English Conversation Study: Introducing Tom and HaQuyen - American English

175,127 views ・ 2016-02-02

Rachel's English


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

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You asked for it. So in this American English pronunciation video, we’re going to do a
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Ben Franklin exercise where we take real American English conversation and analyze the American
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accent to improve listening comprehension and pronunciation skills.
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First, let’s listen to the whole conversation.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. HQ: Hi.
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T: Hi. HQ: Nice to meet you.
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T: How are you? T: Nice to meet you, too.
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R: Have you guys met before? HQ: Um…
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T: I don’t think so. HQ: No, not, not in person. But you’ve told
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me about him. R: Okay. It seems like you have because I’ve
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known both of you for so long, but … T: Yeah.
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R: Never overlapped. T: Yeah, well, it’s about time!
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Now for the analysis.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom.
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Did you notice how the second syllable of ‘HaQuyen’ and the syllable ‘Tom’ were
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the most stressed? They had that up-down shape. Especially ‘Tom’, which came down in pitch
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at the end of the sentence.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom.
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We want this shape in our stressed syllables. The two words ‘this is’ were flatter and
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quicker.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. [2x] HQ: Hi.
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T: Hi:
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Both words, ‘hi’, ‘hi’, ‘hi’, had that up-down shape. Hi. Hi.
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HQ: Hi. T: Hi. [3x]
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HQ: Nice to meet you.
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These two phrases happened at the same time. HaQuyen said, “Nice to meet you.” What’s
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the most stressed word there? HQ: Nice to meet you. [2x]
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‘Meet’. ‘Nice’ also had some stress, a little longer. Nice to meet you. The word
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‘to’ was reduced. Rather than the OO vowel, we have the schwa. Nice to, to, to.
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HQ: Nice to meet you. [2x]
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Nice to meet you. What did you notice about the pronunciation of this T?
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HQ: Nice to meet you. [2x]
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It was a Stop T. Meet you. There was no release of the T sound.
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HQ: Nice to meet you. [2x]
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Tom’s phrase, “How are you?” How are you?
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T: How are you? [2x]
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He stressed the word ‘are’. How are you?
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T: How are you? [2x]
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You’ll also hear this with the word ‘you’ stressed. How are you?
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T: How are you? Nice to meet you, too.
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Tom really stressed the word ‘too’.
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T: Nice to meet you, too. [2x]
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It was the loudest and clearest of the sentence.
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T: Nice to meet you, too. [2x]
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He, like HaQuyen, also reduced the word ‘to’ to the schwa. To, nice to, nice to meet you.
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T: Nice to meet you, too. [2x]
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Also, again like HaQuyen, he made a Stop T here. He did not release the T sound.
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Meet you.
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T: Nice to meet you, too. [2x] R: Have you guys met before?
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I put a little break here, between ‘guys’ and ‘met’, while I thought about what
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I was going to say.
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R: Have you guys met before?
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Did you notice my pronunciation of T? A Stop T.
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R: Met before?
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We tend to make T’s Stop T’s when the next word begins with a consonant. Or, when
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the word is at the end of a thought or sentence.
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R: Met before? [2x] R: Have you guys met before?
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What do you notice about the intonation of the sentence? How does it end?
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R: Have you guys met before?
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Before? It goes up in pitch.
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R: Have you guys met before?
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That’s because this is a yes/no question. A question that can be answered with yes or
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no goes up in pitch at the end. Other questions, and statements, go down in pitch.
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T: I don’t think so.
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I don’t think so, I don’t think so. Again, there was a clear stop in sound here. I don’t
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think so.
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T: I don’t thinks so. [2x]
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I don’t think so. The words were not connected. I don’t, I don’t, I don’t think. I don’t
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think so. ‘Think’ was the most stressed word there. I don’t think so. Feel your
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energy to towards it and then away from it in the sentence. I don’t think so.
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T: I don’t think so. HQ: No, not, not in person.
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The first ‘not’ was a Stop T, as HaQuyen did not continue. Not, not. Not in person.
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The second T, though, was a Flap T because it links two vowels together. The AH vowel,
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and the IH as in SIT vowel. Most Americans will make the T between vowels a Flap T, which
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sounds like a D between vowels. Not in [3x]. Not in person.
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HQ: Not in person. [2x]
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‘Person’ is a two-syllable word. Which syllable is stressed?
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HQ: Not in person [2x].
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The first syllable. PER-son. The second syllable doesn’t really have a vowel in it. It’s
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the schwa sound. But when the schwa is followed by N, you don’t need to try to make a separate
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vowel, -son, -son, person, person.
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HQ: Not in person [2x], but you’ve told me about him.
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How is the T pronounced in ‘but’?
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HQ: But you’ve told me about him. [2x]
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It’s a Stop T, but you’ve, but you’ve. What’s the most stressed, the most clear
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word in this phrase?
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HQ: But you’ve told me about him. [2x]
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It’s the verb ‘told’. But you’ve told me about him. The sentence peaks with that word.
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HQ: But you’ve told me about him. [2x]
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HaQuyen dropped the H in ‘him’. We do this often with the words ‘him’, ‘he’,
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‘his’, ‘her’, for example. Also, ‘have’ and ‘had’.
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HQ: But you’ve told me about him. [2x]
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Now the T comes between two vowels. What’s that going to be? A Flap T. About him, about
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him. Just flap the tongue on the roof of the mouth.
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HQ: But you’ve told me about him. [2x] R: Okay.
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I didn’t really pronounce the OH diphthong here, it was more like a schwa, okay, okay.
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‘-Kay’ had the shape of a stressed syllable. Okay.
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R: Okay. [2x] It seems like you have…
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In the first part of this sentence, what is the most clear, the most stressed syllable?
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R: It seems like you have [2x]
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It’s the word ‘seems’. It seems like you have [2x].
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R: It seems like you have [2x] because I’ve known both of you for so long, but.
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What about in the second half of the sentence. What’s the most stressed syllable?
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R: because I’ve known both of you for so long, but. [2x]
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Known. Because I’ve known both of you for so long. ‘Long’ is also stressed, it’s
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also a longer word.
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R: because I’ve known both of you for so long, but. [2x]
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Even though this sentence is very fast, it still has longer stressed words, ‘seems’,
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‘known’, ‘long’. It’s important to keep your stressed words longer, even when
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you’re speaking quickly. This is what’s clear to Americans.
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R: because I’ve known both of you for so long, but. [2x]
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The less important words, the function words, will be less clear and very fast. And sometimes,
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we’ll change the sounds. For example, in the word ‘for’. That was pronounced with
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the schwa, for, for, for. It’s very fast.
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R: For so long [2x], but.
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How did I pronounce the T in ‘but’?
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R: For so long, but. [2x]
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It was the end of my thought, it was a Stop T. But, but. I stopped the air.
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R: For so long, but. [2x] T: Yeah.
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Tom’s interjection, ‘yeah’: stressed. Up-down shape. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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T: Yeah. [2x] R: Never overlapped.
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Can you tell which is the stressed syllable in ‘never’? Which is longer?
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R: Never overlapped. [2x]
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It’s the first syllable. Ne-ver. What about in the next word?
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R: Never overlapped. [2x]
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Again, it’s the first syllable. O-verlapped. Never overlapped. Uh-uh. Never overlapped.
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R: Never overlapped. [2x]
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Notice the –ed ending here is pronounced as a T, an unvoiced sound. That’s because
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the sound before, P, was also unvoiced. Overlapped, overlapped.
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R: Never overlapped. [2x] T: Yeah, well, it’s about time.
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Did you notice that Tom didn’t really make a vowel here. Tsabout, tsabout. He connected
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the TS sound into the next sound.
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T: Well, it’s about time. [2x]
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How is this T pronounced?
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T: Well, it’s about time. [2x]
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A Stop T, because the next sound is a consonant.
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T: Well, it's about time.
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Let’s listen again, following along with our marked up text. You’ll hear two different
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speeds, regular pace, and slowed down.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. HQ: Hi. T: Hi.
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HQ: Nice to meet you. T: How are you?
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T: Nice to meet you, too.
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R: Have you guys met before? HQ: Um…
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T: I don’t think so. HQ: No, not, not in person. But you’ve told
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me about him. R: Okay. It seems like you have because I’ve
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known both of you for so long, but … T: Yeah.
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R: Never overlapped. T: Yeah, well, it’s about time!
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. HQ: Hi. T: Hi.
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HQ: Nice to meet you. T: How are you?
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T: Nice to meet you, too.
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R: Have you guys met before? HQ: Um…
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T: I don’t think so. HQ: No, not, not in person. But you’ve told
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me about him. R: Okay. It seems like you have because I’ve
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known both of you for so long, but … T: Yeah.
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R: Never overlapped. T: Yeah, well, it’s about time!
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We’ll listen one last time. This time, you’ll repeat. You’ll hear each sentence or sentence
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fragment three times. Repeat exactly as you hear it, paying attention to intonation, sounds,
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and stress.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. [3x]
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HQ: Hi. T: Hi. [3x]
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HQ: Nice to meet you. T: How are you? [3x]
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T: Nice to meet you, too. [3x]
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R: Have you guys met before? [3x]
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HQ: Um… T: I don’t think so. [3x]
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HQ: No, not, not in person. [3x]
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But you’ve told me about him. [3x]
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R: Okay. [3x]
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It seems like you have [3x]
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because I’ve known both of you [3x]
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for so long, but … [3x]
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T: Yeah. [3x]
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R: Never overlapped. [3x]
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T: Yeah, well, it’s about time! [3x]
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Now the conversation, one more time.
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R: HaQuyen, this is Tom. HQ: Hi. T: Hi.
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HQ: Nice to meet you. T: How are you?
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T: Nice to meet you, too.
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R: Have you guys met before? HQ: Um…
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T: I don’t think so. HQ: No, not, not in person. But you’ve told
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me about him. R: Okay. It seems like you have because I’ve
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known both of you for so long, but … T: Yeah.
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R: Never overlapped. T: Yeah, well, it’s about time!
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Great job. If you liked this video, be sure to sign up for my mailing list for a free
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weekly newsletter with pronunciation videos sent straight to your inbox.
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Also, I’m happy to tell you my book American English Pronunciation is available for purchase.
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If you want an organized, step-by-step resource to build your American accent, click here
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to get the book, or see the description below. I think you’re going to love it.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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