Learning English—How to learn ENGLISH SPEAKING—Learning English with movies | Rachel’s English
1,669,185 views ・ 2019-03-12
아래 영문자막을 더블클릭하시면 영상이 재생됩니다.
00:00
I’ve got something very exciting for you.
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너를 위해 아주 흥미로운 것을 준비했어.
00:02
In this video, we’re going to study English with movies!
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이 비디오에서, 우리는 영화로 영어를 공부할 거야!
00:06
Today it’s a short scene from a new movie, On the Basis of Sex,
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오늘은 새로운 영화 '섹스 기반'의 짧은 장면이다.
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and we’re going to do an in-depth pronunciation analysis to
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그리고 우리는 에 대한 심층적인 발음 분석을 할 것이다.
00:14
boost your listening comprehension and help you sound more American.
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당신의 듣기 이해를 높이고 당신이 더 미국적으로 들리도록 도와라.
00:18
It’s amazing what we can discover by studying even a small bit of English conversation.
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약간의 영어회화라도 공부함으로써 우리가 발견할 수 있는 것은 놀랍다.
00:24
I call this kind of exercise a Ben Franklin exercise.
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나는 이런 종류의 운동을 벤 프랭클린 운동이라고 부른다.
00:27
First we’ll watch the scene, then you and I will study together to understand exactly how the
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먼저 우리는 그 장면을 볼 것이고, 그리고 나는 정확히 어떻게 그 장면을 이해하기 위해 함께 공부할 것이다.
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words are being pronounced.
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말이 발음되고 있다
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You’ll be amazed at what we’re going to find after watching the scene.
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그 장면을 보고 나면 우리가 무엇을 발견하게 될지 너는 놀랄 것이다.
00:38
First, the scene.
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첫번째, 장면.
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I apologize, okay?
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사과할게, 알았지?
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I want to know where you were.
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네가 어디에 있었는지 알고 싶어.
00:44
Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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Denise와 나는 Gloria Steinem의 연설을 듣기 위해 집회에 갔어.
00:47
What?
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뭐?
00:49
Gloria Steinem. She's a writer. She just started her own magazine.
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Gloria Steinem. 그녀는 작가다. 그녀는 방금 자기 잡지를 시작했다.
00:53
>> She testified in the Senate.
>>Yeah, I know who Gloria Steinem is.
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그녀는 상원에서 증언했다. >>그래, 나는 글로리아 스타넴이 누군지 알아.
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>> What if you got hurt, or, arrested?
>> Mom, it's a rally, not a riot.
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>>다치거나 체포되면? >> 엄마, 폭동이 아니라 궐기대회다.
01:00
Jane, these things can get out of hand.
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Jane, 이런 행동들은 통제 불능이 될 수 있어.
01:02
Okay, well I'm fifteen years old, and you don't need to control every minute of my life.
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좋아, 난 15살이고 엄마는 내 인생의 매 순간을 통제할 필요가 없어.
01:05
Yes I do. That is my job.
And your job is to go to school and learn.
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좋아. 널 통제하는게 내 일이야. 그리고 니가 할 일은 학교에 가서 공부 하는 거야.
01:08
Now, the analysis.
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자, 분석합시다.
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I apologize.
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01:12
I apologize.
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01:13
I apologize.
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A five-syllable thought group.
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01:18
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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01:27
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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01:33
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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02:05
I apologize.
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02:06
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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02:28
I apologize, okay?
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02:30
I apologize, okay?
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02:32
I apologize, okay?
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I want to know where you were.
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02:35
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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02:48
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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03:24
I want to know where you were.
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03:27
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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03:33
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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03:38
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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03:45
Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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03:49
Denise and I went to a rally to hear Gloria Steinem speak.
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03:52
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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04:11
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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05:08
Denise and I--
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05:11
Denise and I--
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05:12
Denise and I--
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Denise and I--
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05:15
Denise and I--
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05:16
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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05:31
Went to a -- Went to a --
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Went to a rally.
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05:35
Went to a rally.
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05:36
Went to a rally.
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05:38
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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06:11
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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06:22
Went to a-- Went to a-- Went to a--
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06:24
Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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Went to a rally.
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06:28
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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07:25
Rally to-- Rally to--
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Rally to hear--
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07:29
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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08:11
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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08:33
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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09:17
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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10:13
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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11:19
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?
240
746180
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12:30
It comes after an R before a vowel, not between vowels. True,
241
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12:34
but this same rule applies. A T becomes a flap T when it comes after an R before a vowel.
242
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12:39
Started. Started.
243
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1420
12:41
So the vowel sound here is the IH as in sit vowel followed by the D consonant.
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12:46
This is how we pronounce the ED ending. Started.
245
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5520
12:52
The ED ending is pronounced this way if the sound before is a T or a D. Started. Started.
246
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6820
12:59
The ED ending when it makes an extra syllable is always unstressed.
247
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4200
13:03
Star-- ted, ted, ted.
248
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13:06
So it's said more quickly, it's flatter in pitch, less energy in the voice. Started.
249
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13:11
She just started.
250
791640
1520
13:13
She just started. She just started.
251
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2360
13:15
She just started her own magazine.
252
795520
1900
13:17
Her own magazine.
253
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1500
13:18
Her own magazine.
254
798920
1420
13:20
So her and own, less stressed, a little flatter, leading up in pitch and energy to the stressed syllable, mag.
255
800340
7600
13:27
Her own magazine.
256
807940
2600
13:30
And then smoothly, the voice falls off.
257
810540
2520
13:33
So this is how stress works in American English.
258
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2880
13:35
We have stressed syllables where the pitch of the voice peaks, and the energy of the voice peaks,
259
815940
5240
13:41
and it's always a smooth connection up to, and then falling away from that peak.
260
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13:46
The word her, she doesn't drop the H although that is a common reduction.
261
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13:51
Started her. Started her own. Started her own magazine.
262
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13:55
You might hear that. She doesn't do that though, she pronounces a light H sound even though it's unstressed.
263
835240
5860
14:01
Her own magazine.
264
841100
1900
14:03
Her own magazine, her own magazine, her own magazine.
265
843000
3720
14:06
She testified in the senate.
266
846720
1600
14:08
She testified in the senate.
267
848320
2280
14:10
Okay so she's getting more impassioned.
268
850600
2480
14:13
The pitch of her voice, the high pitches of her voice are getting higher.
269
853080
3600
14:16
She testified in the Senate.
270
856680
3820
14:20
And then her mom starts speaking.
271
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2240
14:22
But she, in, the, all function words, a little less important for meaning, lower in pitch, faster,
272
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11460
14:34
less clear than the stressed syllables of the stressed words.
273
874200
3940
14:38
Test, sen.
274
878140
2840
14:40
She testified in the senate.
275
880980
1780
14:42
She testified in the senate.
276
882760
1820
14:44
She testified in the senate.
277
884580
1860
14:46
Notice the ED ending here in testified.
278
886440
3440
14:49
It's just a sound, it's the D sound.
279
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2900
14:52
So there's no extra syllable, it's not a vowel and a consonant, it's just a consonant.
280
892780
5200
14:57
And that's because the sound before was not a T or a D. Testified.
281
897980
5840
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
903820
6460
15:10
She testified in the Senate.
283
910280
4220
15:14
And it's hard to hear because her mom starts talking but this T is a stop T.
284
914500
5160
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
972700
6200
16:18
Ending M links right into the beginning vowel IH of 'is'.
300
978900
4740
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
993840
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
1024020
4660
17:08
And here, it begins with a consonant sound, H.
313
1028680
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.
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So as you've seen here in this dialogue, there are lots of different reductions in American English.
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T's are pronounced differently depending on the context.
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ED endings, pronunciation is not always what you think, like the N apostrophe T in 'don't', why is that T dropped?
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So the more you study English like this, and the more you pay attention to how Americans speak,
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the easier time you will have understanding them, and then also the easier you'll be able to imitate them
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when you know the details of what's happening.
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And when you're able to really imitate then you will start to sound more natural
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when you speak American English.
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Because a lot of what Americans do with pronunciation might be different from what you learned in school.
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Let's listen to this whole dialogue one more time.
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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
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>> every minute of my life.
>> Yes I do. That is my job.
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And your job is to go to school and learn.
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We’re going to be doing a lot more of this kind of analysis together.
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What movie scenes would you like to see analyzed like this?
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Let me know in the comments.
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And if you want to see all of my Ben Franklin videos I’ve ever made, here is that playlist.
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You can also find the link in the video description.
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That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.
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