FAST ENGLISH - They Thought They Heard It Right - But They Were Wrong!

64,755 views ・ 2022-06-14

Rachel's English


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

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You will fail this quiz. I’m going to play you little bits of casual American English
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conversation, anywhere from 2-4 words in a row, and you will not be able to tell what
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the words are. Even native speakers will fail this quiz. I’ve done this with my parents,
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my brother, my friends and husband, they all failed.
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In a minute, I’m going to test you. This failure illustrates an important point for
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my non-native English-speaking students. No wonder English is hard to understand if you’re
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not a native speaker. It’s okay. It’s not you, it’s English.
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Click here or in the video description to get a free cheat sheet, the sounds of American
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English, it’s a great reference tool and even I use it quite a bit.
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Now, Let’s get to that quiz. Question number one. What is being said here?
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Do you need it again? Here. I’m even going to give you a hint. You’re hearing four
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words.
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Now, one thing you might be saying is, can you turn it up? That’s too quiet to understand.
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YES. volume is one of the differences between stressed and unstressed syllables. American
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English is a stress-timed language which means we need this contrast.
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A stressed syllable is longer, louder, usually has an up-down shape of the melody of the
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voice, has more vocal energy. An unstressed syllable is shorter, quieter, flatter in pitch,
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less vocal energy. In fact, all these characteristics of unstressed syllables can make the speech
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so unclear that if you isolate just those words, native speakers can’t understand.
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Before I give you the answer to question 1, let’s see how my friends and family did
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with this question.
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I need to hear it again.
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Okay, here it is again.
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I have no idea.
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No idea.
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Not a clue.
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No, they don’t get it. Do you? Here it is again.
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I don’t get it.
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No idea.
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No idea? Okay.
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Should I just wanted to. I think something like that.
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I was going to say something about do I ask. Do I something.
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Okay.
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Great, but, totally wrong. I’m going to tell you the answer in just a second, first
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let’s see just two more people fail.
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It’s so, I mean I even know what it is and that even that time it was, I was like, what.
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Okay.
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Something my husband?
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No. So seven native speakers, not one person got it. These are four words in a row. It’s
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not like a single syllable.
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I’m going to play it for you one more time. Be bold, right now, put it in the comments,
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“I think the answer to number one is …” Ok, here, for the last time.
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Now here’s what’s crazy. I’m going to play you the whole sentence. If you’re a
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native speaker, you’re probably going to understand every word I say, effortlessly.
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My friends and family did.
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Before we hear the full sentence, a huge thanks to all my supporters here on
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YouTube, everyone who has joined my channel, they get special badges to make their comments
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pop, early release of videos when available, and also the top tier gets a free monthly
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audio lesson. Thank you! Click JOIN to learn more.
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OK, here’s the sentence.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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Did you get it?
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Let me play the whole sentence. Tell me if it seems clear now.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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Exactly. So, right away you understand it.
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When you hear the whole sentence, those little words make a lot of sense. And it sounds a
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lot more natural than each word being clear.
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Whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer. The contrast of stressed
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and unstressed is vital to natural spoken English. And sometimes I have a hard time
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convincing my students just how much you need to take out of unstressed words. They think,
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I can’t do it like that, no one will understand what I’m saying. Exactly. Just these unstressed
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words, maybe no one would understand. But in the context of a whole sentence, yes, we
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understand. And we’re used to that rhythmic contrast. It puts us at ease.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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That was you.
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Exactly right. That was me. Very good. That was this one. It was the first one I played.
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Between us and the photographer.
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Right.
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Between us and the
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Between us and the
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Between us and the
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Right. When you know what it is, I think it is a little bit easier to pick it up but it
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is so funny how you hear the sentence and you’re like total comprehension. You hear
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the snippet and you’re like, and it’s not even like it was part word, it was like
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three or four words
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Hmmhmm.
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Blows my mind.
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Have you ever noticed, like, even an English teacher might say “like” too much? Hmm!
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But magically, this snippet, that was so unclear, that no one could understand it, is immediately
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understandable in the whole sentence. I’m going to give you 6 more questions. I think,
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at best, you will get one right.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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Yes, between us and the photographer.
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Did you hear us or did you hear me?
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And yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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Yeah, us.
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Yeah.
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Ok, so you guys get how the game goes. I play a clip, you will not be able to understand
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it. I will play clips of my friends and family also failing the quiz question, everyone fails.
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No one needs to feel bad. Then I’ll play the whole clip and you’ll get it. We’ll
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watch the lightbulb go on “I get it! for my friends and family.
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Remember the point. Understand the contrast of American English. Understand that,
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to get the contrast, some speech needs to be unclear. For my students, at the end, I’ll
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give you some training on unstressed words like these in a row, like what we’re hearing here.
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Question number 2. What is being said.
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Need it again?
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Put your guess in the comments.
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Is it hold on, look at?
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That’s partially correct.
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No, I’m okay?
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I’ll play it again.
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Sounds like a child.
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Um, I don’t know. I don’t know sounds.
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No guesses. Okay.
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Want to look at?
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I don’t know what he said.
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Want to look at? You want to hear it again mom?
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Yeah.
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It could be want to look at.
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I’m going to play it for you one more time.
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Did you get it? My brother did actually get this one right.
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Want to look at?
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Bravo Ian!
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The whole sentence is:
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So you want to look at me, okay?
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You want to look.
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Yup. Ian got it.
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That’s probably the easiest one out of the set.
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So you want to look at me, okay?
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So you want to look at me, okay? Molly.
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Right.
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Photography shoot with the boys.
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That was one which is like, “so you want to look at.”
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Oh, it sounds like a small child.
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In the context, it doesn’t sounds that high? But it is funny to me also how sometimes if
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you take a snippet it seems unnaturally high. And you know, she was talking to kids and
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her energy was a little bit higher but in the sentence, it doesn’t sound too crazy.
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No.
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So you want to look at me, okay?
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So you want to look at me, okay?
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It’s so clear, isn’t it?
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Question number 3. Identify this.
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Gif?
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You?
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I love this so much.
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I love stumping native speakers with their own language.
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Give?
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Give.
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Okay.
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My dad had the same guess as John, give, but that’s not right.
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Give.
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Do.
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Play it again.
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Oh, do maybe.
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That’s last time I heard gif.
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When she planted the seed.
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I’m going to give you one more listen
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Got it? Here’s the whole sentence.
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So when do you think these are from?
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So David got it right on the second listen, this is ‘do you’.
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So when do you think these are from?
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So when do you.
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Which you guys also got.
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Two for seven.
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Yes.
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So when do you think these are from?
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When do you think these are from?
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Hmm.
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Yeah.
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So when you. So what you heard in that little fragment was do and you.
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Yeah.
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That was really short.
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But in the sentence, clear.
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So when do you think these are from?
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So when do you think these are from?
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Exactly.
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No one is having any problem with this sentence, hearing it just once. No one is thinking they’re
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hearing ‘give’.
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Question 4. Here it is.
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Let me play that for you again for you.
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Can I have it?
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No, but that is what it sounds like.
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What?
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Can I have it?
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Can I have it?
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They have the same guess as John and Amanda. Close, but not quite it.
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Can I have it?
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That one seemed pretty clear to me.
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You heard it too.
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I heard it too.
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For the record, that’s not correct.
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Good.
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I’m like, I’m definitely sure I guessed that.
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But I agree, it sounds like that.
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Everyone guessed the same. That’s the only time that happened with this quiz. Is that
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what you also guessed? Let’s listen again.
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Here is the full sentence.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look.
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The snippet that you didn’t understand before was “and I haven’t”.
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Oh.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look?
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Yes, exactly.
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What is a ring look?
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Out of context, she was talking about a ring.
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Oh.
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Out of context, I feel like that is hard but you still totally got it.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look?
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And I haven’t.
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Tricky, isn’t it?
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Question 5. What do you hear?
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Hmm. Let’s play it again.
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Cheers?
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It does sort of sound like that, that’s not what it is.
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But it does sort of say, it does sort of sound like that.
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Chirp.
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It sounds like Dad.
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It’s actually Steven Colbert.
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Oh.
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Chirp.
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Chir. It’s part of “it’s your.”
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It’s your?
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Hmm.
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Maybe.
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I have to give a shoutout to my Dad here. In general he was terrible at this game. But this
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was a great guess. Not a hundred percent right but close.
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Cheers.
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To your?
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To your like chur.
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Yeah. Let’s hear it again.
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To your, to your point.
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What do you think? You listen one more time.
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David and Renee were right. Here’s the whole sentence.
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Now you recently have added a new credit to your name.
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Can you hear it now? TO YOUR, ‘chur’.
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Now you recently have added a new credit to your name.
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Now you recently have added a new credit to your name.
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Yeah. So that was ‘to your’ that I think you guys were sort of on to. I think you guys
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maybe said that.
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Okay.
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Yeah.
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Actually, they had both gotten it.
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Now you recently have added a new credit to your name.
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Now you have recently added a new credit to your name.
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Exactly.
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That sounds like a talk show.
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That’s Steven Colbert.
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Sounds like Colbert.
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Now you have recently added a new credit to your name.
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To your.
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To your name.
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Chur.
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If you’re wondering where the CH sound is coming, it comes from the T and the R. Take
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the word ‘train’, for example. Most native speakers will say ‘chrain’, with a CHR
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not TR. The CHR pronunciation is more common for TR words than the TR pronunciation. So
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in the phrase ‘to your’, there is so much reduction, so many sounds dropped, that the
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TR sounds are coming together to make that CHR sound, chr.
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Just two questions left. Question 6.
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Hmm.
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Gonna.
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Done a.
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Done a? Gotta?
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Or Gonna.
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Done a, gonna, or gotta.
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Down in?
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Down in, do you have a guess?
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Belly?
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Done a, gonna, gotta, now we add the guesses ‘down in’ and ‘belly’. Are any of
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these your guesses?
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Got it?
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Hear it again.
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It does sound like got it.
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Ballot, got it.
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Ballot? Got it? Listen one last time.
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This one is tricky. Here’s the full sentence.
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Did you get all it? Here it is again.
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Walked out of the movie Lake House.
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Walked out of the movie Lake House?
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Yeah. Zack Galafanakis talking to some.
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This was a clip from the Zack Galafanakis show Between Two Ferns.
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Walked out of the movie Lake House?
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What was the sentence?
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Walked out of the movie Late Ones.
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I thought he said Lake House.
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Here, let’s play it again.
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Walked out of the movie Lake House.
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Walked out of the movie Lake House.
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Yes.
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Apparently the movie “Lake house” was terrible. Out of the. Did you get that one?
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Out of the.
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Here’s the last question. I think it’s the hardest one.
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What do you hear?
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Okay, again.
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It’s so ridiculous, isn’t it?
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This is actually three words
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Yup. Sounds like as if something.
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Uhuh, Uhuh.
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Actually, it’s not ‘as if’.
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What?
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David doesn’t even hears anything that sounds remotely like a word.
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No idea.
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Wishup.
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Wishup?
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Wish upon a star?
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Okay, do you have a guess, Ian?
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One more time?
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Okay.
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Nope. I don’t have a guess.
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My Dad’s guess is ‘wishup’, which, for the record, is not a word in English. I’m
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going to play you the whole sentence now. Can you get it?
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Was the whole thing clear? Let’s hear it again.
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The three words in question were ‘that was a’.
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That was a really long time ago, honey.
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You guys crushed every single word in the sentence, no problem whatsoever.
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It was a really long time ago, honey.
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It’s actually ‘that’, I think.
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That was a really long--
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But it’s true that ‘that’ and ‘it’ can actually reduce to the same sentence.
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I was a really long time ago, honey.
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That was a really long time ago, honey.
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It was a really long time ago, honey.
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It’s actually ‘that’. That was a really long time ago, honey.
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That was a really long time ago, honey.
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Alright.
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No wonder people can’t understand this.
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People can. They just have to learn the tricks.
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Okay, so sentence 1.
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And, yeah, I’m just trying to get whatever conversation happens between us and the photographer.
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The fragment in the quiz was this:
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Between us and the
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Between us and the
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Between becomes tween. ‘Be’ kind of sound in front ‘tween’. But not really it’s
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own syllable. Tween us and the, tween us and the. The n links right into the uh for us,
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tween us and the. The word and reduces, us and, us and, us and the, us and the. The word
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the, we have the voiced th beginning an unstressed word, you don’t need to bring your tongue
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tip through for this th sound. It can just touch the backs of the teeth, don’t lift
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the tongue tip and release it, that will sound like a d but rather bring it forward and pull
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it back. The, the, the, the. Tween us, tween us and, tween us and. You’re going to have
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to really simplify your mouth movements to match this speed. Tween us and. Now, you try
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it. I’m going to play it then there will be a gap for you to say it, we’ll do it
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5 times in a row. Play it, say it. Really simplify your mouth movements as you do this.
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Sentence 2
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So you want to look at me, okay?
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And the fragment in the quiz was this:
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Want to look at
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Want to look at. Want to look at, want to look at. Want to becomes wanna, very common
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reduction. Want to look at. The word ‘looked’, not stressed here. Wanna look at. Lower in
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pitch, lower energy. The word at reduces to the schwa, ət, ət, ət. And the t is a stop
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t because the next word me begins with a consonant that will usually be a stop t. It can sound
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dropped to my students but we don’t hear it as dropped. Native speakers still hear
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it as a T. Because of just the little stop quality, the little lift, at me, at me, at
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me, at me. Wanna look ət, wanna look ət, wanna look ət. We’ll have a play it, say
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it training section, match exactly what you hear, don’t stop, don’t fix, just hear
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the next iteration and hear it again.
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Sentence 3
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So when do you think these are from?
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The fragment in the quiz:
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Do you
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Do you, do you, do you, do you
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You can think of both of these vowels as the schwa, I can do this without living my lips
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at all. Do you, do you, do you, do you. It’s just the tongue moving inside. Do you, do you.
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Linking together like a single word, no separation.
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Here’s your training section, play it, say it five times.
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Sentence 4
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look.
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The fragment in the quiz:
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And I haven’t
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And I have not and I haven’t becoming n I haven’t, n I haven’t. And reduces, it’s
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just the n sound. That links right into the I diphthong, nI, nI. In the word haven’t,
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she’s dropping the h. nI aven’t, nI aven’t, nI aven’t.
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Not as much daily, and I haven’t found my daily ring look.
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The t at the end of an apostrophe contraction can be dropped or stop t. In the whole sentence,
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I feel more as a stop. Haven’t, n’t, n’t, n’t. That abrupt stop of air that symbolizes
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the t. And I haven’t.
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Okay now, play it, say it 5 times in a row.
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23:37
Sentence 5
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Now, you recently have added a new credit to your name.
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And the fragment in the quiz: to your
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23:47
To your, to your. The t sound a little bit more like a ch, that’s the influence of
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23:55
the r coming later. To your, to your.
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24:00
Play it, say it 5 times
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Isn’t it interesting? It’s not to your. There’s a lot less happening with your mouth.
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To your.
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24:26
Sentence 6
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Walked out of the movie Lake House.
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And the fragment: out of the
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24:32
Out of the, out of the. Really unclear. The T in out becomes a flap. The word ‘of’
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reduces to just the schwa so out of becomes outə but not pronounced nearly that clearly.
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Out of, out of, out of the, out of the. Again, the word the, that voiced th, tongue tip won’t
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come through the tip. It just touches the backs of the teeth and then pulls away quickly,
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25:01
the, the, the. Outəthe, outəthe. If you’re thinking the words ‘Out of the’, it will
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25:07
be impossible to pronounce this so quickly so forget the words, forget what you see in
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black and white, just focus on what you hear.
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Now, the play it say it 5 times. You repeat in the pause.
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The last sentence
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That was a really long time ago, honey.
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And the fragment was: That was a
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25:45
That was a. The th can be dropped in the word that and that’s what’s happening here.
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The vowel in that can reduce to the schwa so ‘that’ becomes ət. Super quick schwa
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then a stop t because the next word begins with a consonant, the word was, absolutely
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not fully pronounced but it becomes ət was, ət was, ət was. So fast. Then the article,
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just a schwa at the end, wəzə, wəzə, wəzə. So that was a becomes, ətwəzə, ətwəzə,
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ətwəzə.
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Now, you do it, play it, say it 5 times.
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I call these reduction strings when we have
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these unstressed words or syllables in a row. If you want to train more of this kind of
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audio, I do have a chapter that has reduction string training in it in my Academy, this
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would be in the stress 3 course, so check out rachelsenglishacademy.com and sign up
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27:07
if you want more of this kind of work.
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If you’re interested in training all the reductions of American English, not to mention
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all the sounds, check out my online school and #1 accent training ground RachelsEnglishAcademy.com.
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27:22
I would love to have you as my student. It’s the best way to train those muscles and change
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27:27
your habits. Keep your learning going now with this video and be sure to subscribe,
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27:32
with notifications on, to my channel here on YouTube. I love being your English teacher.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English
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