
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'But I don't'. She didn't release the T. That would be 'don't'. Don', don'. But I don't.
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>> But I don't. [3x] >> Wow. So you didn't have to work for it.
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>> Well, I won't say I didn't have to work for it, but I had great teachers.
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We're standing in front of the Education Nation banner, and I don't recall...
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I don't recall. Again, no released T sound. Don't recall [2x] >> And I don't recall [3x],
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but I don't think most people hear themselves with an accent. But I >> Right.
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watched television. And most of the people on television didn't have accents.
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Didn't have accents. Again, no released T in the N'T ending.
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Didn't, didn't, didn't have accents.
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>> And most of the people on television didn't have accents. [3x]
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>> Okay. >>So, I'm not quite sure why people do anyway.
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>> Uh-huh. So, when you're preparing a text to read in front of the camera,
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how much time do you spend with it,
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what do you do to sort of help yourself prepare for that?
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>> It's crazy to say I spend as much time as I can or I'm given.
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Sometimes I'm not given a lot of time because you're rushing to an event
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and it's happening now. >> Right. >> So, you don't have a whole lot of time.
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You don't have, don't have. Again, no released T.
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>> So you don't have [3x] a who lot of time. It's like, um, so, what I do is,
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I'm a fast study, I'm a fast read. And, if I write my script on my iPad or my laptop,
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I will read it over as many times as I possibly can.
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>> Out loud? or? >> Yeah. Out loud. Because I want to hear how it sounds.
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>> Mm-hmm. Great. What do you do when you come across a word
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that you don't know how to pronounce? >> I ask my producer, Sue Kroll.
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>> Okay. And then do you, they'll, you hear it, do you, is it better for you to read,
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visually get the pronunciation, or, do you need to hear it in order for it to make sense?
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>> Sometimes I'll write it down, trying to write it out phonetically. >> Phonetically.
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Yeah. >> Yeah. And I'll just ask someone, say it to me again. And again, and again.
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>> Repetition. >> Right. And otherwise, I'll try and change the word.
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>> Okay. To something that you know. >> That I can pronounce.
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>> Hey, that's fair. Um, are there any words in American English that you know
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are going to trip you up that you have a problem with?
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>> It's a deadly word. But is, p--, uh, I can't say it!
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Can't say, can't, can't.
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This one is especially hard because if we don't release the T, how do you know it's not
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'can', the very opposite of 'can't'? Check out this video that explains the difference.
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>> I can't say it, [3x] posthumously.
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>> Oh yeah. That's a tough word. Avoid that word at all costs.
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>> And you don't have to say it that many, um, there's not that much,
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many times that you have to say that >> Yeah. >> word, but if I do,
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I will change it if I >> Yeah. >> can. Because as you could see, I can't say it.
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>> Right, yeah. >> You say it. >> Posthumously. >> Ah, see there?
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>> You know what, for the record, I'm pretty sure that's how you say it.
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I will look it up before editing the final cut of this video.
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Posthumously. A great vocabulary word. It means, something that happens after one's
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death. So, if someone is, for example, given an award after he or she has died, that award
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is given posthumously. Another example, if a book is published after the author dies,
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it is published posthumously. This is a four-syllable word with stress on the first
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syllable. DA-da-da-da. Post-hu-mous-ly. Posthumously.
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>> Alright, well thank you so much for your time. I really appreciate it,
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I know my audience appreciates it. >> My pleasure.
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Follow Ms. Ellis on Twitter and check out her segments on TV
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or online for a great example of American English pronunciation.
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>> Alright guys, that's it, and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
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Check out all the videos in the Interview a Broadcaster series by clicking here,
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or on the link in the video description below.
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