The trickiest word in English - Quite!

54,220 views ・ 2019-03-01

Simple English Videos


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Hi everyone.
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I’m Vicki and I’m British.
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And I’m Jay and I’m American and today we’re looking at a word that’s quite tricky.
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No, it’s very tricky.
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But that’s what I said!
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No you didn’t!
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I speak British English and Jay speaks American English and normally, we manage to communicate
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OK.
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But there’s a word that causes us problems.
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Quite.
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It’s such a common word.
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We both use it a lot.
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But it’s the word that’s hardest for us to understand.
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Sometimes we use it in the same way, but sometimes we use it differently.
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And then we get confused.
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Quite.
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Quite?
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Let’s look at some examples.
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Have you finished the artwork yet?
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No.
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I’m not quite ready.
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I need another five minutes.
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Take your time.
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I’m quite happy to wait.
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Do you want to go and get a coffee or something?
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No, I’m quite all right thanks.
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I’ve had quite enough coffee today.
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That’s not quite correct.
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Just go away!
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What’s your problem?
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Here are some of the things we said.
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'Quite' is an adverb and it means ‘completely’ in all these examples.
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It means to the greatest possible degree - 100%.
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We can use it this way in British and American English
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And you heard quite in two negative sentences too, where it means not completely - so almost,
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but not 100%.
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Again it can have this meaning in British and American English.
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We often use quite in the negative like this to criticize someone gently or to say we disagree
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with them.
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So we might say ‘I don’t quite agree’ or ‘That’s not quite right’.
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Yes, and we mean ‘I don’t agree 100%.’
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or ‘You’re a little wrong’.
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Quite softens the disagreement.
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It works like that in American and British English.
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But there’s another way we use 'quite' that’s quite different.
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So what did you think of my report?
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It’s quite good.
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Fantastic.
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I’ll send it to everybody now.
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Hang on.
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It needs some changes.
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But you said it was quite good.
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Yes, but we need it to be VERY good.
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Huh?
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There was a misunderstanding there.
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Yeah, I thought you liked my report.
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Well, I thought it was fairly good or pretty good, but not very good.
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But you said it was quite good.
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If I say that I mean very good.
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Quite is a forceful word.
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It’s not forceful in British English.
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It just means to some degree.
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So let me get this straight.
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Sometimes when you say 'quite' you mean completely, like me.
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Yes.
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But other times you just mean fairly or pretty.
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Yes.
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Then how can I tell what you mean?
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Well, sometimes you can tell from the kind of adjective we use with quite – whether
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it’s gradable or ungradable.
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We’d better explain that.
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Some English adjectives are gradable, so they can be true to different degrees.
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For example good is gradable.
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Something can be very good, or fairly good, or just a little good.
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But other adjectives are ungradable, for example perfect.
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We don’t say something is very perfect or fairly perfect or a little perfect.
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It's just perfect.
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Here are some more examples of ungradable adjectives.
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Things are either dead or they’re not.
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People are either married or they’re not.
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There’s no in-between with these adjectives, so we don’t use them with 'very'.
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The meanings of these adjectives already contain the idea of ‘very’.
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So here’s what happens in British English.
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If we use ‘quite’ with an ungradable adjective, we probably mean completely.
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For example, 'It's quite perfect'.
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It's 100% perfect.
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But if we use quite with a gradable adjective, we probably mean ‘fairly’ – so to some
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extent, but not very.
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For example, 'It's quite nice' - it's fairly nice.
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So if you say ‘I’m quite tired’, you mean you’re fairly tired.
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Yeah, and what about you?
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I could mean that, but normally if I say I’m quite tired, I mean I’m VERY tired.
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Pronunciation matters too.
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If we stress the word 'quite' the difference can get more marked.
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I’m QUITE tired - that means I’m very very tired
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I’m QUITE tired – that means I’m only fairly tired.
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There’s another thing you do in British English.
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What’s that?
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I’ll say something and instead of saying ‘I agree’ you say ‘quite’.
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Oh yes.
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It’s rather formal but to show we agree with someone or to show we’ve understood,
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we can say ‘quite’ or ‘quite so’.
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It just means ‘yes’.
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It sounds very British.
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Quite.
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Let’s have a quiz question now.
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OK.
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See if you can answer this everyone, and you Jay.
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If your American boss says ‘your work is quite good’, what does it mean?
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Jay?
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If my American boss says my work is quite good, I should get a raise.
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They think my work is very good.
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British English is different.
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If my British boss says my work is quite good, I’d have to ask what I'm doing wrong.
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Because it’s only fairly good.
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Wow!
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So the difference in meaning is subtle, but it can be very important.
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If you don’t pay attention, you might miss it.
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When I came to the US I had to stop and think when people said ‘quite’.
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‘Do they mean fairly or do they mean ‘very’?
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I still have to stop and think sometimes.
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And I’ve had to learn the difference too, so I can understand Vicki’s family and friends.
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Yeah.
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Here’s a real example.
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My British friend was visiting us and meeting Jay for the first time and they were just
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getting to know one another and talking about their families.
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I was telling her about my father and how he spoke six languages and I said ‘He was
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quite good at languages’.
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So my British friend was surprised and she said, ‘Why are you saying that?
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You said he spoke six languages.’
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‘Yeah, he was quite good at languages.’
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So my friend was thinking, ‘He’s being derogatory about his father?
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That’s not nice!
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If you speak six languages you’re a very good linguist – not just fairly good.
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And I was thinking, ‘We’ve only just met.
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Why is this woman being so argumentative?’
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It was like she wanted to pick a fight with me for no reason.
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It’s the sort of misunderstanding that can damage relationships.
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Yes, it’s dangerous because you might not realise it’s happening.
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And one last thing before we stop.
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Yeah?
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I have some advice for any American guys who are going on a date with a British girl.
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What’s that?
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Don’t tell her she’s quite pretty.
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It happened to one of my friends on her first date with an American guy.
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What!
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He told her she was quite pretty?
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Yes, he was lucky to get a second date!
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And that’s it for today everyone.
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If you’ve enjoyed this video please share it with a friend and don’t forget to subscribe
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to our channel.
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Bye-bye now.
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See you next Friday.
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Bye.
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