Learning English—How to learn ENGLISH SPEAKING—Learning English with movies | Rachel’s English

1,665,390 views

2019-03-12 ・ Rachel's English


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Learning English—How to learn ENGLISH SPEAKING—Learning English with movies | Rachel’s English

1,665,390 views ・ 2019-03-12

Rachel's English


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

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I’ve got something very exciting for you.
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In this video, we’re going to study English with movies!
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Today it’s a short scene from a new movie, On the Basis of Sex,
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and we’re going to do an in-depth pronunciation analysis to
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boost your listening comprehension and help you sound more American.
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It’s amazing what we can discover by studying even a small bit of English conversation.
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I call this kind of exercise a Ben Franklin exercise.
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First we’ll watch the scene, then you and I will study together to understand exactly how the
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words are being pronounced.
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You’ll be amazed at what we’re going to find after watching the scene.
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First, the scene.
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I apologize, okay?
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I want to know where you were.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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What?
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Gloria Steinem. She's a writer. She just started her own magazine.
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>> She testified in the Senate. >>Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
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>> What if you got hurt, or, arrested? >> Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
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Jane, these things can get out of hand.
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Okay, well I'm fifteen years old, and you don't need to control every minute of my life.
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Yes I do. That is my job. And your job is to go to school and learn.
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Now, the analysis.
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I apologize.
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I apologize.
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I apologize.
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A five-syllable thought group.
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I apol--
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And the middle syllable, the third syllable is the most stressed.
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I apologize.
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But the intonation is smooth. We don't have skips.
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It scoops up, the voice scoops up and then it comes back down.
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I apologize. I apologize.
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I apologize. I apologize.
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Linked together smoothly. We have a vowel to vowel link here, with a diphthong AI.
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I uh-- linking right into the schwa of 'apologize'.
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In a link like this, when it's an AI diphthong linking into another word that begins with a vowel or diphthong,
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you can think of connecting them with a Y sound. I ya-- yapologize, yapologize.
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I apologize. It can help smooth out that link.
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I apologize.
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I apologize.
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I apologize, okay?
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Okay? Okay? Pitch goes up at the end. Okay.
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It's a yes/no question. However, it's, she's not really asking yes or no.
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Her tone is pretty harsh, isn't it? I apologize.
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It doesn't sound very apologetic at all.
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I apologize, okay?
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I apologize, okay?
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I apologize, okay?
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I apologize, okay?
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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One sentence, one thought group. What are the most stressed syllables there?
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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I think 'know' and 'were' are the most stressed words there.
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Every word is linked together smoothly, the words 'want to'
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linked together into a single reduction. Wanna.
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I wanna, I want to know.
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I wanna know where you were.
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No gaps between the words, everything super smooth.
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I wanna. AI diphthong right into the W constant sound,
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schwa of 'wanna' uh, uh, right into the stressed word know. I want to know.
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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I want to know where you were.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Then her daughter replies with a long thought group.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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What do you hear as the most stressed words there?
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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So Denise is a little bit stressed, but
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there's also, she's not putting a lot of energy in her voice there at the beginning,
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Denise, Denise.
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Denise and I went to a rally--
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Denise and I went to a rally--
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Speak is also a little bit longer.
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Let's talk about her reductions.
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Do you hear any reductions here?
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A reduction is where a sound on a word is dropped or changed.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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This first one, right here. Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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The word 'and' is reduced, it's just an N sound, quick schwa N. Denise and, Denise and,
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Denise and I.
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I think this word sounds sort of like the word 'in' when it's reduced. Denise and I, Denise and I.
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And it's really smoothly linked together, the ending S sound links into the schwa.
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Denise and I.
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And then the N sound links right into the AI diphthong.
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Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Went to a -- Went to a --
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We have two T's here, they're connected with just a single true T sound.
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So you don't need to make two T's here, we link them together.
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Went to a -- Went to a --
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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The word 'to', this word usually reduces.
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Almost always the vowel changes to the schwa but
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here, the next word is simply the schwa.
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So if we changed the OO vowel to a schwa,
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then we wouldn't have anything to let us know we're changing syllables here,
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because it would be the same exact sound.
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So in order to link smoothly, but have us know,
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have us hear that as two separate words,
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we don't reduce the vowel when it's followed by a schwa.
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To a-- To a-- To a-- To a--
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So even though it's not stressed, that would be 'to'
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it's still said flatly and quickly. To, to, to.
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It's not reduced.
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Went to a-- Went to a-- Went to a--
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Okay, now, look. Here, we have another word 'to',
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another opportunity to study the word. How is it pronounced here?
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Went to a rally to hear--
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Went to a rally to hear--
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Went to a rally to hear--
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T's definitely not: to, to, to.
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There's no true T and there's no OO vowel.
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It's more of a flap T and then the vowel is the schwa. Rally to--
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So we make it t a flap T when it comes between two vowels.
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We don't usually do this at the beginning of words,
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but words like today, tomorrow, two, together,
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these words we do sometimes do this with, make the true T a flap T instead.
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Rally to-- Rally to-- Rally to--
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So we have two occurrences of the word 'to', both times they're unstressed but once it's not reduced at all,
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none of the sounds are changed and the other time it's reduced a lot. Both sounds change flap T and schwa.
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Rally to-- Rally to--
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Rally to hear--
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Rally to hear--
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Rally to hear--
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'Hear', this is a verb and usually our content words are stressed, but in any sentence,
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if we have a lot of different content words that is nouns, verbs, adjectives, or adverbs,
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they won't all be equally stressed.
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So here, went and hear, even though those are both verbs, to me feel less stressed than the others.
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Then we have Gloria Steinem, a proper noun.
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Now, any time we have a name, it's the last word in the name that's the most stressed.
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So Gloria-- Glor--, the stressed syllable there is stressed but Steinem,
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the stressed syllable there, to me, is even more stressed.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Da-da-da-DA-da. Steinem.
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The stressed syllable of her last name would be the most stressed in the group of her name.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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And then one more stressed word, speak, at the end.
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Gloria Steinem speak.
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Gloria Steinem speak.
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Gloria Steinem speak.
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What?
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What? What?
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She does a light true T release at the end,
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that's a little uncommon, it's more common to make a stop T at the end of a thought group. What?
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What? But she does a light release. Notice the intonation goes up. What?
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What? She's surprised. She can't believe what she's hearing.
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Let's talk about the WH consonants here.
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How does she pronounce these sounds?
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What? What? What?
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Just as a pure W sound. What? What?
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It's become outdated, I would say, to pronounce the hh sound before the W.
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What? What?
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In WH words, you might hear some people say it that way.
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My mom does it that way, what, white, for example,
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but it's much more common these days to just do a clean W sound. What.
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Not the W sound with the little escape of air H before. What?
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What?
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What?
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What?
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Okay there's that name again.
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And again, we have a little bit of stress on the stressed syllable of Gloria,
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but then more stress on the stressed syllable, Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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There's no separation between these words they're linked smoothly together
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because they're part of the same thought group.
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Everything in English is really smoothly linked together within the same thought group.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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Gloria Steinem.
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer. She's a writer.
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Again, linked together, really smoothly there's no break, the letter A, the article a here is the schwa.
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She's a--, so the apostrophe S is a Z sound, it links right into the schwa.
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The schwa links right into the beginning sound of the next word, which is an R.
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The W is silent in this word.
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She's a writer. She's a writer.
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What's the most stressed syllable there?
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer.
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It's the stressed syllable of writer. So we have smoothly going up, she's a writer,
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then the peak on wri--, and the pitch falls down. She's a writer.
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Uuuhh--- Really smooth, no jumps or gaps in the pitch there. She's a writer.
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And notice the T here is a flap T because it comes between two vowel sounds.
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So it's not a true T, but rather a flap of the tongue.
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer.
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She's a writer. She just started her own magazine.
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She just started her own magazine.
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What are your most stressed words there?
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She just started her own magazine.
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She just started her own magazine.
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She just started her own magazine.
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Started her own magazine.
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Star and mag the most stressed syllables there,
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the other syllables said quickly. She just--
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How is the word 'just' pronounced?
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Focus especially on the ending cluster ST.
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She just started-- She just started-- She just started--
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Just started-- Just started-- She just started--
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The T is dropped. This is really common with the ST cluster at the end
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when the next word begins with a consonant,
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we tend to drop the T.
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Just started. So the two words linked together with a single S sound.
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She just started. She and just, low in pitch, flatter, compared to star. She just star-- she just started.
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She just started. She just started. She just started.
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The T here in started, another flap. Why?
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It comes after an R before a vowel, not between vowels. True,
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but this same rule applies. A T becomes a flap T when it comes after an R before a vowel.
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Started. Started.
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So the vowel sound here is the IH as in sit vowel followed by the D consonant.
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This is how we pronounce the ED ending. Started.
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The ED ending is pronounced this way if the sound before is a T or a D. Started. Started.
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The ED ending when it makes an extra syllable is always unstressed.
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Star-- ted, ted, ted.
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So it's said more quickly, it's flatter in pitch, less energy in the voice. Started.
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She just started.
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She just started. She just started.
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She just started her own magazine.
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Her own magazine.
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Her own magazine.
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So her and own, less stressed, a little flatter, leading up in pitch and energy to the stressed syllable, mag.
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Her own magazine.
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And then smoothly, the voice falls off.
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So this is how stress works in American English.
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We have stressed syllables where the pitch of the voice peaks, and the energy of the voice peaks,
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and it's always a smooth connection up to, and then falling away from that peak.
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The word her, she doesn't drop the H although that is a common reduction.
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Started her. Started her own. Started her own magazine.
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You might hear that. She doesn't do that though, she pronounces a light H sound even though it's unstressed.
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Her own magazine.
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Her own magazine, her own magazine, her own magazine.
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She testified in the senate.
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She testified in the senate.
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Okay so she's getting more impassioned.
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The pitch of her voice, the high pitches of her voice are getting higher.
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14:16
She testified in the Senate.
270
856680
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14:20
And then her mom starts speaking.
271
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14:22
But she, in, the, all function words, a little less important for meaning, lower in pitch, faster,
272
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14:34
less clear than the stressed syllables of the stressed words.
273
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14:38
Test, sen.
274
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14:40
She testified in the senate.
275
880980
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14:42
She testified in the senate.
276
882760
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14:44
She testified in the senate.
277
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14:46
Notice the ED ending here in testified.
278
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14:49
It's just a sound, it's the D sound.
279
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14:52
So there's no extra syllable, it's not a vowel and a consonant, it's just a consonant.
280
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14:57
And that's because the sound before was not a T or a D. Testified.
281
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15:03
So just a light D sound at the end which then links into the next word, the IH as in sit vowel for in.
282
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15:10
She testified in the Senate.
283
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15:14
And it's hard to hear because her mom starts talking but this T is a stop T.
284
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15:19
She doesn't release the escape of air. Senate.
285
919660
2980
15:22
It's an abrupt stop of air. If I said that with a true T, it would sound like this: Senate.
286
922640
5880
15:28
Do you hear the difference? Senate.
287
928520
2160
15:30
But instead it's, Senate.
288
930680
2160
15:32
That might sound to you like the T is dropped but it's not totally dropped because we do stop the air.
289
932840
5780
15:38
Senate.
290
938620
1660
15:40
It, it, it. And that abrupt stop is part of the T.
291
940280
5120
15:45
Senate.
292
945400
1160
15:46
Senate.
293
946560
1200
15:47
>> Senate. >> Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
294
947760
2460
15:50
Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
295
950220
4220
15:54
So a really quick yeah, and then I know who Gloria Steinem is, a thought group with three stressed syllables.
296
954440
11080
16:05
I know who Gloria Steinem is.
297
965520
2600
16:08
And all of those sounds linked together really smoothly. There's no break between words.
298
968120
4580
16:12
I know who Gloria Steinem is.
299
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6200
16:18
Ending M links right into the beginning vowel IH of 'is'.
300
978900
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16:23
Is, pronounced with a light weak Z sound at the end. Is, is, is.
301
983640
5060
16:28
Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
302
988700
2580
16:31
Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
303
991280
2560
16:33
Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
304
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3100
16:36
What if you got hurt?
305
996940
1280
16:38
What if you got hurt?
306
998220
2480
16:40
What if you got hurt?
307
1000700
2120
16:42
Two stressed words there. What if you got hurt?
308
1002820
4860
16:47
Hurt, the most stressed. She does a light release so that's a true T. Hurt.
309
1007680
7360
16:55
The T here, got hurt, is a stop T.
310
1015040
4620
16:59
We make a T a stop T when it's at the end of a thought group, like here in Senate
311
1019660
4360
17:04
or when it's followed by a word that begins with a consonant sound.
312
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4660
17:08
And here, it begins with a consonant sound, H.
313
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3540
17:12
Got hurt, got hurt.
314
1032220
2800
17:15
So there's a stop here. Got hurt.
315
1035020
3300
17:18
And that signifies the stop T.
316
1038320
2580
17:20
What about the T in 'what' over here?
317
1040900
3920
17:24
What if you got hurt?
318
1044820
1660
17:26
What if you got hurt?
319
1046480
1500
17:27
What if you got hurt?
320
1047980
1320
17:29
What are you hearing there?
321
1049300
1900
17:31
It's a flap T. What if, what if.
322
1051200
3280
17:34
And that's because it comes between two vowel sounds.
323
1054480
3000
17:37
So even though the vowel in 'if', the IH vowel, isn't part of the same word,
324
1057480
6060
17:43
these two words link together so that T does come between two vowels and it is a flap T.
325
1063540
5180
17:48
That flap T connects the two words.
326
1068720
3380
17:52
What if, what if, what if.
327
1072100
2080
17:54
What if you got hurt?
328
1074180
1660
17:55
What if you got hurt?
329
1075840
1680
17:57
What if you got hurt, or, arrested?
330
1077520
2440
17:59
Arrested, arrested. Da-DA-da.
331
1079960
5040
18:05
Stress on the middle syllable. A-rres-ted.
332
1085000
3960
18:08
The ED ending of this word, how is it pronounced?
333
1088960
3140
18:12
It is an extra syllable. That means it's a vowel and a consonant. The IH vowel
334
1092100
5060
18:17
and the D sound, that's because the sound before was a T. Arrested. Arrested.
335
1097160
7360
18:24
>> Or, arrested? >> Mom.
336
1104520
1660
18:26
>> Or, arrested? >> Mom.
337
1106180
1760
18:27
>> Or, arrested? >> Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
338
1107940
3280
18:31
Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
339
1111220
3380
18:34
Okay, so what do we have here?
340
1114600
2120
18:36
What are our most stressed syllables?
341
1116720
2860
18:39
Mom, has some length. Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
342
1119580
6140
18:45
Then stress on the syllable rall-- and riot, she also exaggerates the R, rally, rrr--
343
1125720
6960
18:52
and when we exaggerate a consonant by holding it out a little bit, giving it a little bit more time,
344
1132680
4960
18:57
that adds more stress. It's a rally.
345
1137640
3700
19:01
It's a rally, not a riot.
346
1141340
2640
19:03
It's a rally, not a riot.
347
1143980
2400
19:06
It's a rally, not a riot.
348
1146380
2400
19:08
It's a little hard to hear, what her final T is. I think it's a true T
349
1148780
4300
19:13
but it's a little hard to hear because her mom starts talking.
350
1153080
3440
19:16
It's a-- not a--,
351
1156520
2420
19:18
these two sets of unstressed words, flatter in pitch, it's a-- not a--
352
1158940
5920
19:24
said more quickly compared to rally and riot which are stressed. Everything links together.
353
1164860
7180
19:32
Everything's very smooth. It's a rally, not a riot.
354
1172040
4400
19:36
Not a, linking together with that flap T.
355
1176440
3740
19:40
It's a rally, not a riot.
356
1180180
2540
19:42
It's a rally, not a riot.
357
1182720
2420
19:45
>> It's a rally, not a riot. >> Jane, these things can get out of hand.
358
1185140
3940
19:49
Jane, Jane. Single thought group, stressed word, up down, Jane, Jane.
359
1189080
7380
19:56
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
360
1196460
5580
20:02
Get out of hand. She says this word a little bit differently.
361
1202040
5380
20:07
It's part of the accent that she's developed for this movie, we would say hand,
362
1207420
5760
20:13
the AH as in bat vowel when it's followed by N, like it is here, has an UH sound like butter or schwa before the N.
363
1213180
9060
20:22
Hand--
364
1222240
2760
20:25
This is where the back of the tongue relaxes. But this is not really how she pronounces it.
365
1225000
4600
20:29
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
366
1229600
2400
20:32
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
367
1232000
2200
20:34
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
368
1234200
1920
20:36
Hand, hand, hand.
369
1236120
2320
20:38
So that's not really a standard pronunciation of the word.
370
1238440
3620
20:42
Hand, hand, ah, ah, ah,
371
1242060
3720
20:45
Would be more standard. The word 'these' unstressed, said more quickly. These things can get--
372
1245780
7640
20:53
Then we have the word 'can'. It's not only unstressed but it reduces, a sound changes.
373
1253420
5520
20:58
Rather than ah, it's the schwa, and it's said really quickly. Can, can, things can, things can get.
374
1258940
8460
21:07
These things can get out of hand.
375
1267400
2100
21:09
These things can get out of hand.
376
1269500
1920
21:11
These things can get out of hand.
377
1271420
1720
21:13
Now, we have two T's here. This T comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds.
378
1273140
4740
21:17
This T comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds, so they should both be flap T's.
379
1277880
5220
21:23
Let's listen to how she does it.
380
1283100
2300
21:25
Can get out of hand.
381
1285400
1600
21:27
Can get out of hand.
382
1287000
1400
21:28
Can get out of hand.
383
1288400
1460
21:29
And they are both Flap Ts.
384
1289860
2320
21:32
Get out of, get out of.
385
1292180
2820
21:35
The word 'of' is reduced to just the schwa. That's pretty common especially with 'out'.
386
1295000
4820
21:39
Out of, out of, out of. Get out of hand, get out of hand.
387
1299820
5380
21:45
Get out of hand.
388
1305200
1340
21:46
Get out of hand.
389
1306540
1720
21:48
Get out of hand.
390
1308260
660
21:48
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old, and you don't need to control every minute of my life.
391
1308920
3660
21:52
Then we have a very long thought group here, it continues on to the next slide.
392
1312580
4680
21:57
Let's listen to this first part and listen for the stressed syllables.
393
1317260
4220
22:01
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
394
1321480
2020
22:03
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
395
1323500
2020
22:05
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
396
1325520
1640
22:07
So her pitch is higher, her speech is a lot faster, showing emotion here, but I still hear a couple syllables,
397
1327160
7020
22:14
a couple words is a little bit more stressed.
398
1334180
2120
22:16
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
399
1336300
3700
22:20
Fifteen and old, a little bit longer, a little bit more stressed.
400
1340000
4240
22:24
The T here is a true T because it starts a stressed syllable. Fifteen.
401
1344240
6220
22:30
That's different than the word 'fifty' where it's the first syllable that's stressed. Fifty.
402
1350460
6000
22:36
Then we usually make that T a flap T even though it doesn't follow the rules.
403
1356460
3720
22:40
Fifty, but 1-5, fifteen, has a true T, stress on the second syllable.
404
1360180
6480
22:46
Well, I'm fifteen years old--
405
1366660
1900
22:48
Notice everything links together really smoothly, the plural S in years is pronounced as a Z
406
1368560
5420
22:53
and it links into the next words. Zold, zold. Years old, years old.
407
1373980
4300
22:58
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
408
1378280
2040
23:00
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old--
409
1380320
2020
23:02
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old, and you don't need to control every minute of my life.
410
1382340
3700
23:06
And you don't need to control every minute of my life.
411
1386040
2920
23:08
Okay, don't, she stresses that, she does a gesture with her arms on it to add more stress.
412
1388960
5140
23:14
You don't need to control every minute of my life.
413
1394100
5840
23:19
Okay, so those are our most stressed syllables. What else is going on here?
414
1399940
4720
23:24
First of all, I notice the reduction with the word 'and'.
415
1404660
3360
23:28
And, and, and, and, and, said really quickly. And you, and you, and you.
416
1408020
4640
23:32
And you don't need to--
417
1412660
1380
23:34
And you don't need to--
418
1414040
1420
23:35
And you don't need to--
419
1415460
900
23:36
Now we have a stressed word, don't. Usually when a word is stressed,
420
1416360
3620
23:39
we don't change anything about the pronunciation. We don't reduce it.
421
1419980
3600
23:43
But what happens to the T? Let's listen.
422
1423580
3180
23:46
And you don't need to--
423
1426760
1460
23:48
And you don't need to--
424
1428220
1260
23:49
And you don't need to--
425
1429480
980
23:50
You don't need, you don't need.
426
1430460
2420
23:52
It's it's totally dropped. This is a way that we do pronounce N apostrophe T contractions.
427
1432880
5340
23:58
There are several different ways it's pronounced, this is one of them.
428
1438220
3800
24:02
T completely dropped, the N in don't links directly into the N in need. Don't need, you don't need.
429
1442020
7820
24:09
And you don't need to--
430
1449840
1380
24:11
And you don't need to--
431
1451220
1420
24:12
And you don't need to--
432
1452640
1020
24:13
Need to-- need to-- need to--
433
1453660
2180
24:15
Now, here, again, it's a flap. It's not a true T sound. It's more like a D.
434
1455840
5220
24:21
And we can link that with the word before, need to-- need to--.
435
1461060
3840
24:24
So this is just like earlier when she reduced the word 'to' to flap and schwa.
436
1464900
5140
24:30
She's doing it again. Need to-- need to-- need to--
437
1470040
3820
24:33
And you don't need to control--
438
1473860
1780
24:35
And you don't need to control--
439
1475640
1640
24:37
And you don't need to control--
440
1477280
1560
24:38
Control, stress on the second syllable, TR cluster is often pronounced as CHR
441
1478840
6500
24:45
and I do hear this lightly as a CH, rather than a T sound. Control, control.
442
1485340
7660
24:53
Control, control, control every minute of my life.
443
1493000
4360
24:57
Minute of my life. Every minute of my life. Every minute of my life.
444
1497360
7180
25:04
Again, the pitch change is always very smooth.
445
1504540
3780
25:08
Every min-- that's leading up to the peak in minute of my life.
446
1508320
8480
25:16
It goes down and then back up, minute of, linked together with a flap T. Minute of my life.
447
1516800
7100
25:23
Now, here, the V sound isn't dropped. It is said lightly.
448
1523900
4040
25:27
Minute of my life.
449
1527940
2260
25:30
Every minute of my life.
450
1530200
1660
25:31
Every minute of my life.
451
1531860
1660
25:33
>> Every minute of my life. >> Yes, I do. That is my job.
452
1533520
2420
25:35
Yes, I do. That is my job.
453
1535940
3800
25:39
Quite a bit of stress here. Yes, I do. That is my job.
454
1539740
6720
25:46
Two peaks in each of those sentences. Yes I do.
455
1546460
3140
25:49
Uhhhh. But the pitch change is very smooth, very linked together, those words: Yes, I do. That is my job.
456
1549600
7920
25:57
These two words linked with a flap T. That is, that is, that is. That is my job.
457
1557520
6100
26:03
Yes, I do. That is my job.
458
1563620
1980
26:05
Yes, I do. That is my job.
459
1565600
1900
26:07
Yes, I do. That is my job. And your job is to go to school and learn.
460
1567500
3680
26:11
And your job is to go to school and learn.
461
1571180
3180
26:14
And your job is to go to school and learn.
462
1574360
8260
26:22
Those are the most stressed words there. What's happening with reductions?
463
1582620
5220
26:27
And your job is to go to school and learn.
464
1587840
2400
26:30
And your job is to go to school and learn.
465
1590240
2520
26:32
And your job is to go to school and learn.
466
1592760
2240
26:35
And your job, and, and, and, and.
467
1595000
3380
26:38
So the word 'and' reduced again. I would probably say the vowel isn't reduced, and,
468
1598380
5660
26:44
instead of un, un, un, un. Here, it was: and you, and you, and you.
469
1604040
5140
26:49
But here it's: and, and, and, and your, and your, and your.
470
1609180
4620
26:53
And your job--
471
1613800
1300
26:55
And your job--
472
1615100
1480
26:56
And your job--
473
1616580
1180
26:57
And your job-- And your job--
474
1617760
2880
27:00
So even though she's stressing the word 'your', she's reducing it, she's not saying:
475
1620640
5620
27:06
your, she's saying: yer, yer.
476
1626260
3540
27:09
So that's the Y sound, the schwa, and the R.
477
1629800
4940
27:14
So she's reduced the sounds but the intonation and the stress is there. Yer-- up down, it's a peak.
478
1634740
6520
27:21
And your job, and your job.
479
1641260
3200
27:24
And your job--
480
1644460
1280
27:25
And your job--
481
1645740
1360
27:27
And your job is to go to school.
482
1647100
2000
27:29
Is to go to school.
483
1649100
2500
27:31
So interestingly, alright, first we have the Z sound in 'is'. Iz, iz to. Then I here this as a true T and the OO vowel,
484
1651600
11500
27:43
not reduced: to, to, to.
485
1663100
2980
27:46
I'm not quite sure why she does that, it might be part of the accent she's developing for this period.
486
1666080
6300
27:52
To, to, to. Your job is to go to--
487
1672380
3220
27:55
But then the second word 'to, totally reduced. Flap T and the schwa.
488
1675600
6660
28:02
Go to, go to, go to, go to school.
489
1682260
3640
28:05
Is to go to school.
490
1685900
1300
28:07
Is to go to school.
491
1687200
1480
28:08
Is to go to school and learn.
492
1688680
1680
28:10
And learn. And learn. And learn.
493
1690360
3120
28:13
I would write that as schwa N, that reduction, it's certainly not and.
494
1693480
4880
28:18
And learn. And learn. And learn.
495
1698360
3900
28:22
So as you've seen here in this dialogue, there are lots of different reductions in American English.
496
1702260
5940
28:28
T's are pronounced differently depending on the context.
497
1708200
3080
28:31
ED endings, pronunciation is not always what you think, like the N apostrophe T in 'don't', why is that T dropped?
498
1711280
8040
28:39
So the more you study English like this, and the more you pay attention to how Americans speak,
499
1719320
4960
28:44
the easier time you will have understanding them, and then also the easier you'll be able to imitate them
500
1724280
5820
28:50
when you know the details of what's happening.
501
1730100
2680
28:52
And when you're able to really imitate then you will start to sound more natural
502
1732780
4580
28:57
when you speak American English.
503
1737360
1780
28:59
Because a lot of what Americans do with pronunciation might be different from what you learned in school.
504
1739140
5780
29:04
Let's listen to this whole dialogue one more time.
505
1744920
3340
29:08
I apologize, okay?
506
1748260
1640
29:09
I want to know where you were.
507
1749900
2000
29:11
Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
508
1751900
3800
29:15
What?
509
1755700
1380
29:17
Gloria Steinem. She's a writer. She just started her own magazine.
510
1757080
3720
29:20
>> She testified in the Senate. >> Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
511
1760800
3680
29:24
>> What if you got hurt, or, arrested? >> Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
512
1764480
4120
29:28
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
513
1768600
1600
29:30
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old, and you don't need to control
514
1770200
1920
29:32
>> every minute of my life. >> Yes I do. That is my job.
515
1772120
1900
29:34
And your job is to go to school and learn.
516
1774020
2460
29:36
We’re going to be doing a lot more of this kind of analysis together.
517
1776480
3180
29:39
What movie scenes would you like to see analyzed like this?
518
1779660
3920
29:43
Let me know in the comments.
519
1783580
1300
29:44
And if you want to see all of my Ben Franklin videos I’ve ever made, here is that playlist.
520
1784880
5320
29:50
You can also find the link in the video description.
521
1790200
3220
29:53
That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
522
1793420
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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.

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