2 Hour English Test: How will you do?

1,952,762 views ・ 2020-04-17

Speak English With Vanessa


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

00:00
Vanessa: Hi, I'm Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.
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Are you ready to test your English skills?
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Let's get started.
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Today, I have a new type of video for you.
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Over the last three years, I've created a lot of English tests on my YouTube channel.
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These tests are about vocabulary, grammar, phrasal verbs, listening, fluency, and a lot
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of other topics.
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Today, I'm going to compile all of these tests together into one mega test.
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I challenge you to try to do all of these English tests one time.
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I know that it's a lot of time to dedicate, but it's a good way to immerse yourself in
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English and to really challenge yourself to see, can I learn these concepts?
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Do I know these concepts?
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I hope you learn a lot of great new things and also you review some things that you've
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already learnt.
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Vanessa: I know it's two and a half hours, but it's way more fun than taking a school
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entrance exam that's for the same amount of time.
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Let's get started.
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Today, I'm going to test your listening skills.
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Do you want to understand fast native speakers in movies and TV shows and in regular daily
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conversations?
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Yes.
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There are countless reductions and linking in spoken English, so the best way to study
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this is to study real conversations, and that's what we're going to do.
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You're going to hear five short conversations.
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For each conversation, you're going to see three words.
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What I want you to do is I want you to listen carefully for which word is used in that conversation.
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Are you ready for the first conversation?
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I want you to listen carefully for the word all right, although, or almost.
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Vanessa: Which word do you hear in the conversation?
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Let's listen.
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Dan: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: Which word did you hear?
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Although, all right, almost?
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I hope that you heard the word although.
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Dan used the word although to contrast to something that he previously said.
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He said that, "We have our own phones.
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We don't share a phone, but in the past we did share a phone."
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He said, "Although in the past we shared a phone."
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He's showing that he's contrasting between something that's happening now and something
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that used to happen before.
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Let's listen again to that quick conversation and we're going to listen to the key sentence.
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I want you to listen for the word although.
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Dan: I have my own phone.
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We don't share these things, although for a time we did share a smartphone.
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I have my own phone.
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We don't share these things, although for a time we did share a smartphone.
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Vanessa: Did you hear that keyword although?
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I hope so.
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Let's move on to the second conversation, and I want you to listen for three keywords,
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interested, eager, or involved.
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Which one do you hear?
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Let's listen.
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Faith: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: Which word did you hear?
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Interested, eager, or involved?
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I hope you heard the word involved.
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In this conversation, Faith said this keyword involved pretty quickly.
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She explains that when she was younger, she was really shy, but her mom wanted to encourage
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her to participate in events, or we could say to get involved.
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It means to participate in events.
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I also used another word, optimum, that I talked about in a recent vocabulary quiz here
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on my YouTube channel.
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You can watch it up here if you'd like to learn more about that word.
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Let's listen to the key sentence again and I want you to listen for the word involved.
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Faith: I was just really shy and timid, and it was hard for my mom because she wanted
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to get me involved in things.
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I was just really shy and timid, and it was hard for my mom because she wanted to get
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me involved in things.
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Vanessa: Did you hear that word?
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I hope so.
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Let's move on to conversation number three.
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You're going to be listening for one of these three words, challenge, change, or child.
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Which one is in the conversation?
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Let's listen.
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Brad: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: Which word did you hear?
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Challenge, change, or child?
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I hope you heard the word change.
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In this conversation, Brad said that he loves to visit family occasionally.
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Occasionally means maybe three times a year, not every day, because he enjoys seeing how
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things are different each time when he sees his family.
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Things have changed each time when he sees his family.
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Let's listen to that clip one more time.
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I want you to hear that keyword change.
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We'll listen to that sentence.
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All right.
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Brad: Well, I think visiting family is a wonderful thing and part of what makes it so wonderful
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is getting to see them change and grow every time you see them.
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Well, I think visiting family is a wonderful thing and part of what makes it so wonderful
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is getting to see them change and grow every time you see them.
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Vanessa: Did you hear the word change?
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I hope so.
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Let's go onto the fourth conversation.
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We're going to be listening for one of these three words, teen, two, or 10.
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These are number related words, so listen carefully.
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Sarah: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Sarah: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: Which word did you hear?
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I hope you heard that Sarah has been a massage therapist, someone who gives massages, for
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how many years?
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10 years.
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I hope you heard the word 10.
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Listening for numbers is essential in conversation.
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If you'd like to practice pronouncing some of the most difficult numbers, you can watch
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this lesson, which is how to pronounce the top 33 most difficult words.
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All right.
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Let's listen to that key sentence again and see if you can hear the word 10.
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How did you start this?
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Let's start at the very beginning.
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How did you get into massage therapy?
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Sarah: Okay.
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I became a massage therapist about 10 years ago.
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Vanessa: How did you start this?
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Let's start at the very beginning.
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How did you get into massage therapy?
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Sarah: Okay.
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I became a massage therapist about 10 years ago.
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Vanessa: Did you hear the word 10?
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I hope so.
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Let's move on to the fifth and final listening quiz question, which I think is the most tricky.
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Listen carefully for the word especially, specifically or special.
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Let's listen.
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Anna: [Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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[Listen carefully!]
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Vanessa: Which word did you hear?
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Did you hear the word especially?
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This is technically the correct word, but in this conversation, Anna uses a common spoken
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reduction for the word especially.
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She cuts off the E at the beginning and she says 'specially.
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'Specially.
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This is pretty common.
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It might be a little bit tricky to hear the first time around.
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We'll listen to it again in just a moment so that you can hear it.
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Listen for especially.
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In this conversation, Anna mentions that it's expensive to own a horse, so sometimes multiple
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people will buy one horse and they'll share the expenses.
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Let's listen to this key sentence again and listen for the word especially that has been
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reduced to 'specially.
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Anna: My mom co-owned a horse for a little while.
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A lot of people go in on one together so that you don't have to pay all of the expenses,
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especially with any vet calls that might happen.
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My mom co-owned a horse for a little while.
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A lot of people go in on one together so that you don't have to pay all of the expenses,
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especially with any vet calls that might happen.
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Vanessa: Did you hear the word especially or 'specially?
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I hope so.
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Let me know in the comments, what was your score?
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Did you get all five of these right?
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Or maybe you got none of them right?
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Feel free to repeat this lesson as much as you need.
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Today, I want to test you on 15 advanced English vocabulary words that you'll definitely hear
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in daily conversation.
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Not words like convivial that you'll never hear Americans actually say.
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These are words that you're going to hear in conversation, in movies, in TV shows, and
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you are welcome to integrate them and add them to your own personal vocabulary.
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I challenge you to test yourself.
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Try to guess the correct answer to each sentence.
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If you don't get the answer correct, no worries.
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Vanessa: That means that you're ready to add a new word to your vocabulary.
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You can write it down, make your own sentence with it, read your sentence out loud, and
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enjoy yourself because adding to your vocabulary can be fu, and also it's super useful.
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Let's start with the first sentence.
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I'm going to read you a sentence, and there are going to be two options for you to fill
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in the blank.
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I'll give you three seconds, and you can try to guess what the correct answer is before
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I explain it.
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Let's get started.
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Sentence number one is, I need to practice English because we have to _ with the American
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branch next week.
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Is the word collaborate or is the word decide?
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We have to collaborate with the American branch.
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We have to decide with the American branch.
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Which word is the best fit for this sentence?
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Vanessa: I'll give you three seconds.
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Three, two, one.
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The correct answer is collaborate.
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If you got this correct, congratulations.
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If not, I want to let you know that the word collaborate means work together.
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You often use this in project situations.
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I have to collaborate with my classmates.
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We have to work together on a project, or I have to collaborate with the marketing department
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or the American branch.
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We're working on a project together.
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We have to collaborate.
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This is a beautiful advance word.
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Of course, you can simply say work together.
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Great.
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No problem.
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But this video is all about advanced English expressions that are commonly used.
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You can say, "I have to collaborate with the American branch."
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Let's go on to sentence number two.
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The second sentence is, what do you think is the _ time to go to bed?
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Vanessa: What do you think is the original time to go to bed?
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What do you think is the optimum time to go to bed?
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I'll give you three seconds.
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What do you think is the optimum time to go to bed?
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The word optimum is just an advanced, beautiful way to say best.
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What do you think is the best time to go to bed?
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Here in this picture you can see...
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This is not sponsored by this company.
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I just found this picture online, but this company has decided to use the word optimum
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to describe their product.
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When you take their product, you will get the best sleep.
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You will get the optimum sleep.
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I hope that you can use this as an advanced way to say best.
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Let's go to the next one.
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Sentence number three.
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When he told me about his experience growing up during the war, I realized how _ kids are.
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Vanessa: I realized how resistant kids are.
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I realized how resilient kids are.
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Both of these words sound similar, so make sure that you choose the correct what I'll
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give you three seconds.
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Three, two, one.
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I realized how resilient kids are.
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This is a beautiful word.
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There's a lovely Z sound in there, resilient.
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Resilient.
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this means that you're able to survive even though you have difficult circumstances.
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You're able to keep going and kids are the perfect example of this.
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Even though a lot of kids grow up in a difficult situation, they survive.
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They are resilient.
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They can adapt to those situations.
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All right.
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Let's go on to the next one.
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Sentence number four.
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It made me really annoyed when my dad _ at my idea to interview the president.
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Vanessa: It made me really annoyed when my dad scoffed at my idea to interview the president,
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or when he scammed at my idea to interview the president.
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Which one is the best word for this situation?
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Three, two, one.
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It made me really annoyed when my dad scoffed at my idea to interview the president.
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The word scuff is another excellent word, and you can see by my facial expression that
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the word scoff means you're laughing, you're making fun of, and it's often accompanied
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by this kind of puff of air.
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If you are scoffing at someone else, you're kind of laughing or you think their idea is
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a little stupid or silly, you're going to make that same sound.
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You think you could interview the president?
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That is scoffing.
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When you hear someone scoffing, now you know they are indeed scoffing.
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Vanessa: Let's go to the next one.
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The fifth sentence is, In _ I should have bought stock in Google.
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In _ I should have bought stock in Google.
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Is it in retrospect, I should have bought stock in Google, or in honesty, I should have
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bought stock in Google?
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Which one feels the most right to you?
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I'll give you three seconds.
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Three, two, one.
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In retrospect, I should have bought stock in Google.
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This word retrospect is actually a word that we studied in The Fearless Fluency Club a
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couple months ago.
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The first part of this word is retro.
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Retro means in the past and spect means looking.
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We can imagine we're looking in the past, but there is a slight little nuance about
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this word.
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Vanessa: It means we're thinking about the past, but it means that we realized in the
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past we made a bad decision.
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But in the past I didn't know it was a bad decision, but now I realize in retrospect,
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I should have bought stock in Google.
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I would be really rich right now, but, you know, I didn't do it and probably you didn't
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either.
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In retrospect, we can learn a lot.
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Let's go to the next one.
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Number six.
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I asked her to help me move next weekend, but her answer was kind of _.
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She just said, "I don't know, maybe.
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We'll see."
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Was her answer inundated?
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Was her answer ambiguous?
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Which is the best word for this situation?
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Three, two, one.
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Her answer was ambiguous.
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This means that it's not certain.
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I don't actually know what her answer is.
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It's not clear at all.
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Vanessa: You can see in this cool image here that it is a little bit ambiguous.
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Do you see a rabbit or do you see a duck?
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It's ambiguous.
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It's not certain.
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It's a beautiful word.
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Let's go to the next one.
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Sentence number seven.
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Speaking only one language _ me from getting a promotion.
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Speaking only one language hinders me from getting a promotion, or speaking only one
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16:49
language diverts me from getting a promotion.
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16:52
What's the best word for this situation?
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16:54
Three, two, one.
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16:58
Speaking only one language hinders me from getting a promotion and that's why I'm here
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17:03
with Speak English with Vanessa to improve my English and get a promotion.
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17:07
I hope it works for you.
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17:09
Here, this word hinders means stops or prevents.
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17:12
Vanessa: When you speak only one language, maybe that is preventing you from getting
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17:18
a better job, or it's preventing or hindering you from getting a promotion.
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This word hinder is a beautiful way to color your vocabulary and sound like an advanced
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17:28
English speaker.
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17:29
Let's go to the next one.
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Sentence number eight.
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17:31
My ancestors came to the U.S. and tried to _ into the general American culture.
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They tried to asinine into the culture.
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The tried to assimilate into the culture.
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Which word is the best?
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17:44
Three, two, one.
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17:46
My ancestors came to the U.S. and they tried to assimilate to the general American culture.
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17:54
This means they tried to fit in.
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17:57
They tried to be similar to the general American culture.
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18:01
Vanessa: This is something that was quite common, especially in the early 1900s.
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18:07
People who came to the U.S. from Italy, like my ancestors, or Poland or Ireland or from
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18:14
other countries as well, they tried to fit in or lose their native culture and tried
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to assimilate into the general American culture, which is why American culture nowadays is
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18:27
quite diverse because no one can actually perfectly assimilate.
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18:31
We all keep little bits of our own culture inside of us, but this is the best word to
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18:35
describe this.
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18:36
They tried to assimilate into the general American culture.
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18:40
Let's go to the next one.
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18:42
Number nine.
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18:43
When the teenager hit my car in the parking lot, I couldn't believe how _ he was.
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18:49
I couldn't believe how nonchalant he was.
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18:52
Vanessa: I couldn't believe how immune he was.
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18:54
What is the best word for this sentence?
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18:58
Three, two, one.
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19:01
When the teenager hit my car, I couldn't believe how nonchalant he was.
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19:07
This means not caring, cool.
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19:11
It doesn't bother him.
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1000
19:12
Oh, I hit your car.
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1000
19:13
It's not a big deal.
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19:14
It's, Oh, it's all right.
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19:15
Don't worry about it.
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19:17
Nonchalant.
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19:18
I was quite surprised when the teenager hit my car and he didn't care.
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19:22
He was just nonchalant.
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19:23
It's all right.
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19:24
Let's just go hang out on the beach.
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19:28
Not exactly.
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1000
19:29
That's not exactly how you respond in that situation.
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19:32
Let's go to the next one.
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1140
19:33
Sentence number 10.
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19:35
Last week, I was really busy and didn't get much sleep, but last night I slept for nine
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19:40
glorious hours.
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1771
19:41
This morning I feel _.
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19:45
This morning I feel rejuvenated.
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2549
19:48
This morning I feel modified.
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1731
19:50
Vanessa: What's the best word in this situation?
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19:53
I feel, three, two, one, rejuvenated.
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4450
19:57
Here, we're talking about alive, with energy.
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4309
20:02
I feel like before I was tired and now all of a sudden I have more energy.
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20:08
I feel rejuvenated.
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20:09
What about for you?
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20:10
What makes you feel rejuvenated?
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2100
20:13
Is it when you have a good chat with a friend, or you go for a walk in the woods, or you
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20:17
get a good night's sleep?
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1430
20:18
What makes you feel rejuvenated?
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2230
20:21
Let's go to the next one.
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20:22
Number 11.
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1231
20:23
When he made a remark about her weight, he was _ to the fact that she felt embarrassed.
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20:31
He was obvious to the fact that she felt embarrassed, or he was oblivious to the fact that she felt
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7861
20:39
embarrassed.
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1000
20:40
Vanessa: There is a slight difference between these two words in their spelling, so make
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4500
20:44
sure that you choose the word correctly, especially if you're writing it down.
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4459
20:49
Don't mess up.
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1000
20:50
I'll give you three, two, one seconds.
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20:53
The correct answer is, he was oblivious to the fact that she felt embarrassed.
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5840
20:59
This means that he had no clue.
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2060
21:01
He wasn't paying attention at all.
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2240
21:03
You can see in this fun image, this perfectly describes oblivious.
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3830
21:07
He's looking at his phone, he's telling someone, "I'll see you later.
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3200
21:10
Take care," and then he's about to step in a giant hole.
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2920
21:13
He is oblivious.
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1050
21:14
He's not paying attention.
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1779
21:16
This is a beautiful word to talk about someone who just has no idea.
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3351
21:19
They're just oblivious.
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1590
21:21
They're not knowing what's going on.
390
1281460
2370
21:23
Let's go to the next one.
391
1283830
1000
21:24
Vanessa: Number 12.
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1349
21:26
One of the worst types of bullying is to _ someone from the group.
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5711
21:31
Is to fund someone from the group.
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3090
21:34
Is to ostracize someone from the group.
395
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3800
21:38
Which one of these words is the best?
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1180
21:39
I'll give you three, two, one.
397
1299960
2620
21:42
The correct answer is, one of the worst types of bullying is to ostracize someone from the
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7500
21:50
group.
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1000
21:51
This means that you push them away.
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1910
21:52
You ignore them.
401
1312990
1049
21:54
You don't let them be your friend, be part of the group.
402
1314039
3951
21:57
This is something that is really harsh, especially for teenagers because they really want to
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4679
22:02
have friends and fit in.
404
1322669
1000
22:03
This is pretty tough.
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1870
22:05
If you were ostracized as a kid or as a teenager, I'm sorry.
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1325539
4441
22:09
It's really a difficult situation.
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2530
22:12
Number 13.
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1000
22:13
I was going to rest inside today, but after I saw the sunny weather, I decided to go for
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4810
22:18
a hike _ of the moment.
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1338320
1980
22:20
Vanessa: What is that word there?
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1340300
2579
22:22
Spur of the moment or top of the moment?
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2780
22:25
Which one of those words fits the best?
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2381
22:28
I'll give you three seconds, two seconds, one second.
414
1348040
2959
22:30
The answer is, I decided to go for a hike spur of the moment.
415
1350999
5270
22:36
If you are in The Fearless Fluency Club this month, you know that we have talked about
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4390
22:40
this word, spur of the moment.
417
1360659
1931
22:42
It means spontaneously.
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2050
22:44
I didn't plan it.
419
1364640
1000
22:45
I was in fact planning to rest, but instead I saw the weather and thought, "Hey, I'll
420
1365640
4149
22:49
just go outside and go for a hike.
421
1369789
1860
22:51
I did it spur of the moment.
422
1371649
1910
22:53
I did it spontaneously."
423
1373559
2060
22:55
Let's go to the next one.
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1131
22:56
Number 15.
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1049
22:57
Looking at your phone too much can hurt your eyes, but if you _ your body will hurt as
426
1377799
5380
23:03
well.
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1000
23:04
Vanessa: If you sling, your body will hurt as well.
428
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4350
23:08
If you slouch, your body will hurt as well.
429
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3770
23:12
Which one of these two words?
430
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1061
23:13
Will you choose?
431
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1080
23:14
Three, two, one.
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1940
23:16
The answer is, looking at your phone too much can hurt your eyes, but if you slouch, your
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1396380
8929
23:25
body will hurt as well.
434
1405309
2220
23:27
This action of not sitting up straight, but slouching is a common vocabulary word these
435
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7030
23:34
days because a lot of people are starting to feel concerned about your posture while
436
1414559
4791
23:39
you're looking at your phone.
437
1419350
1500
23:40
Especially young people are looking at their phones a lot during their body's formative,
438
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4929
23:45
so slouching can cause a lot of problems later in life.
439
1425779
4110
23:49
A lot of parents say, "Don't slouch.
440
1429889
1581
23:51
Don't slouch.
441
1431470
1000
23:52
Sit up," or a teacher say that, "Hey, don't slouch.
442
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3079
23:55
Sit up."
443
1435549
1000
23:56
Look at your posture right now.
444
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1340
23:57
Are you slouching or are you sitting up?
445
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3380
24:01
Vanessa: You can take a moment to correct your posture and don't slouch.
446
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3571
24:04
Let's go to the next one.
447
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1089
24:05
Sentence number 15.
448
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1641
24:07
This is the last one.
449
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1589
24:09
You got this.
450
1449159
1000
24:10
The sentence is, someone said it's going to snow tomorrow.
451
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3510
24:13
I know it's only October, but I guess it's _.
452
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5590
24:19
But I guess it's plausible.
453
1459259
2400
24:21
But I guess it's passable.
454
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2411
24:24
Which one of these two words is the best?
455
1464070
2020
24:26
Three, two, one.
456
1466090
2880
24:28
Well, someone said it's going to snow tomorrow.
457
1468970
2569
24:31
It's only October, but I guess it's plausible.
458
1471539
4031
24:35
Plausible.
459
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1689
24:37
Don't forget that L sound there.
460
1477259
2431
24:39
Plausible.
461
1479690
1000
24:40
This means that it's possible, but not likely.
462
1480690
3780
24:44
You can see here in this fun image that I found, I was doing a search for the word plausible
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4760
24:49
because I wanted to show an image to you, and this image is perfect for the word plausible.
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5519
24:54
They're showing how the dinosaurs disappeared.
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2831
24:57
Vanessa: Maybe in the science world there's some controversy about how dinosaurs disappeared.
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5040
25:02
I don't really know.
467
1502620
1000
25:03
I haven't really researched it that much, but here is a plausible, it's possible, but
468
1503620
5840
25:09
not likely situation.
469
1509460
2110
25:11
We have the animals on the ark.
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2690
25:14
This is kind of a Christian idea of the animals getting saved in the flood and they are shooting
471
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6899
25:21
and killing the dinosaurs.
472
1521159
2080
25:23
Do you think this happened?
473
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2491
25:25
Very unlikely, but there's no way to prove it, so it is plausible.
474
1525730
5279
25:31
That is a fun way to use the word plausible.
475
1531009
4380
25:35
If someone tells you something that's pretty unbelievable, but it's maybe possible, you
476
1535389
7061
25:42
could say, "Well, it's plausible.
477
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1880
25:44
Okay.
478
1544330
1050
25:45
It's not likely, but it's plausible."
479
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2860
25:48
Now, I have a challenge for you.
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2179
25:50
We've talked about 15 excellent advanced English vocabulary words.
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1550419
4260
25:54
Vanessa: I want you to choose one or more if you'd like and try to make your own sentence
482
1554679
4720
25:59
in the comments with this word.
483
1559399
5291
26:04
I have a secret to tell you.
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1564690
2020
26:06
Before I became an English teacher, I had never heard the expression phrasal verb.
485
1566710
5110
26:11
I can bet you $50 that if you went on the street and you asked anyone in the U.S. what's
486
1571820
6070
26:17
a phrasal verb, I bet that they wouldn't know.
487
1577890
3249
26:21
I tell you this because sometimes when you try to focus on concepts and put them into
488
1581139
4901
26:26
little categories like phrasal verbs, flap T, past perfect, present perfect, it can feel
489
1586040
6269
26:32
really stressful and make you feel a little more stressed about English than you need
490
1592309
3600
26:35
to.
491
1595909
1000
26:36
Of course, it's great to have tools in your metaphorical toolbox to know what those concepts
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5390
26:42
are, but don't let them stress you out.
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2000
26:44
Vanessa: When I was living in Paris, my French teacher was the most amazing teacher that
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4161
26:48
I've ever had, and I always try to be like him.
495
1608460
3230
26:51
Let me give you an example about what he would do.
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2469
26:54
Every English speaker has a fear of the subjunctive tense in French.
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1614159
3801
26:57
For some reason, because we don't really use it that often in English, it is just really
498
1617960
3980
27:01
stressful to learn this in French.
499
1621940
1880
27:03
My teacher had a unique way to help us learn this without stress.
500
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4469
27:08
I really remember at the end of that lesson I felt like, "Oh, it's not that bad.
501
1628289
4140
27:12
Why did I think that the subjunctive tense was that bad?"
502
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3291
27:15
This is what he did.
503
1635720
1000
27:16
He went around the room and he asked each student a question.
504
1636720
3870
27:20
We knew that we needed to answer that question using the subjunctive tense.
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1640590
3689
27:24
Vanessa: He didn't give us the rule, you need to use it for desire, will, or wanting these
506
1644279
5340
27:29
types of things.
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1040
27:30
He just said, "Your answer needs to be in the subjunctive tense.
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3230
27:33
Here's my question."
509
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1000
27:34
He asked me, "What do you need to do today?"
510
1654889
3780
27:38
I said [French 00:27:39] blah, blah, blah.
511
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3031
27:41
This is using the subjunctive tense in French.
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2290
27:43
I didn't know the exact rule behind this yet, but in real life, when someone asked me, "What
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1663990
6299
27:50
do you need to do today," I knew I need to use the subjunctive because I already had
514
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6110
27:56
this real life situation where I used it in the classroom.
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4020
28:00
I hope that today's lesson will be similar.
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1711
28:02
I hope that you'll be able to use these phrasal verbs intuitively before I teach you a rule
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6730
28:08
about it.
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1000
28:09
Vanessa: What I'm going to do is I'm going to show you nine pairs of sentences and I
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4210
28:14
want you to guess should you use the phrasal verb or should you use the simple verb?
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4969
28:19
Let's take a look at a quick example.
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1760
28:20
Here we have two verbs, try and try out.
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4401
28:25
Try out is the phrasal verb and try is the simple verb.
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4069
28:29
Here are two sentences.
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1801
28:31
I need to _ the cake before I buy it.
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5160
28:36
I need to _ the program before I buy it.
526
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4470
28:40
The only difference here is the cake or the program.
527
1720700
3599
28:44
Which one is best with just try, the simple verb try, and which one's best with the phrasal
528
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6700
28:50
verb, try out?
529
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1641
28:52
Think about it for a moment.
530
1732640
2019
28:54
Did you say, "I need to try the cake before I buy it and I need to try out the program
531
1734659
8661
29:03
before I buy it?"
532
1743320
1000
29:04
Vanessa: ... and I need to try out the program before I buy it.
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1439
29:05
If you said this, you are correct.
534
1745759
1000
29:06
Did you know that we use "try out" to test some kind of program or experience?
535
1746759
6020
29:12
Maybe you didn't know that specific rule, but "try out" just intuitively felt right
536
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5080
29:17
with the word program.
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1041
29:18
That's what I want you to do, I want you to look inside your heart and guess the best
538
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4170
29:23
answer for these next pairs of sentences.
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2589
29:25
Afterwards, I'll tell you a quick rule about it, but hopefully in the future you'll be
540
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4240
29:29
able to use these naturally.
541
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1171
29:31
All right, let's go on to our first pair of sentences.
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29:34
Vanessa: Pair number one: "brings or brings up."
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5049
29:39
Vanessa: "He always ... his wife in conversation."
544
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5091
29:44
Vanessa: "He always ... some wine to my house."
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5829
29:50
Vanessa: The main difference here is the end of the sentence, of course, so take a look
546
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4511
29:54
at this and feel in your heart which one is the most correct for each of these sentences.
547
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5270
29:59
Did you say, "He always brings up his wife in conversation.
548
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6089
30:05
He always brings some wine to my house"?
549
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3531
30:09
I hope so.
550
1809460
1000
30:10
That's the correct answer.
551
1810460
1169
30:11
We use the phrasal verb to "bring up" something to talk about entering a topic into a conversation.
552
1811629
7831
30:19
That means that this man often talks about his wife in conversation, hopefully because
553
1819460
4010
30:23
he loves her so much, so he brings up his wife in conversation.
554
1823470
4500
30:27
Or you could bring up politics in conversation.
555
1827970
2990
30:30
You are bringing up a topic in a conversation.
556
1830960
2679
30:33
And of course, we use the word "bring" to physically give something to someone else.
557
1833639
5321
30:38
"He brings a bottle of wine to my house."
558
1838960
2969
30:41
Vanessa: Pair number two: "fill or fill out."
559
1841929
4261
30:46
Vanessa: "You should ... your mind with facts."
560
1846190
4489
30:50
Vanessa: "You should ... the form with facts."
561
1850679
5151
30:55
Vanessa: The only difference is your mind and the form.
562
1855830
6649
31:02
Think about this for a moment.
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1900
31:04
I'll give you three seconds.
564
1864379
1581
31:05
Three, two, one.
565
1865960
2669
31:08
"You should fill your mind with facts.
566
1868629
5851
31:14
You should fill out the form with facts."
567
1874480
4819
31:19
Did you know that we use "fill out a form" to talk about writing some information on
568
1879299
6151
31:25
a form?
569
1885450
1000
31:26
I use the simple verb "fill" in this more metaphorical way.
570
1886450
5010
31:31
Of course, you can "fill a glass of water," but when you "fill your mind with facts,"
571
1891460
7949
31:39
your mind has a lot of factual information in it.
572
1899409
3451
31:42
It is filled with facts.
573
1902860
1699
31:44
Vanessa: Pair number three: "found and found out."
574
1904559
4360
31:48
This is the past tense of "find and find out".
575
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4140
31:53
Vanessa: "I ... how to avoid the traffic."
576
1913059
4631
31:57
Vanessa: "I ... a better road to avoid traffic."
577
1917690
5109
32:02
Vanessa: Which one of these needs the phrasal verb, and which one of these needs the simple
578
1922799
6250
32:09
verb?
579
1929049
1000
32:10
Think about it for three seconds.
580
1930049
1340
32:11
Three, two, one.
581
1931389
2280
32:13
Did you say, "I found out how to avoid the traffic."?
582
1933669
5970
32:19
Did you say, "I found a better road to avoid the traffic."?
583
1939639
5321
32:24
I hope so.
584
1944960
1719
32:26
We use "find out" to talk about solving a problem, especially when we say "find out
585
1946679
6521
32:33
how" or "find out why."
586
1953200
3559
32:36
Those are your keywords, "how and why" when we use "find out".
587
1956759
4481
32:41
For a longer video about "find out" and "figure out," you can check out this link up here,
588
1961240
5989
32:47
which is a video that I made about two years ago comparing these two similar and yet different
589
1967229
5221
32:52
phrasal verbs.
590
1972450
1000
32:53
Vanessa: Pair number four: "read and read over."
591
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3900
32:57
Now, this pair of words here looks like "read and read over" but the present and the past
592
1977350
7720
33:05
tense are spelled exactly the same, they're just pronounced differently.
593
1985070
3800
33:08
So we need the context here.
594
1988870
1119
33:09
Let's take a look at the sentences.
595
1989989
1890
33:11
Vanessa: "She ... the article three times."
596
1991879
3561
33:15
Vanessa: She ... the newspaper this morning."
597
1995440
3579
33:19
Vanessa: Which one should have "read" and which one should have "read over"?
598
1999019
5980
33:24
Think about it for a moment.
599
2004999
1880
33:26
Three, two, one.
600
2006879
1360
33:28
It is best to say, "She read over the article three times," and "She read the newspaper
601
2008239
8660
33:36
this morning."
602
2016899
1000
33:37
For this one, it's okay to say, "She read the article three times," but if you want
603
2017899
5321
33:43
to emphasize that she read it in detail, this is "read over," to look at something in detail.
604
2023220
7120
33:50
Then you can use the phrasal verb, "read over."
605
2030340
2399
33:52
Vanessa: "She read over the article three times in detail to find out everything."
606
2032739
5481
33:58
Vanessa: Pair number five: "used or used up".
607
2038220
4730
34:02
The sentences are: Vanessa: "Dan ... the cream for his coffee?"
608
2042950
5909
34:08
Vanessa: "Dan ... the cream for his coffee, oh no!"
609
2048859
4210
34:13
Vanessa: So the only difference here is "Oh no!"
610
2053069
3550
34:16
Which one evokes the feeling of, "Oh no."
611
2056619
3851
34:20
Think about it for a moment.
612
2060470
1209
34:21
Three, two, one.
613
2061679
2000
34:23
Did you say, "Dan used the cream for his coffee," and "Dan used up the cream for his coffee,
614
2063679
7690
34:31
oh no!"?
615
2071369
1000
34:32
I hope so.
616
2072369
1000
34:33
If Dan uses cream for his coffee, cool.
617
2073369
3050
34:36
Okay.
618
2076419
1000
34:37
It doesn't bother me.
619
2077419
1000
34:38
I don't care.
620
2078419
1000
34:39
But if Dan uses up the cream for his coffee, this is a problem because it means that I
621
2079419
5480
34:44
don't get any.
622
2084899
1000
34:45
"Use up" means to finish something completely.
623
2085899
3131
34:49
So in the morning when Dan makes his coffee, if he uses up the cream, I might be a little
624
2089030
5399
34:54
bit upset because then I don't get any in my drink, so that's why I said, "Oh no!"
625
2094429
5341
34:59
Let's go to the next one.
626
2099770
1000
35:00
Vanessa: Number six: "call, call on".
627
2100770
4760
35:05
Let's look at the sentences.
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1039
35:06
Vanessa: "If you don't listen, the teacher will ... your parents after class."
629
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6181
35:12
Vanessa: "If you don't listen, the teacher will ... you in class."
630
2112750
6329
35:19
Vanessa: Which one feels the most correct for the phrasal verb?
631
2119079
4081
35:23
Three, two, one.
632
2123160
2510
35:25
Did you say, "If you don't listen, the teacher will call your parents after class.
633
2125670
8440
35:34
If you don't listen, the teacher will call on you in class."?
634
2134110
4290
35:38
Vanessa: For me, this seems like it's a universal truth that if you're not listening, if you're
635
2138400
5070
35:43
about to fall asleep, the teacher will always call on you.
636
2143470
3540
35:47
The teacher knows who sleepy, who is not paying attention, and they'll say, "Vanessa, what's
637
2147010
4800
35:51
number six?"
638
2151810
1479
35:53
And then you feel really scared.
639
2153289
1251
35:54
So when you call on someone, you ask them to answer a question.
640
2154540
4730
35:59
Have you ever experienced this in school that when you're not paying attention, the teacher
641
2159270
3360
36:02
always calls on you.
642
2162630
2080
36:04
But if you call someone, "The teacher called my parents," this means that she's making
643
2164710
7389
36:12
a phone call.
644
2172099
1721
36:13
When someone makes a phone call to your parents, it's always a bad thing.
645
2173820
3239
36:17
So if you're not listening in class, the teacher might call your parents.
646
2177059
5800
36:22
She's not calling on your parents, that feels a little bit weird.
647
2182859
3131
36:25
She's just simply calling your parents.
648
2185990
1700
36:27
Vanessa: Number seven is "got and got into."
649
2187690
4129
36:31
The verb "got" is the past tense of "get" here.
650
2191819
2841
36:34
So let's think about which one of these fits into these sentences.
651
2194660
2860
36:37
Vanessa: "I ... English last year when I found Vanessa's lessons."
652
2197520
4460
36:41
Vanessa: "I finally ... English last year when I found Vanessa's lessons."
653
2201980
5579
36:47
Vanessa: The only difference here is the word "finally."
654
2207559
5601
36:53
Think about which one of these words is correct.
655
2213160
3050
36:56
Three, two, one.
656
2216210
2940
36:59
"I got into English last year when I found Vanessa's lessons.
657
2219150
7360
37:06
I finally got English last year when I found Vanessa's lessons."
658
2226510
6990
37:13
Why did we say, "I got into English last year."?
659
2233500
3990
37:17
That means that you started to become interested in English when you found my lessons.
660
2237490
3660
37:21
Maybe that was true for you, I hope so.
661
2241150
2580
37:23
So you started to become interested in something, but the word "get", or in the past tense of
662
2243730
5220
37:28
"got", by itself has a lot of different meetings in this sentence.
663
2248950
3389
37:32
It means simply understood.
664
2252339
2431
37:34
Maybe you've never understood another native English speaker before and then you watched
665
2254770
3680
37:38
my lessons and thought, "I can understand her.
666
2258450
2940
37:41
This is amazing."
667
2261390
1399
37:42
So you might say, "I finally got English.
668
2262789
2560
37:45
It finally made sense to me when I found Vanessa's lessons."
669
2265349
3791
37:49
So you would say, "I finally got English when I found Vanessa's lessons."
670
2269140
4830
37:53
Vanessa: Number eight: "keep and keep on".
671
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3099
37:57
Let's look at the sentences.
672
2277069
2040
37:59
Vanessa: "Make sure that you ... studying every day."
673
2279109
4821
38:03
Vanessa: "Make sure that you ... studying every day."
674
2283930
4660
38:08
Vanessa: Which one of these is correct?
675
2288590
3840
38:12
Think about it for a moment.
676
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1470
38:13
Do both of these sentences look exactly the same to you?
677
2293900
5679
38:19
This is a trick question, I'm sorry.
678
2299579
2391
38:21
It's because "keep" and "keep on" have exactly the same meaning.
679
2301970
3730
38:25
"Make sure that you keep studying every day.
680
2305700
3550
38:29
Make sure that you keep on studying every day."
681
2309250
2970
38:32
This is exactly the same meaning you could say, "Keep on running, go, go, go," or "Keep
682
2312220
5980
38:38
running, go, go, go."
683
2318200
1639
38:39
Same meaning, no problem.
684
2319839
1881
38:41
You can use "keep" or "keep on" and they're the same.
685
2321720
2970
38:44
Let's go to the next one and the final question.
686
2324690
2720
38:47
Number nine.
687
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1000
38:48
Vanessa: Number nine: "show and show up".
688
2328410
2980
38:51
Vanessa: "Why does she always ... us pictures of her cats?"
689
2331390
5320
38:56
Vanessa: "Why does she always ... 10 minutes late?"
690
2336710
4940
39:01
Vanessa: Which one is best with the simple verb?
691
2341650
3360
39:05
Which one is best with the phrasal verb?
692
2345010
2230
39:07
Think about it for just a moment.
693
2347240
2790
39:10
Three, two, one.
694
2350030
1319
39:11
"Why does she always show us pictures of her cats?"
695
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4301
39:15
Probably because they're really cute and she loves them and she wants you to love them
696
2355650
4180
39:19
too.
697
2359830
1000
39:20
"Why does she always show up 10 minutes late?"
698
2360830
4029
39:24
When someone shows up, they appear, they arrive 10 minutes late.
699
2364859
4911
39:29
This is pretty rude depending on the situation, but if it's at work, do not show up 10 minutes
700
2369770
6390
39:36
late, not a good idea if you want to keep your job.
701
2376160
2400
39:38
Vanessa: All right.
702
2378560
1000
39:39
How did you do?
703
2379560
1000
39:40
Did you add the phrasal verbs to the right sentence and the simple verbs to the right
704
2380560
3940
39:44
sentence?
705
2384500
1000
39:45
I hope you did.
706
2385500
1000
39:46
I hope you learned something new.
707
2386500
1000
39:47
Let me know in the comments.
708
2387500
1000
39:48
What was your score on this test?
709
2388500
3660
39:52
Vanessa: Do you feel like prepositions are tricky?
710
2392160
5060
39:57
Should it be, "I'm in the store or I'm at the store.
711
2397220
3399
40:00
I talked to him or I talked with him."
712
2400619
3410
40:04
These small words "in, at, with, to" these are called prepositions.
713
2404029
5780
40:09
The reason why prepositions are so tricky is because we can't translate them from your
714
2409809
4730
40:14
native language.
715
2414539
1300
40:15
For example, in Spanish, the words "para" and "por" both mean "for" when you translate
716
2415839
6201
40:22
it into English, but those two words can be used in a lot of different situations where
717
2422040
5880
40:27
in English we would say "for, by, during, along."
718
2427920
5149
40:33
How are Spanish speakers and you supposed to know which is the correct English preposition?
719
2433069
5081
40:38
It's tricky.
720
2438150
1000
40:39
Today, we're not going to cover all the rules for all prepositions, but instead we're going
721
2439150
4169
40:43
to do something, a little fun, a quiz.
722
2443319
2941
40:46
Over the next 15 questions, you're going to review 15 different prepositions.
723
2446260
5150
40:51
Of course, we can't talk about every rule for every preposition, but we're going to
724
2451410
3770
40:55
talk about some of the common uses.
725
2455180
1790
40:56
Vanessa: Before we get started, I want you to guess how many questions do you think you'll
726
2456970
5780
41:02
guess correctly.
727
2462750
1299
41:04
Think about a number one through 15 or maybe zero through 15, how many questions do you
728
2464049
5841
41:09
think you'll get correct?
729
2469890
1620
41:11
I want you to think about this number because I have a feeling, I guess that you probably
730
2471510
5350
41:16
know more about prepositions than you think you do.
731
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2780
41:19
So I hope that this lesson will help you to realize, "I do know something about prepositions
732
2479640
5360
41:25
and now I know a little bit more as well."
733
2485000
2280
41:27
All right, let's get started with question number one.
734
2487280
2650
41:29
Vanessa: Preposition sentence number one, "Today is beautiful, let's go for a walk ... the
735
2489930
5460
41:35
park."
736
2495390
1000
41:36
Vanessa: "Let's go for a walk in the park."
737
2496390
3010
41:39
Vanessa: "Let's go for a walk at the park."
738
2499400
2750
41:42
Vanessa: Which one of these is the most common?
739
2502150
2199
41:44
I'll give you three seconds to guess.
740
2504349
2091
41:46
Three, two, one.
741
2506440
2629
41:49
The correct answer is, "It's beautiful today, let's go for a walk in the park."
742
2509069
6960
41:56
You should use the word "in" because we're talking about being inside or surrounded by
743
2516029
5951
42:01
the park.
744
2521980
1000
42:02
If you say, "Let's go for a walk at the park."
745
2522980
2750
42:05
We're just talking about a specific point.
746
2525730
2390
42:08
You might say, "Let's meet at the entrance to the park" but here we're talking about
747
2528120
5150
42:13
going for a walk in the park, we're surrounded by the park.
748
2533270
3720
42:16
All right, let's go to question number two.
749
2536990
1809
42:18
Vanessa: Question number two, "Basketball is enjoyable, but ... all I like baseball."
750
2538799
5760
42:24
Vanessa: "But about all, I like baseball."
751
2544559
3520
42:28
Vanessa: "But above all, I like baseball."
752
2548079
2691
42:30
Vanessa: Which preposition is correct?
753
2550770
2500
42:33
You have three seconds, two, one.
754
2553270
2950
42:36
"Basketball is enjoyable, but above all, I like baseball."
755
2556220
6520
42:42
Here we have a fixed expression.
756
2562740
2200
42:44
You might call this in grammatical terms, a collocation "above all."
757
2564940
5250
42:50
Here we can imagine physically above your interests are more important, more interesting.
758
2570190
6780
42:56
Baseball above all is the best.
759
2576970
2550
42:59
So you could say, "I like learning English all the time, but above all, Vanessa's lessons
760
2579520
6140
43:05
are my favorite."
761
2585660
1169
43:06
Vanessa: Sentence number three, "I'm teaching my son to walk ... the sidewalk."
762
2586829
4881
43:11
Vanessa: "I'm teaching my son to walk by the sidewalk."
763
2591710
2899
43:14
Vanessa: Or "I'm teaching my son to walk on the sidewalk."
764
2594609
2811
43:17
Vanessa: Which one is correct?
765
2597420
1609
43:19
This is true, my son's one and a half and I'm trying to teach him to walk the sidewalk,
766
2599029
5340
43:24
it's dangerous if you walk the road.
767
2604369
2440
43:26
All right, let's think about this in three seconds, two, one.
768
2606809
3971
43:30
The answer is, "I'm teaching my son to walk on the sidewalk."
769
2610780
5640
43:36
With the word "on" we can imagine a flat surface on the sidewalk.
770
2616420
5020
43:41
"Don't walk on the road, walk on the sidewalk."
771
2621440
3609
43:45
Vanessa: Sentence number four, "Walk ... that tall building and you'll find downtown."
772
2625049
6290
43:51
This is directions.
773
2631339
1000
43:52
Vanessa: "Walk to that tall building and you'll find downtown."
774
2632339
4280
43:56
Vanessa: Or, "Walk towards that tall building and you will find downtown."
775
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3821
44:00
Vanessa: Here we can kind of imagine that in the distance there is a tall building and
776
2640440
4870
44:05
you're trying to tell your friend how to get to downtown.
777
2645310
3340
44:08
So let's think about which preposition is correct.
778
2648650
3860
44:12
Three, two, one.
779
2652510
2960
44:15
"Walk towards that tall building and you'll find downtown."
780
2655470
4930
44:20
We use the preposition "towards" to talk about moving in a direction towards something, to
781
2660400
6500
44:26
something, but you're not exactly going to that spot.
782
2666900
3189
44:30
"If you want to walk to downtown from my house, you don't need to get to that tall building,
783
2670089
5770
44:35
you just need to move in the direction of that tall building."
784
2675859
3941
44:39
Vanessa: Sentence number five, "I'll see you ... the party ... six o'clock."
785
2679800
5110
44:44
Vanessa: "I'll see you by the party by six o'clock."
786
2684910
2939
44:47
Vanessa: "I'll see you at the party at six o'clock."
787
2687849
2950
44:50
Vanessa: Here we're going to use the same preposition for both blanks.
788
2690799
3941
44:54
Think about it.
789
2694740
1140
44:55
Three, two, one.
790
2695880
1870
44:57
"I'll see you at the party at six o'clock."
791
2697750
5240
45:02
Here we're talking about a specific point in time.
792
2702990
4339
45:07
Remember question number one, we talked about meeting at the entrance to the park, that's
793
2707329
5311
45:12
the same thing here.
794
2712640
1000
45:13
"We're I'm going to meet you at the party at six o'clock."
795
2713640
3490
45:17
A specific point.
796
2717130
1410
45:18
Vanessa: Preposition sentence number six, "I don't understand what Vanessa is talking..."
797
2718540
5799
45:24
Vanessa: "I don't understand what Vanessa is talking with."
798
2724339
3571
45:27
Vanessa: "I don't understand what Vanessa's talking about."
799
2727910
3600
45:31
Vanessa: Which one is correct?
800
2731510
2030
45:33
Three, two, one.
801
2733540
2630
45:36
We have a key here to help us know what the correct answer is.
802
2736170
4020
45:40
The key word is the word "what".
803
2740190
2920
45:43
"I don't understand what Vanessa is talking about."
804
2743110
6080
45:49
If you know this fixed expression to talk about something, you know that we talk about
805
2749190
5840
45:55
something, we're not talking about a person.
806
2755030
3809
45:58
I'm talking about prepositions, I'm talking about the moon, I'm talking about English.
807
2758839
6921
46:05
What if we wanted to say, "I'm talking with..."?
808
2765760
2690
46:08
Here, we need to use a person, but in my sentence I'm talking about something because I used
809
2768450
5560
46:14
the word what.
810
2774010
1000
46:15
"I'm talking with you about prepositions."
811
2775010
3650
46:18
Do you see that difference here?
812
2778660
2010
46:20
Vanessa: Sentence number seven, this one's a little tricky.
813
2780670
2910
46:23
"We'll try to be home ... 10:00 PM, but probably earlier."
814
2783580
5130
46:28
You can imagine telling a babysitter this, maybe if you're going out and the babysitter
815
2788710
4030
46:32
is staying home and watching your kids, you might say, "We'll try to be home by 10:00
816
2792740
6470
46:39
PM, but probably earlier."
817
2799210
1920
46:41
Or, "We'll try to be home at 10:00 PM, but probably earlier."
818
2801130
5600
46:46
Which one is correct?
819
2806730
1359
46:48
Three two, one.
820
2808089
2821
46:50
Well, technically both of these are correct, but the best answer here is, "I'll try to
821
2810910
7420
46:58
be home by 10:00 PM."
822
2818330
2400
47:00
Why did I choose "by"?
823
2820730
3059
47:03
The word "by" means that we're talking about the latest possible time, "Try to be home
824
2823789
6580
47:10
by 10:00 PM..."
825
2830369
1041
47:11
And our key here is that final part, "... but probably earlier."
826
2831410
4639
47:16
I'm imagining that 10:00 PM is the latest that I will be home, so here we need to use
827
2836049
5441
47:21
the word "by".
828
2841490
1359
47:22
You might also hear in a classroom, the teacher might say to you, "You need to have your homework
829
2842849
4541
47:27
finished by the beginning of class."
830
2847390
3020
47:30
The beginning of class is the latest possible time.
831
2850410
3709
47:34
Don't finish your homework during the class, it needs to be finished by the beginning of
832
2854119
5440
47:39
class.
833
2859559
1000
47:40
Vanessa: Preposition sentence number eight, "After watching the tidying documentary ... I
834
2860559
4500
47:45
went all of my things."
835
2865059
2000
47:47
Vanessa: "After watching the tidying documentary, I went into all my things."
836
2867059
4770
47:51
Or, "I went through all my things".
837
2871829
2801
47:54
Which preposition is correct?
838
2874630
1980
47:56
Three, two, one.
839
2876610
2560
47:59
"After watching the tidying documentary, I went through all of my things."
840
2879170
6610
48:05
You can imagine a tunnel, you're going through the tunnel, you're surrounded by the tunnel.
841
2885780
7130
48:12
I'm here in the sentence surrounded by my things, clothes, kitchen things, office supplies.
842
2892910
7730
48:20
I went through my things, it was thorough, I went through every single thing.
843
2900640
7510
48:28
It also helps if you know the fixed expression to "go through something."
844
2908150
5280
48:33
This is one of the best ways to really memorize prepositions is to memorize those full fixed
845
2913430
5180
48:38
phrases, to "talk about" something.
846
2918610
2810
48:41
To "go through" something.
847
2921420
2109
48:43
Vanessa: Sentence number nine, "I was in New York ... two weeks."
848
2923529
3631
48:47
Vanessa: "I was in New York since two weeks."
849
2927160
2899
48:50
Vanessa: "I was in New York for two weeks."
850
2930059
2240
48:52
Vanessa: Which one is the most correct?
851
2932299
1971
48:54
Three, two, one.
852
2934270
2560
48:56
"I was in New York for two weeks."
853
2936830
4459
49:01
I know that the word "for" and "since" can be tricky together and we use "for" when we
854
2941289
5201
49:06
ask the question, what was the duration of time?
855
2946490
4010
49:10
The duration of time was two weeks, so I was in New York for two weeks.
856
2950500
6240
49:16
Vanessa: Sentence number 10, "The cat ran ... the kitchen when he heard the can open."
857
2956740
7190
49:23
This is true for my cats.
858
2963930
1740
49:25
When you open a can of cat food, "They run to the kitchen."
859
2965670
4990
49:30
Or, "They run into the kitchen."
860
2970660
3209
49:33
These are pretty similar, right?
861
2973869
1750
49:35
Think about it for just a moment.
862
2975619
1581
49:37
Three, two, one.
863
2977200
2649
49:39
"The cat ran into the kitchen when he heard the can open."
864
2979849
6631
49:46
We use the preposition "into" to talk about a room or a building.
865
2986480
6059
49:52
If you want to say, "The cat ran to something", we need to use a specific thing.
866
2992539
5931
49:58
"The cat ran to the bowl.
867
2998470
2500
50:00
The cat ran to me.
868
3000970
1670
50:02
The cat ran into the kitchen to the bowl."
869
3002640
3050
50:05
Beautiful sentence.
870
3005690
1000
50:06
Vanessa: Sentence number 11, "Oh no, that was the last can of cat food, I need to go
871
3006690
4530
50:11
... the store to get more cat food."
872
3011220
2730
50:13
Is it, "I need to go to the store to get more cat food."
873
3013950
2909
50:16
Or.
874
3016859
1000
50:17
"I need to go about the store to get more cat food."?
875
3017859
2521
50:20
Which one's correct?
876
3020380
1939
50:22
Three, two, one.
877
3022319
1941
50:24
"I need to go to the store to get more cat food."
878
3024260
4980
50:29
Immediately, my cats are going crazy.
879
3029240
2480
50:31
We use the preposition "to" for a specific destination, "Come to my house.
880
3031720
6720
50:38
I'm going to the US.
881
3038440
2139
50:40
I need to go to the store."
882
3040579
2331
50:42
Vanessa: Number 12, "The museum is full ... tourists in July."
883
3042910
5109
50:48
Vanessa: "The museum is full of tourists in July."
884
3048019
4681
50:52
Vanessa: Or, "The museum is full for tourists in July."
885
3052700
4339
50:57
Vanessa: Which one feels the most correct to you?
886
3057039
5121
51:02
Three, two, one.
887
3062160
1310
51:03
"The museum is full of tourists in July."
888
3063470
5139
51:08
It helps if you know this fixed expression "full of something".
889
3068609
4791
51:13
"The tree is full of monkeys.
890
3073400
3820
51:17
The museum is full of tourists."
891
3077220
2500
51:19
Vanessa: Number 13, "I talked ... the client about the problem.
892
3079720
5450
51:25
Vanessa: "I talked with the client about the problem."
893
3085170
4020
51:29
Vanessa: Or, "I talked to the client about the problem."
894
3089190
3570
51:32
Vanessa: Think about this for a moment.
895
3092760
3259
51:36
Three, two, one.
896
3096019
2790
51:38
"I talked with the client about the problem."
897
3098809
4821
51:43
Or, "I talked to the client about the problem."
898
3103630
4310
51:47
Oh, both of these can be correct grammatically but they have slightly different meanings
899
3107940
4389
51:52
in a business situation.
900
3112329
1940
51:54
If you're talking about a friend, "I talked with my friend, I talked to my friend."
901
3114269
3901
51:58
No problem, same meaning.
902
3118170
1500
51:59
But in a business situation with a client they have a slightly different meaning.
903
3119670
4210
52:03
If you say, "I talked with the client," it has a more friendly, approachable, kind of
904
3123880
6239
52:10
equal feeling.
905
3130119
1071
52:11
Both people are speaking, "I spoke with the client, I talked with the client."
906
3131190
5240
52:16
If you say, "I talked to the client," in a business situation, it kind of feels like
907
3136430
5520
52:21
one person is doing more speaking.
908
3141950
2740
52:24
You might say, "My boss talked to me about being late."
909
3144690
4929
52:29
That means that I was late too much and he was angry with me, he talked to me about being
910
3149619
5670
52:35
late.
911
3155289
1000
52:36
So just know that in a business situation it's slightly different but in a casual conversation
912
3156289
4550
52:40
they're the same.
913
3160839
1000
52:41
Vanessa: Number 14, "It's been raining ... Saturday."
914
3161839
3851
52:45
Vanessa: "It's been raining until Saturday."
915
3165690
2139
52:47
Vanessa: "It's been raining since Saturday."
916
3167829
3891
52:51
Vanessa: Three, two, one.
917
3171720
2599
52:54
When is the start date?
918
3174319
2921
52:57
When did it start raining?
919
3177240
2230
52:59
Saturday.
920
3179470
1000
53:00
"It has been raining since Saturday."
921
3180470
4210
53:04
This is a tricky word.
922
3184680
1970
53:06
We know the start date, Saturday.
923
3186650
2100
53:08
"It has been raining since Saturday.
924
3188750
2510
53:11
I've been learning English since I was eight years old."
925
3191260
4400
53:15
Eight years old is the start time, "I've been learning since I was eight years old."
926
3195660
5480
53:21
If you'd like to learn a little bit more about the difference between "until and since" make
927
3201140
4531
53:25
sure you check out this live lesson that I did quite a while ago so that you can learn
928
3205671
3618
53:29
that more deeply.
929
3209289
1000
53:30
Vanessa: And our final preposition quiz sentence is: "I fell asleep ... the movie."
930
3210289
6441
53:36
Vanessa: "I fell asleep during the movie."
931
3216730
2920
53:39
Vanessa: Or, "I fell asleep from the movie."
932
3219650
3119
53:42
Vanessa: Which one of these feels the most correct?
933
3222769
2381
53:45
It's the last question, you can do it.
934
3225150
3040
53:48
Three, two, one.
935
3228190
1700
53:49
"I fell asleep during the movie."
936
3229890
3250
53:53
The word "during" comes from the word "duration", which means in the middle of the movie I fell
937
3233140
7120
54:00
asleep.
938
3240260
1000
54:01
You've heard a lot of prepositions during this lesson.
939
3241260
4309
54:05
How did you do in this quiz?
940
3245569
1780
54:07
This was just a quick overview of 15 common prepositions, but I have a feeling that you
941
3247349
5521
54:12
got more correct than you thought you would at the beginning.
942
3252870
3719
54:16
Vanessa: "Could I speak English?
943
3256589
4701
54:21
Where what I speak English?
944
3261290
1829
54:23
Should I speak English?"
945
3263119
2341
54:25
"Could, would, should" help.
946
3265460
3659
54:29
These three verbs "could, would and should" are called modal verbs and they can be tricky
947
3269119
6021
54:35
for a lot of English learners.
948
3275140
1350
54:36
Are they tricky for you?
949
3276490
1710
54:38
Well, I have some good news today.
950
3278200
2290
54:40
I'd like to challenge you with a "could, would, should" test.
951
3280490
4470
54:44
Are you ready?
952
3284960
1049
54:46
I'm going to ask you eight questions using the different forms of "could, would and should"
953
3286009
5441
54:51
and I want you to try your best, look into your heart and choose the correct answer.
954
3291450
4940
54:56
You'll have three seconds to choose "could, would or should" and then I'll explain hopefully
955
3296390
5419
55:01
clearly why that's the correct answer.
956
3301809
2211
55:04
Vanessa: Number one, let's imagine that you work for an American company and one of your
957
3304020
3809
55:07
coworkers tells you that she's having trouble making friends in your country, so you want
958
3307829
5311
55:13
to give her some polite advice.
959
3313140
3030
55:16
You say, "If you want to meet local people, you ... go to a bar."
960
3316170
6699
55:22
Vanessa: "You could go to a bar."
961
3322869
2650
55:25
Vanessa: "You would go to a bar."
962
3325519
2711
55:28
Vanessa: "You should go to a bar."
963
3328230
2619
55:30
Vanessa: You have three seconds to choose the best answer.
964
3330849
3460
55:34
Three, two, one.
965
3334309
3151
55:37
"If you want to make friends, you could go to a bar."
966
3337460
5889
55:43
We use "could" to give a polite suggestion.
967
3343349
4661
55:48
This isn't commanding someone to do something, we'll talk about that with "should" later.
968
3348010
5289
55:53
To practice this way to use "could" I want to ask you a question, "If I visit your city,
969
3353299
5790
55:59
where could I get a good view?
970
3359089
2891
56:01
Sometimes it's nice to go up high and look down on the city.
971
3361980
3200
56:05
So where could I go to get a good view?"
972
3365180
2590
56:07
For example, if you came to my city, you could go to a nearby mountain top and look down
973
3367770
4910
56:12
on the city.
974
3372680
1000
56:13
You could go to a nearby mountain top.
975
3373680
2960
56:16
Vanessa: Number two, let's imagine that you're visiting a new country and as you're walking
976
3376640
4510
56:21
down the street, someone tries to steal your phone.
977
3381150
3330
56:24
When you go back and tell the hotel receptionist about this, she says, "Well, in the future
978
3384480
6960
56:31
you ... take your phone outside, it's not safe."
979
3391440
4550
56:35
What's the best answer?
980
3395990
1039
56:37
Vanessa: "You couldn't take your phone outside."
981
3397029
3671
56:40
Vanessa: "You wouldn't take your phone outside."
982
3400700
2909
56:43
Vanessa: Or, "You shouldn't take your phone outside."
983
3403609
2650
56:46
Vanessa: Three, two, one.
984
3406259
4000
56:50
"In the future, you shouldn't take your phone outside."
985
3410259
5381
56:55
We use "should" to give strong advice.
986
3415640
2840
56:58
I hope you got this one correct because we just briefly mentioned it during number one.
987
3418480
4359
57:02
In fact, this situation happened to my sister when she was living in another country, I
988
3422839
4010
57:06
won't mention where, but it was her first day in the country and she was walking down
989
3426849
3811
57:10
the street and a lady, kind of crazy lady came up and tried to grab her necklace from
990
3430660
5250
57:15
around her neck.
991
3435910
1000
57:16
It wasn't something flashy, just a little tiny chain with a little emblem on it or something.
992
3436910
6540
57:23
And later when she told her friends about that experience, her friend said, "Oh yeah,
993
3443450
5490
57:28
you shouldn't wear jewelry, especially on that street because it's too dangerous."
994
3448940
4500
57:33
Thankfully the lady didn't take her necklace, my sister screamed and the lady ran away,
995
3453440
3810
57:37
but it was a little bit frightening for her.
996
3457250
2210
57:39
So her friend's advice is really strong, "You shouldn't wear jewelry, especially on that
997
3459460
5149
57:44
street."
998
3464609
1000
57:45
I just want to let you know that the verb "should" is so strong that we don't often
999
3465609
4571
57:50
use it for other people.
1000
3470180
1840
57:52
You don't want to tell your friends unless it's a dangerous situation, so you don't want
1001
3472020
3740
57:55
to tell them, "You should eat your vegetables."
1002
3475760
2559
57:58
It's a little bit strange, but we often use this to talk about ourselves.
1003
3478319
3260
58:01
If you want to give yourself- Vanessa: We often use this to talk about ourselves.
1004
3481579
1051
58:02
If you want to give yourself advice, it's no problem if it's strong advice.
1005
3482630
3920
58:06
You might say, "I should wake up earlier.
1006
3486550
2420
58:08
I'm sleeping too late.
1007
3488970
1470
58:10
I should go to bed earlier because I'm having trouble waking up.
1008
3490440
4040
58:14
I should."
1009
3494480
1520
58:16
When you give yourself advice, this is perfectly normal, and it's not too strong for someone
1010
3496000
4599
58:20
else because it's about yourself.
1011
3500599
1690
58:22
Vanessa: Let's go to question number three.
1012
3502289
2330
58:24
"Mm you help me with my project?"
1013
3504619
3521
58:28
"Could you help me with my project?"
1014
3508140
3560
58:31
"Would you help me with my project?"
1015
3511700
2930
58:34
"Should you help me with my project?"
1016
3514630
2929
58:37
Which one feels the most correct?
1017
3517559
2151
58:39
Three two, one.
1018
3519710
3030
58:42
Actually, this is a trick question because you have two choices.
1019
3522740
4940
58:47
You can say, "Could you help me with my project?" or, "Would you help me with my project?"
1020
3527680
6679
58:54
Both of these are equally correct, and they both are just a polite request.
1021
3534359
5111
58:59
"Would you help me?"
1022
3539470
1260
59:00
"Could you help me?"
1023
3540730
1139
59:01
The sentence structure is often "could," "would" plus "you," plus a verb, plus "me."
1024
3541869
8051
59:09
"Could you pass me the paper?"
1025
3549920
3359
59:13
"Would you email me when the report is ready?"
1026
3553279
3441
59:16
We use this all the time, so it's really natural.
1027
3556720
2280
59:19
Vanessa: Question number four.
1028
3559000
1819
59:20
Let's imagine that we're talking about our childhood, and we're talking about something
1029
3560819
3621
59:24
that we were capable of doing as kids.
1030
3564440
3600
59:28
You could say, "When I was a child, I... play outside all day."
1031
3568040
7170
59:35
"I could play outside all day."
1032
3575210
3190
59:38
"I would play outside all day."
1033
3578400
2709
59:41
"I should play outside all day."
1034
3581109
3150
59:44
Which one describes a capability?
1035
3584259
2850
59:47
Three, two, one.
1036
3587109
3071
59:50
We could say, "When I was a child, I could play outside all day."
1037
3590180
5889
59:56
Here, we're using "can" in the past.
1038
3596069
4401
60:00
When we turn the verb "can" to conjugate it in the past, it becomes "could."
1039
3600470
5109
60:05
So let's take a look at this sentence in the present and compare it with "could."
1040
3605579
3480
60:09
"I can play outside all day."
1041
3609059
3141
60:12
This is describing now, the present.
1042
3612200
2819
60:15
But if we want to talk about the past, when you were a child, we need to change "can"
1043
3615019
4411
60:19
to "could."
1044
3619430
1000
60:20
"When I was a child, I could play outside all day."
1045
3620430
3389
60:23
It's simply talking about your ability to do something.
1046
3623819
3290
60:27
Vanessa: To practice this possibly new way to use "could," I want to ask you a question.
1047
3627109
6131
60:33
What's something that you could do when you were younger, but you can't do now?
1048
3633240
3850
60:37
Do you see how we're comparing "could do when you were younger" and "can't do now" with
1049
3637090
6380
60:43
that present?
1050
3643470
1289
60:44
Great.
1051
3644759
1000
60:45
You might answer this by saying, "Well, when I was younger, I could stay up all night,
1052
3645759
4850
60:50
but now I can't.
1053
3650609
1000
60:51
I get tired really early," or, "When I was younger, I could eat sweets and never gain
1054
3651609
5470
60:57
weight, but now that's not possible."
1055
3657079
2061
60:59
This is a good chance to practice "could" to talk about your ability in the past.
1056
3659140
4659
61:03
Vanessa: Sentence number five, "When I lived near the beach, I... swim in the water every
1057
3663799
7931
61:11
day."
1058
3671730
1000
61:12
"When I lived near the beach, I could swim in the water every day."
1059
3672730
4629
61:17
"I would swim in the water every day," or, "I should swim in the water every day."
1060
3677359
7691
61:25
Which one feels the most correct?
1061
3685050
1620
61:26
Three, two, one.
1062
3686670
2169
61:28
"When I lived near the beach, I would swim in the water every day."
1063
3688839
8071
61:36
We can use "would" to talk about "will" in the past.
1064
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This can be a little bit tricky, so my tip for thinking about this version of "would"
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is to think about an action that happened regularly in the past.
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61:50
If I say, "When I lived at the beach, I would swim in the water every day," this is talking
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61:57
about something that habitually happened.
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62:00
Let's take a look at another example.
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"My teacher would always give us a quiz on Friday."
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It happened regularly.
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62:07
"He wouldn't study, so he failed the class."
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62:12
"He wouldn't regularly study," this is something that regularly happened, "so he failed the
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62:18
class."
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62:19
Vanessa: I want to let you know that sometimes native speakers mix verb tenses.
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We might use the past simple plus a word that means habitually.
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62:28
So for example, you could say, "I swam in the ocean every day."
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62:32
"My teacher always gave us a quiz."
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"He didn't ever study."
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These words "every day," "always," "ever," they mean habitually.
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62:43
It's something that happened regularly.
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62:46
So if you want to just use the past simple, make sure that you add one of those words,
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62:50
or you could simply say, "He wouldn't study."
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62:53
"My teacher would give us a quiz."
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62:56
"I would swim."
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62:57
It already encapsulates that idea of something that happened regularly in the past.
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63:02
Vanessa: Question number six.
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63:03
Let's imagine that you're leaving the office to go to lunch with your international coworkers,
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63:09
and you know that it's raining outside.
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63:10
We call that sprinkling, and you see that one of your coworkers isn't bringing her umbrella,
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63:17
so you want to tell her something politely.
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63:20
You could say, "I think it's sprinkling outside.
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63:25
You... bring your umbrella or you can share mine."
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63:29
"You could probably bring your umbrella."
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63:33
"You would probably bring your umbrella."
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63:37
"You should probably bring your umbrella."
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63:40
Which one of these is the best?
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63:43
Vanessa: Three, two, one.
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63:46
"You should probably bring your umbrella."
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63:49
We already talked about how "should" is really strong.
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63:53
So when we add the word "probably," it lessens the intensity.
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63:58
We use "should probably" to give polite advice.
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64:01
You don't want to say, "You should bring your umbrella."
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64:04
Maybe a teacher might say that to a student or a parent might say that to a child.
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64:09
You're giving strong advice, but for your coworkers, you want to be a little more polite.
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64:13
So native speakers will often add these words to lessen the intensity and "probably" is
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64:18
one of the most common.
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64:19
You could say, "We should probably make reservations at that restaurant because it's really busy."
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64:26
Should probably.
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1000
64:27
Vanessa: Sentence number seven, "She didn't want to turn off her phone because she...
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64:34
get an important phone call."
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1990
64:36
"She could get an important phone call," "She would get an important phone call," or, "She
1112
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64:44
should get an important phone call."
1113
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2060
64:46
Three, two, one.
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2581
64:48
"She didn't want to turn off her phone because she could get an important phone call."
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64:55
We use "could" to talk about possibilities in the future.
1116
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64:59
She thinks that it's pretty likely that she will get a phone call, so she doesn't want
1117
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65:04
to turn off her phone.
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65:06
"It could rain on Sunday, so let's go hiking today."
1119
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65:10
It's a possibility that on Sunday, it could rain, so let's enjoy the outdoors today while
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65:16
it's still sunny.
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65:17
I have an important note.
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65:19
You can substitute the word "might" in this sentence, and it has the exact same meaning.
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65:24
Let's take a look at those two sentences again.
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65:26
"She could get an important phone call."
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65:29
"She might get an important phone call."
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65:31
"It could rain on Sunday."
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65:34
"It might rain on Sunday."
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65:36
You've got two choices and both of them are correct.
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65:39
Vanessa: Sentence number eight.
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65:40
This is the final sentence.
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65:42
"If I didn't have air conditioning in my house, it... be very hot."
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65:48
"It could be very hot."
1133
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3520
65:52
"It would be very hot."
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65:55
"It should be very hot."
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65:58
Which one feels the most correct?
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65:59
Three, two, one.
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2690
66:02
"If I didn't have air conditioning in my house, it would be very hot."
1138
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66:10
We often use "would" to talk about hypothetical situations.
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66:14
These are imaginary things.
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66:16
It's not real.
1141
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1240
66:18
It's not happening right now.
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66:19
It's hypothetical.
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1000
66:20
Sometimes these are impossible situations.
1144
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66:23
"If I were a cat, I would sleep a lot."
1145
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66:27
It's not possible for me to become a cat.
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66:30
This is hypothetical.
1147
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66:32
It's imaginary, so we need to use "would."
1148
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2600
66:34
"I would sleep a lot," or you can use "would" for hypothetical situations that are not impossible,
1149
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7229
66:42
but they're just not happening right now, and that's what our sample sentence at the
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4101
66:46
beginning was.
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1000
66:47
"If I didn't have AC, it would be very hot."
1152
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66:51
"The AC might break, and then I wouldn't have air conditioning, and it would be really hot."
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8429
67:00
So here, this is hypothetical.
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67:02
It's imaginary because it's not happening right now, but it's still possible.
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67:06
It could happen in the future.
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1839
67:08
So we need to use "would."
1157
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67:09
It would be very hot.
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67:11
Vanessa: How did you do on this quiz?
1159
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67:13
Let me know in the comments what your score was.
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67:15
But before we go, let's review all of these ways to use "could," "would," and "should."
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Could.
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67:22
A suggestion, "You could go to a bar."
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67:25
A polite request, "Could you help me?"
1164
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67:28
"Can" in the past, "When I was a child, I could play outside all day."
1165
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67:34
A possibility in the future, "It could rain tomorrow."
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3459
67:38
Would.
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67:40
A polite request, "Would you help me?"
1168
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3200
67:43
"Will" in the past, "When I lived near the beach, I would swim every day."
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5619
67:49
A hypothetical situation, "If I ate fast-food every day, I would gain weight."
1170
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67:56
Should.
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67:57
Strong advice, "I should wake up earlier."
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68:01
Polite advice, "You should probably call him."
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68:04
Now, I have a challenge for you.
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68:07
In the comments.
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1000
68:08
Tell me, if I visited your city, where could I go to get a good view?
1176
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68:12
Give me a polite suggestion with "could," or you could use another modal verb to practice
1177
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7920
68:20
them.
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68:21
Vanessa: Today, we're going to talk about 15 advanced vocabulary words that you'll definitely
1179
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68:29
hear in daily conversation.
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68:31
If you enjoyed my first advanced vocabulary quiz, you can watch it up here.
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68:36
If you haven't enjoyed it yet, watch out because you might see some of these words in this
1182
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68:41
quiz as well.
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68:42
I challenge you to test yourself.
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68:44
If there's a word that you don't know, write it down.
1185
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2050
68:46
Try to make your own sentence with it.
1186
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1940
68:48
Read it out loud.
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1000
68:49
Try to repeat it so that it sticks in your memory.
1188
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68:51
You'll have three seconds to guess each answer before I explain.
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68:55
Let's get started.
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68:56
Vanessa: Number one, "I don't know why it's taking so long to... the house across the
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69:02
street."
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1000
69:03
"I don't know why it's taking so long to renovate the house across the street."
1193
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4830
69:08
"I don't know why it's taking so long to relegate the house across the street."
1194
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5369
69:13
Which one is the correct answer?
1195
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1540
69:15
You have three seconds.
1196
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69:17
Two, one.
1197
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1170
69:18
The correct answer is, "I don't know why it's taking so long to renovate the house across
1198
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69:26
the street."
1199
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1000
69:27
This is a true story.
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69:28
The house across the street has been getting renovated for minimum two years.
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4939
69:33
Renovate means that they're fixing it up.
1202
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3160
69:36
There's already a house.
1203
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1270
69:37
They're not building a new house, but they've repainted it.
1204
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3270
69:41
They put a new porch on it.
1205
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2000
69:43
They painted it again.
1206
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1621
69:44
They fixed up some of the outside of it.
1207
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2069
69:46
They renovated the house.
1208
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1830
69:48
We usually use this word in association with buildings or houses.
1209
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4340
69:52
That's most common way that you'll see it.
1210
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1561
69:54
Vanessa: Number two, "The worst bosses will... everything that you do."
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4879
69:59
"The worst bosses will subjugate everything that you do," or, "The worst bosses will scrutinize
1212
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8031
70:07
everything that you do?"
1213
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4510
70:11
Which one is the correct answer?
1214
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3170
70:15
Three, two, one.
1215
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1000
70:16
"The worst bosses will scrutinize everything that you do."
1216
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4820
70:20
This beautiful word "scrutinize" means to look carefully at something, but it's not
1217
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5960
70:26
just looking carefully.
1218
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1049
70:27
It's a good idea to look carefully at what your employees are doing, but this often means
1219
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5641
70:33
critically or negatively.
1220
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1640
70:35
They're scrutinizing.
1221
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1410
70:36
They're picking apart every little detail of what you do.
1222
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4220
70:40
If you've had a boss like this, you know how annoying it is.
1223
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3170
70:44
The worst bosses scrutinize every little thing.
1224
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2810
70:46
They don't trust their employees at all.
1225
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1899
70:48
They scrutinize their employees.
1226
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70:50
Vanessa: Number three, "Have you ever had a... friend who just won't go home even though
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6230
70:56
you've already done the dishes and brushed your teeth for bed?"
1228
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3180
70:59
"Have you ever had a chatty friend who just won't go home?"
1229
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3890
71:03
"Have you ever had a clingy friend who just won't go home?"
1230
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5020
71:08
Which is the best word, chatty, or clingy?
1231
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3439
71:11
Three, two, one.
1232
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2071
71:14
"Have you ever had a clingy friend who just won't go home no matter what you do?"
1233
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6600
71:20
Clingy is a beautiful adjective, and it means stuck like glue, usually in a negative way.
1234
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6950
71:27
When we're talking about a person, it means that you want them to go away, but they just
1235
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3549
71:31
won't go away.
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1331
71:32
So we could say that she is a clingy person.
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3419
71:35
She's always with you.
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1000
71:36
"How are you doing?
1239
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1000
71:37
What are you doing?
1240
4297889
1000
71:38
Can I get together?
1241
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1000
71:39
Can I come to your house today?"
1242
4299889
1000
71:40
Then, she won't leave.
1243
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1000
71:41
She's clingy.
1244
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1000
71:42
We could also talk about items being clingy.
1245
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3020
71:45
Maybe the skirt was clinging to her tights.
1246
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3931
71:49
It was a clingy skirt.
1247
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2000
71:51
It's sticky, and it's annoying when it's a skirt, but it's not always a negative thing.
1248
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4820
71:56
Maybe the cling wrap or we call this sometimes plastic wrap is clingy.
1249
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5209
72:01
It sticks to the bowl, and that's exactly what you want.
1250
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72:04
So it means sticking.
1251
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1000
72:05
Vanessa: Number four, "When someone is driving poorly, I wonder if honking will... the problem
1252
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6489
72:11
or help."
1253
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1471
72:13
"I wonder if honking will exacerbate the problem or help."
1254
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4030
72:17
"I wonder if honking will examine the problem or help."
1255
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3570
72:20
I'll give you three seconds.
1256
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3759
72:24
Three, two, one.
1257
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2261
72:27
We have a clue in this sentence because we have the word "or help."
1258
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5240
72:32
We know that the keyword we're looking for is the opposite of help.
1259
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4100
72:36
If you're taking an English exam, this is great to look for these keywords.
1260
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3670
72:40
We have our word that we're going to talk about in just a second "or help," so it needs
1261
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72:44
to be the opposite of help.
1262
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2140
72:46
"Sometimes when I see poor driving, I wonder if honking my horn will exacerbate the problem
1263
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7409
72:53
or help."
1264
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1281
72:55
Can you guess what the word exacerbate means?
1265
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2179
72:57
Vanessa: It means make it worse.
1266
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2641
73:00
It's not helping.
1267
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1710
73:01
Sometimes when someone cuts in front of me and I honk my horn, I wonder if they will
1268
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5419
73:07
drive correctly or if it will just scare them, and all of a sudden, they'll drive even worse.
1269
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6460
73:13
So sometimes I wonder this to myself.
1270
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1561
73:15
It happened last week that someone cut in front of me, and I honked my horn.
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4720
73:19
They got in the correct lane, and it was fine.
1272
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2650
73:22
But sometimes I'm worried that when I honk my horn, it will exacerbate the problem, make
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73:28
it worse because that person will just be surprised and then veer off the road.
1274
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5258
73:33
Vanessa: Number five, "I'm usually... when I walk alone at night."
1275
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4041
73:38
"I'm usually wary when I walk alone at night," or, "I'm usually wiry when I walk alone at
1276
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6890
73:44
night?"
1277
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1000
73:45
There's only one difference between these two words and that's the vowel.
1278
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2900
73:48
Which one is it?
1279
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1760
73:50
Three, two, one.
1280
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2070
73:52
"I'm usually wary when I walk alone at night," and this just means careful, cautious.
1281
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8250
74:00
I'm usually wary.
1282
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1460
74:02
I look around me.
1283
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1040
74:03
I try to stay alert because I want to stay safe.
1284
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3020
74:06
I'm usually wary, cautious of my surroundings when I walk alone at night.
1285
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6400
74:12
Make sure that you pronounce this word correctly, "Wary."
1286
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74:16
It sounds like "wear."
1287
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1531
74:17
"I'm wearing clothes."
1288
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1489
74:19
"Wear," and then you just add E at the end.
1289
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2801
74:22
"Wary."
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1000
74:23
Vanessa: If you're in the Fearless Fluency Club, you already know this word because we
1291
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3300
74:26
talked about it a couple of months ago.
1292
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1160
74:27
If you're not in the Fearless Fluency Club, you can click up here to learn more with me
1293
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3989
74:31
every month and learn great vocabulary expressions like the ones in this lesson.
1294
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3940
74:35
Vanessa: Number six, "I was surprised that she was... about doing the dishes because
1295
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74:41
she seemed so put together in her life."
1296
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3551
74:45
"I was surprised that she was... about the dishes."
1297
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4680
74:49
"I was surprised that she was testy about doing the dishes."
1298
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4289
74:53
"I was surprised that she was negligent about doing the dishes."
1299
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4891
74:58
In this sentence, maybe you don't know what put together meets.
1300
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5140
75:04
That's going to be a key element here, but we can imagine in our heads something that
1301
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4310
75:08
is put together.
1302
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1400
75:09
When you have a puzzle and it's put together, it means it's completed.
1303
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4510
75:14
It's finished.
1304
4514240
1000
75:15
It looks nice.
1305
4515240
1439
75:16
So we can piece together the rest of that sentence to guess what our keyword is here.
1306
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5560
75:22
Let me tell you in three, two, one.
1307
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3230
75:25
"I was surprised she was negligent about doing the dishes."
1308
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6291
75:31
Negligent.
1309
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1000
75:32
What does this word sound like?
1310
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2080
75:34
Do you know the word neglect?
1311
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2420
75:37
This means that you're forgetting something.
1312
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2370
75:39
If you were neglected as a child.
1313
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75:42
This means that your parents didn't pay attention to you.
1314
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2719
75:45
They forgot you.
1315
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75:46
They ignored you.
1316
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75:47
Vanessa: We can imagine that for the dishes that she was negligent about the dishes.
1317
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75:53
The word "negligent" means that you often forget important tasks.
1318
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75:58
In this situation, we have someone who is put together.
1319
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3139
76:01
They're organized.
1320
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1000
76:02
It seems like they always know what's going on.
1321
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2831
76:05
They're never confused, or worried, or uncertain.
1322
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2970
76:08
They are put together, but surprisingly, she is negligent about the dishes.
1323
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5250
76:13
She has tons of dishes in her sink.
1324
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76:14
We can say that she often forgets important tasks.
1325
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4060
76:18
She is negligent.
1326
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1000
76:19
Vanessa: Number seven, "We rented a... house in the English countryside."
1327
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5020
76:24
"We rented up quaint house in the English countryside," or, "We rented a tactful house
1328
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6770
76:31
in the English countryside?"
1329
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1210
76:32
Which of these words feels the most correct?
1330
4592960
3500
76:36
I'll give you three seconds.
1331
4596460
1210
76:37
Three, two, one.
1332
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2290
76:39
"We rented a quaint house in the English countryside."
1333
4599960
4650
76:44
The word "quaint" means cute in an old-fashioned way, so it makes us think about simple times
1334
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8660
76:53
a long time ago.
1335
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1590
76:54
Maybe our grandparents or hundreds and hundreds of years ago.
1336
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3690
76:58
This beautiful, cute, little house.
1337
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2480
77:01
This is something that seems typical in the English countryside.
1338
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2800
77:03
There are quaint houses.
1339
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1440
77:05
This is a stereotype, but you can use that word "quaint" to talk about somewhere that
1340
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4710
77:09
you went on vacation.
1341
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1000
77:10
"Oh, I love this little village.
1342
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1540
77:12
It's so quaint.
1343
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1389
77:13
It's cute."
1344
4633909
1000
77:14
Vanessa: Number eight, "I often wish that architecture in the US was more... pleasing."
1345
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5611
77:20
"I often wish that architecture in the US was more discreetly pleasing," or, "I often
1346
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6760
77:27
wish that architecture in the US was more aesthetically pleasing?"
1347
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4400
77:31
Which of these two words is correct?
1348
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1130
77:32
Three, two, one.
1349
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1000
77:33
The answer is, "I often wish that architecture in the US was more aesthetically pleasing."
1350
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8500
77:42
Aesthetically means something to do with a beauty.
1351
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3000
77:45
"Oh, it's so aesthetically pleasing to see quaint old houses," or if you've ever visited
1352
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5990
77:51
Europe and you've seen those beautiful buildings that have existed for hundreds of years, it
1353
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4859
77:56
is aesthetically pleasing.
1354
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1881
77:58
That means it's pleasing to your eyes.
1355
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1810
77:59
It looks beautiful.
1356
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1440
78:01
"All those colors together in your dress are so aesthetically pleasing."
1357
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3780
78:05
Vanessa: We often use those two words together as "aesthetically pleasing."
1358
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4100
78:09
But on the other hand, architecture in the US isn't really known for being aesthetically
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5530
78:14
pleasing.
1360
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1000
78:15
Unless you go to some older areas of New York, most places in the US just look like this.
1361
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4810
78:20
Just some big box stores with big parking lots.
1362
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2850
78:23
Some downtown areas are cute, but in general, architecture in the US is not so aesthetically
1363
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6330
78:29
pleasing, and I wish it was.
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1259
78:30
Vanessa: Number nine.
1365
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1000
78:31
I'm sure this is not you.
1366
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1461
78:33
"Sometimes people can be rude online because it's easy to be..."
1367
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4769
78:38
"Sometimes people can be rude online because it's easy to be anonymous," or, "Sometimes
1368
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6210
78:44
people can be rude online because it's easy to be assimilated?"
1369
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4051
78:48
Which of these two words is correct?
1370
4728440
1830
78:50
Three, two, one.
1371
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3000
78:53
Sometimes, unfortunately, people can be rude online because it's easy to be anonymous.
1372
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6240
78:59
Anonymous.
1373
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1620
79:01
This means that your identity is hidden.
1374
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3380
79:04
Maybe you just have a screen name, nobody knows who you are.
1375
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3649
79:08
You can say whatever you want, so it's easy to be rude online.
1376
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3040
79:11
Did you recognize this word "assimilated" from the first vocabulary test?
1377
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4471
79:15
I hope so.
1378
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1000
79:16
If not, make sure you go watch it.
1379
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1150
79:17
Vanessa: Number 10, "Do you think that social media... content that you see?"
1380
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5260
79:23
"Do you think that social media censors content that you see?" or, "Do you think that social
1381
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5660
79:28
media subtracts content that you see?"
1382
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2400
79:31
Which one is correct?
1383
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1960
79:33
Three, two, one.
1384
4773100
1460
79:34
"Do you think that social media censors content that you see?"
1385
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5869
79:40
The word "sensor" means hide something that's unacceptable.
1386
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6181
79:46
Maybe for a music album, they might say, "Censored," or, "Explicit," and this helps parents to
1387
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8170
79:54
know, "Uh, I don't want my five-year-old to listen to this music because there is something
1388
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5419
80:00
in here that needs to be blocked.
1389
4800199
1991
80:02
But when it comes to social media, maybe the people who run social media are blocking certain
1390
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6259
80:08
things so that we don't see it.
1391
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1381
80:09
This is a controversial opinion, and I don't really know what I think about it.
1392
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3930
80:13
I don't really think much about it often, but I want to know for you.
1393
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3790
80:17
Do you think that social media censors the content that we see?
1394
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4689
80:22
Let me know on the comments below and use the word "sensor."
1395
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2791
80:25
Vanessa: Number 11, "The mother gave an... sigh when her son got in trouble at school
1396
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6250
80:31
again."
1397
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1000
80:32
"The mother gave an angelic sigh when her son got in trouble at school again," or, "The
1398
4832280
4710
80:36
mother gave an exasperated sigh when her son got in trouble at school again?"
1399
4836990
4959
80:41
Is it angelic or exasperated?
1400
4841949
3011
80:44
Three, two, one.
1401
4844960
3779
80:48
"The mother gave an exasperated, ugh, sigh when her son got in trouble at school again."
1402
4848739
8161
80:56
Does this word sound familiar?
1403
4856900
1670
80:58
Does it sound like a word we talked about previously?
1404
4858570
3779
81:02
Exacerbate.
1405
4862349
1261
81:03
Oh, it's not the same word.
1406
4863610
2529
81:06
One word has a B, exacerbate.
1407
4866139
2881
81:09
This means to make something worse.
1408
4869020
1400
81:10
"If I honk my horn, will it exacerbate the problem?" or in our sample sentence here,
1409
4870420
6340
81:16
we have a mother who's frustrated.
1410
4876760
2410
81:19
That's what the word "exasperate" with a P means, frustrated.
1411
4879170
3690
81:22
"Oh, son, why are you getting in trouble at school again?"
1412
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4799
81:27
Exasperated.
1413
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1261
81:28
"Ah."
1414
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1250
81:30
The word "exasperate" means to breathe out, so we can imagine the mother going, "Ugh,
1415
4890170
6200
81:36
why are you in trouble again?
1416
4896370
2820
81:39
Ah."
1417
4899190
1000
81:40
She's exasperated.
1418
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1000
81:41
She's blowing air out.
1419
4901190
1290
81:42
She's frustrated.
1420
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1000
81:43
Vanessa: Number 12, "Even though he tries to be... he still can't pay his bills."
1421
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5800
81:49
"Even though he tries to be fair, he still can't pay his bills," or, "Even though he
1422
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5910
81:55
tries to be frugal, he still can't pay his bills?"
1423
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3570
81:58
Which one of these two F words is correct?
1424
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1990
82:00
Fair or frugal?
1425
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1840
82:02
Three, two, one.
1426
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2569
82:05
"Even though he tries to be frugal, he still can't pay his bills."
1427
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5141
82:10
The word "frugal" means careful with your money.
1428
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4250
82:14
It's generally a positive thing.
1429
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2089
82:16
If you want to use it in a negative way, you can say stingy.
1430
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3571
82:20
This means that he never gives money to other people.
1431
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2259
82:22
He never helps other people.
1432
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1491
82:23
He just uses his money for himself.
1433
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1650
82:25
Vanessa: But if you want to say it in a positive way, he's just careful about spending his
1434
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5030
82:30
money.
1435
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1000
82:31
He wants to make sure that it goes to the correct places, to the best people.
1436
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3840
82:35
You can say frugal.
1437
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1860
82:37
This is a term that has often been used to talk about me.
1438
4957340
3160
82:40
I'm a frugal person.
1439
4960500
2020
82:42
That means that I'm careful with my money.
1440
4962520
2340
82:44
If I give money to someone else, I just want to make sure that it's used in the way that
1441
4964860
4520
82:49
they say it will be used.
1442
4969380
1370
82:50
I don't have problems donating, but I just want to make sure that it's in the best way,
1443
4970750
5130
82:55
so I'm careful with my money.
1444
4975880
1840
82:57
I'm frugal.
1445
4977720
1000
82:58
Vanessa: Number 13, "I could see the... anger on his face by looking at his eyes."
1446
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6070
83:04
"I could see the subtle anger on his face by looking at his eyes," or, "I could see
1447
4984790
6730
83:11
this sappy anger on his face by looking at his eyes?"
1448
4991520
4159
83:15
Is it subtle or sappy?
1449
4995679
2170
83:17
Three, two, one.
1450
4997849
2551
83:20
"I could see the subtle anger on his face by looking at his eyes."
1451
5000400
6380
83:26
The word "subtle" means not obvious.
1452
5006780
3560
83:30
Maybe it's a little bit hidden.
1453
5010340
2060
83:32
You have to look carefully at his eyes to see his anger.
1454
5012400
3170
83:35
It's subtle.
1455
5015570
1890
83:37
Do you notice something strange about the pronunciation of this word?
1456
5017460
2850
83:40
There is a B, but it sounds like a D, "subtle, subtle."
1457
5020310
5860
83:46
If you want some more information about how to pronounce the word "subtle," I made a video
1458
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4230
83:50
about some of the most difficult words to pronounce up here, and one of those words
1459
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4020
83:54
is the word "subtle."
1460
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1110
83:55
So click on that video so that you can get some more details about its pronunciation.
1461
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3100
83:58
Vanessa: Number 14, "My baby is the cutest baby in the whole world, but of course, I'm..."
1462
5038630
6549
84:05
"But of course I'm biased?"
1463
5045179
2551
84:07
"But of course, I'm biased?"
1464
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2560
84:10
Which of these B words is the correct word?
1465
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2880
84:13
Well, we could say in three, two, one, "My baby is the cutest baby in the whole world,
1466
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7069
84:20
but I guess I'm biased."
1467
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2601
84:22
Biased.
1468
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1580
84:24
The word "bias" has a specific meaning, and in fact, we use this word a lot in daily conversation.
1469
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5170
84:29
It means that you have a previous notion that affects how you feel about other things.
1470
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6879
84:36
My baby is my child, so I'm going to have a different opinion than someone who doesn't
1471
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6371
84:42
know my child.
1472
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1710
84:44
Of course, all of my feelings about my child are going to be biased.
1473
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4410
84:48
They're going to be affected by some previous idea.
1474
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2940
84:51
Vanessa: I want to take a look at a quick cartoon so that you can get another example
1475
5091900
4100
84:56
for the word "bias."
1476
5096000
1679
84:57
Here we see a courtroom, and there is a lady who's being accused of being a witch.
1477
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4651
85:02
She says, "It makes no difference, what I say.
1478
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3240
85:05
You've already decided that I'm guilty."
1479
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2660
85:08
This man had a previous notion that she is a witch.
1480
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3560
85:11
She's guilty.
1481
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1000
85:12
It doesn't matter what she says.
1482
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1840
85:14
He's going to continue to think that she's guilty, and the man here, he says something
1483
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5810
85:20
that reaffirms his belief.
1484
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1610
85:22
"Ugh, gasp.
1485
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1339
85:23
Witches can read minds.
1486
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2031
85:25
She is a witch."
1487
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1890
85:27
He's just reaffirming what he already thinks, which also affirms what she thinks.
1488
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4210
85:31
Here, this man is biased.
1489
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1880
85:33
He has a previous notion that's affecting how he's currently behaving.
1490
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3350
85:36
Vanessa: Number 15, our final question.
1491
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1580
85:38
This is a question that I often get a lot actually.
1492
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3780
85:42
"How did you learn how to teach?"
1493
5142110
3220
85:45
I might say, "It's just...
1494
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2760
85:48
I guess."
1495
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1020
85:49
"It's just intuitive, I guess," or, "It's just oblivious, I guess?"
1496
5149110
6480
85:55
Which one of these two words is correct, intuitive or oblivious?
1497
5155590
3710
85:59
Three, two, one.
1498
5159300
2339
86:01
"How did you learn how to teach, Vanessa?"
1499
5161639
3491
86:05
"Well, it's just intuitive, I guess."
1500
5165130
3359
86:08
Intuitive means that it came naturally for me.
1501
5168489
3641
86:12
It's something that was already within me and it came out.
1502
5172130
3130
86:15
This is just partially true because I also did try to channel some good teachers that
1503
5175260
5410
86:20
I've had and tried to emulate them, but we can say here it's intuitive.
1504
5180670
3820
86:24
It came from within me.
1505
5184490
2160
86:26
Well, what about that other word, oblivious?
1506
5186650
3770
86:30
Do you recognize this word from the first vocabulary test?
1507
5190420
1852
86:32
I hope so.
1508
5192272
1118
86:33
If not, make sure you check out that video.
1509
5193390
3180
86:36
Oblivious and intuitive or not the same thing.
1510
5196570
2060
86:38
We could say that.
1511
5198630
1000
86:39
"Well, I guess my teaching was just intuitive.
1512
5199630
3170
86:42
I just knew it within my mind without having to study."
1513
5202800
3640
86:46
Vanessa: How did you do on this test?
1514
5206440
1850
86:48
Let me know in the comments.
1515
5208290
1010
86:49
What was your final score?
1516
5209300
1350
86:50
Also, I have a challenge for you.
1517
5210650
2040
86:52
Try to make a sentence with one of these new vocabulary words.
1518
5212690
3750
86:56
Use it in a sentence correctly and read it out loud so that you can test your speaking
1519
5216440
4090
87:00
muscles, and also, try to ingrain it in your memory as easily as...
1520
5220530
1000
87:01
Vanessa: Your speaking muscles and also try to ingrain it in your memory as easily as
1521
5221530
2470
87:04
possible.
1522
5224000
1540
87:05
Vanessa: Today, I have a fun grammar test for you.
1523
5225540
5900
87:11
Fun?
1524
5231440
1000
87:12
Grammar?
1525
5232440
1000
87:13
Test?
1526
5233440
1000
87:14
Is it possible?
1527
5234440
1000
87:15
Yes, it's definitely possible.
1528
5235440
1460
87:16
Just watch it and see.
1529
5236900
1000
87:17
Vanessa: In this lesson, you'll learn seven common English grammar mistakes and how to
1530
5237900
4089
87:21
fix them, but the trick is you have to guess what the mistake is.
1531
5241989
5141
87:27
Fun.
1532
5247130
1000
87:28
I'm going to show you seven sentences and you need to find one change in each sentence.
1533
5248130
5819
87:33
Maybe that's taking something out, maybe that's adding something, maybe it's exchanging something.
1534
5253949
6531
87:40
Let's take a look at a quick example.
1535
5260480
1869
87:42
This sentence, I love dog.
1536
5262349
2411
87:44
There's one mistake here, can you guess what it is?
1537
5264760
2609
87:47
What do we need to change to make this beautifully correct?
1538
5267369
3330
87:50
Well, we need to say I love dogs.
1539
5270699
3631
87:54
You need to add an S at the end.
1540
5274330
3210
87:57
This is a pretty simple example, so are you ready for some more advanced grammar sentences?
1541
5277540
4790
88:02
Let's do it.
1542
5282330
1000
88:03
Vanessa: Let's imagine that we're in a coffee shop together, drinking some coffee.
1543
5283330
4070
88:07
Well, maybe that's not such a good idea because if I had a cup of coffee, I would be running
1544
5287400
5460
88:12
around the coffee shop nonstop.
1545
5292860
2350
88:15
So how about this?
1546
5295210
1199
88:16
I'm drinking some tea, you're drinking some coffee and we're having a lovely conversation
1547
5296409
4051
88:20
together and you say to me, "So, how's it been going lately?"
1548
5300460
4310
88:24
And I say, sentence number one, "I bought the new Ferrari yesterday."
1549
5304770
5530
88:30
Oh, what's one thing that you can change in this sentence to make it correct?
1550
5310300
5120
88:35
This sentence is not correct.
1551
5315420
1460
88:36
There's something that's wrong with this sentence.
1552
5316880
2380
88:39
Can you guess?
1553
5319260
1000
88:40
I'll give you three seconds.
1554
5320260
1870
88:42
Three, two, one.
1555
5322130
3100
88:45
Vanessa: I bought a new Ferrari yesterday.
1556
5325230
6060
88:51
You have this image in your head of us sitting in the coffee shop.
1557
5331290
4090
88:55
Do you think that we're looking at the car right now?
1558
5335380
3470
88:58
No, we're just kind of imagining this car.
1559
5338850
3490
89:02
It's not something specific, it's something unknown.
1560
5342340
3200
89:05
So we need to use A. Maybe after we have our drinks, we go out to the parking lot and I
1561
5345540
5411
89:10
say, "This is the new Ferrari that I bought."
1562
5350951
3909
89:14
This is the new Ferrari.
1563
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2820
89:17
We're looking at it, we know which one it is, it's right there, so we need to use the
1564
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4919
89:22
to talk about something known and A for something that's less known.
1565
5362599
4471
89:27
Vanessa: Test sentence number two.
1566
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2100
89:29
I wanted a Ferrari because it's too fast.
1567
5369170
4569
89:33
I wanted a Ferrari because it's too fast.
1568
5373739
5301
89:39
What's wrong in this sentence?
1569
5379040
2079
89:41
Three, two, one.
1570
5381119
4520
89:45
I wanted a Ferrari because it's really fast.
1571
5385639
6580
89:52
We only use too in negative situations.
1572
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3881
89:56
The coffee is too hot, I can't drink it.
1573
5396100
3730
89:59
I'm too tired, I can't study.
1574
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3360
90:03
Maybe I could have said, "My old car was too slow."
1575
5403190
4989
90:08
You can see here that in all of these situations, there's something negative.
1576
5408179
3770
90:11
The coffee's too hot.
1577
5411949
1561
90:13
I'm too tired.
1578
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1000
90:14
The car is too slow.
1579
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1491
90:16
There's a problem in all of these sentences, so I probably want to fix it.
1580
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5019
90:21
And in this sentence with the Ferrari, I think that the Ferrari is really fast, so that's
1581
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5990
90:27
why I want it.
1582
5427010
1000
90:28
If you're curious about some differences between too and so, I made a live lesson about this
1583
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5970
90:33
a long time ago, about two years ago, and you can watch that video up here.
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90:37
Vanessa: All right, sentence number three.
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90:39
When I bought the car, it costs $300,000.
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90:47
When I bought the car, it costs $300,000.
1587
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5321
90:52
It's a lot of money.
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1819
90:54
All right.
1589
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1271
90:55
What is one thing that you can do to change in this sentence to make it correct?
1590
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5379
91:00
Three two, one.
1591
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3971
91:04
When I bought the car, notice this is the past tense, bought the car, it costs?
1592
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9600
91:14
This is the present tense, we need to say it cost $300,000.
1593
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6060
91:20
The word cost is an irregular verb and often, these irregular verbs trip up or trick English
1594
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6639
91:27
learners, so we need to make sure that we use the proper past tense.
1595
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4151
91:31
It cost $300,000.
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2679
91:33
Vanessa: Sentence number four, maybe after I told you how much the car cost, you say,
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7150
91:41
"Huh, Vanessa, that's so much money.
1598
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91:43
Why would you do something like that?"
1599
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1940
91:45
And I say, "Well, I think I'm going eating rice and beans for a whole year."
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8080
91:53
I think I'm going eating rice and beans for a whole year.
1601
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4579
91:58
This means, nothing fancy, nothing special, only rice and beans because I spent all my
1602
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6500
92:04
money on the car.
1603
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2061
92:06
What's the problem with this sentence?
1604
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2360
92:09
Three, two, one.
1605
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4260
92:13
I think I'm going to eat rice and beans for a whole year.
1606
5533300
7240
92:20
Often, English learners have problems with ING and to.
1607
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5619
92:26
It depends on a lot of different factors, but specifically, for the verb going, when
1608
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5250
92:31
we're talking about this in the future.
1609
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2580
92:33
I'm going to eat rice and beans.
1610
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4011
92:38
I'm going to study with Vanessa.
1611
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3360
92:41
I'm going to sleep soon.
1612
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2250
92:43
Well, we need to use to plus an unconjugated verb.
1613
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4640
92:48
I'm going to study.
1614
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1449
92:49
I'm going to eat.
1615
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1381
92:51
I'm going to sleep.
1616
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1000
92:52
Great.
1617
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1000
92:53
All right, let's go to the next one.
1618
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1280
92:54
Vanessa: Number five.
1619
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1190
92:55
For my whole life, I always dreamed of owning a Ferrari.
1620
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93:01
For my whole life, I always dreamed of owning a Ferrari.
1621
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5630
93:06
What's the problem in this sentence?
1622
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1650
93:08
Can you guess?
1623
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1000
93:09
Do we need to add something?
1624
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2319
93:11
Take something away?
1625
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1000
93:12
Switch something?
1626
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1060
93:13
I'll give you three seconds.
1627
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2191
93:15
Three, two, one.
1628
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3869
93:19
For my whole life, I had always dreamed of owning a Ferrari.
1629
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6971
93:26
Why did we add had here?
1630
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3960
93:30
This is the past perfect tense and I know it can be tricky for a lot of English learners.
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5240
93:35
We use the past perfect tense to talk about something that was continuing for a long time
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5709
93:41
in the past and now, it has stopped.
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3830
93:45
Do you know why my dream has stopped?
1634
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2750
93:48
Oh, because it came true.
1635
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1621
93:49
I own a Ferrari.
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1000
93:50
Of course, this is a fake situation, just imaginary.
1637
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3910
93:54
Vanessa: But because this dream came true, well, we can say that it has stopped.
1638
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6259
94:00
So we need to make the sentence, for my whole life, I had always dreamed of owning a Ferrari,
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8841
94:09
and now, I do.
1640
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1090
94:10
Now that dream has come true.
1641
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2449
94:13
If you'd like to learn more about how to use the past perfect tense or the future perfect
1642
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4871
94:18
tense, you can click on this live lesson that I made up here a long time ago.
1643
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4250
94:22
There's one full lesson about the past perfect tense and one full lesson about the present
1644
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5209
94:27
perfect tense.
1645
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1000
94:28
These can be tricky, so please take your time, be patient with yourself and study them and
1646
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4951
94:33
take some notes.
1647
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1000
94:34
All right, let's go to the next sentence.
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94:35
Vanessa: Sentence number six.
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1720
94:37
Not only is my Ferrari beautiful, but it is fun to drive.
1650
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6670
94:44
Not only is my Ferrari beautiful, but it is fun to drive.
1651
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4900
94:49
How can we make this sentence better?Huh?
1652
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2610
94:51
Three two, one.
1653
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4800
94:56
Not only is my Ferrari beautiful, but it's also fun to drive.
1654
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9510
95:06
We need to add the word also, and our key here is the first part of that sentence uses
1655
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95:11
not only, and then the second part needs but also.
1656
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5350
95:16
This is an advanced phrase, not only, but also that's going to make your sentences more
1657
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4320
95:21
complex.
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1000
95:22
Instead of just saying simple sentences, my Ferrari's beautiful.
1659
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4330
95:26
It's fun to drive.
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1000
95:27
We can combine those with a beautiful advanced expression like this, not only is my Ferrari
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4890
95:32
beautiful, but it is also fun to drive.
1662
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2970
95:35
We use not only, but also to give some more information about something, but it's really
1663
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6069
95:41
to take it to a higher level, to kind of escalate something.
1664
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4701
95:46
Vanessa: So here, my Ferrari's beautiful.
1665
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2899
95:48
Okay.
1666
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1000
95:49
But the next level is, oh, it's also fun to drive.
1667
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3960
95:53
On top of that, it is also fun to drive.
1668
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3060
95:56
So you might say, not only is this lesson useful, but it is also fun.
1669
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8051
96:05
I hope that this lesson is useful to you, but I hope it's not boring.
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4100
96:09
I hope it's also fun.
1671
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1709
96:10
We're taking it to the next level.
1672
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1600
96:12
All right, let's go to the next one.
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96:13
Vanessa: Sentence number seven.
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2069
96:15
If I crashed the car, I will cry.
1675
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5371
96:21
If I crashed the car, I will cry.
1676
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2279
96:23
Hmm.
1677
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1000
96:24
Can you imagine this situation?
1678
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2630
96:27
Spending so much money on a car and then crashing it?
1679
5787229
3100
96:30
And that's it.
1680
5790329
1000
96:31
That would be terrible.
1681
5791329
1000
96:32
All right.
1682
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1201
96:33
Let's think about what is the best way to fix this sentence.
1683
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4150
96:37
Three, two, one.
1684
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2930
96:40
This is a hypothetical, imaginary situation.
1685
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3190
96:43
If you are listening to my quick little explanation, you might've guessed the correct answer.
1686
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4609
96:48
If I crashed the car, I would cry.
1687
5808409
4980
96:53
We use if plus would to talk about these imaginary, hypothetical situations.
1688
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6471
96:59
It's not happening right now, so we need to use would.
1689
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2950
97:02
If you'd like to learn how to use would in other situations or some more in depth examples
1690
5822810
4599
97:07
about it, make sure you check out another test I made, should, would and could, and
1691
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5741
97:13
how do you use them correctly.
1692
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1940
97:15
How did you do on this test about my Ferrari?
1693
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2200
97:17
I hope you enjoyed it.
1694
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1090
97:18
Now it's time to do a little review.
1695
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1819
97:20
Vanessa: Let's go back and read all of those sentences using the correct words that you
1696
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3951
97:24
can visually see it and also hear it one more time.
1697
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3170
97:27
I bought a new Ferrari yesterday.
1698
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2570
97:29
I wanted a Ferrari because it's really fast.
1699
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3590
97:33
When I bought the car, it cost $300,000.
1700
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4980
97:38
I think I'm going to eat only rice and beans for one year.
1701
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4090
97:42
For my whole life, I had always dreamed of owning a Ferrari.
1702
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4530
97:47
Not only is my Ferrari beautiful, but it's also fun to drive.
1703
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4889
97:51
If I crashed the car, I think I would cry.
1704
5871969
3681
97:55
How did you do on this test?
1705
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1449
97:57
Let me know in the comments what your score was.
1706
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3631
98:00
Vanessa: Do you want to understand movies and TV shows and fast English speakers?
1707
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7510
98:08
Yes, of course you do, but there are countless reductions and linking in English that make
1708
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5709
98:13
it difficult, so the best way to understand fast English conversations is to study fast
1709
5893949
6411
98:20
English conversations, and that's what we're going to do today.
1710
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3790
98:24
We're going to be listening to five quick English conversations and I'm going to give
1711
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4760
98:28
you three sentences for each conversation.
1712
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3660
98:32
I want you to guess which sentence you hear in each conversation.
1713
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5880
98:38
If this exercise is too easy for you, then this is my challenge.
1714
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4120
98:42
I challenge you to not look at the screen, but to try to write every single word that
1715
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4450
98:47
you hear from that conversation.
1716
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2600
98:49
This way, instead of listening for specific words that you already know will happen in
1717
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4709
98:54
that conversation that I give to you, you're going to be trying to write just from your
1718
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4511
98:58
listening skills every word that you hear.
1719
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2620
99:01
Vanessa: These conversations that you're about to hear are all part of the 30-day listening
1720
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4860
99:06
challenge pack four, which is open now until December 31st.
1721
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6069
99:12
If you'd like to join hundreds of other English learners who are deciding to start the new
1722
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4671
99:17
year 2020 by improving your listening skills, great.
1723
5957060
4349
99:21
You can click on the link up here or in the description to find out more about the listening
1724
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3931
99:25
challenge.
1725
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1000
99:26
Vanessa: Are you ready to listen to the first conversation?
1726
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3040
99:29
I'm going to give you three sentences that I want you to listen for.
1727
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3740
99:33
I want you to choose which one is going to be in the conversation.
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4030
99:37
Let's take a look at those sentences.
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2020
99:39
You didn't take it seriously.
1730
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2429
99:41
You didn't take in seriously.
1731
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2381
99:43
You didn't take on seriously.
1732
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2840
99:46
Let's listen to the conversation clip and I want you to choose, did you hear number
1733
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4169
99:50
one, two or three?
1734
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1601
99:52
All right, let's listen a couple of times to the clip.
1735
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2560
99:55
Dan: I had probably kind of poor work ethic.
1736
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3390
99:58
Vanessa: Oh yeah?
1737
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1000
99:59
[Listen carefully!]
1738
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1000
100:00
Dan: But I didn't have to try very hard in high school.
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1860
100:02
Vanessa: As in you could do okay in high school?
1740
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2529
100:04
Dan: I didn't have to study that much to get by in my high school because my high school
1741
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5341
100:10
didn't have very high standards.
1742
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2390
100:12
Vanessa: Oh, I see.
1743
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2290
100:14
Dan: I had probably kind of poor work ethic.
1744
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2539
100:17
Vanessa: Oh yeah?
1745
6017489
1000
100:18
[Listen carefully!]
1746
6018489
1000
100:19
Dan: But I didn't have to try very hard in high school.
1747
6019489
1860
100:21
Vanessa: As in you could do okay and high school?
1748
6021349
2603
100:23
Dan: I didn't have to study that much to get by in my high school because my high school
1749
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5267
100:29
didn't have very high standards.
1750
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1841
100:31
Vanessa: Oh, I see.
1751
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1690
100:32
Vanessa: Which sentence did you hear?
1752
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1840
100:34
Did you hear number one, you didn't take it seriously?
1753
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4279
100:38
I hope so.
1754
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1241
100:40
In this conversation, Dan said that he didn't work really hard in high school and I kind
1755
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4670
100:44
of clarified his statement by saying, "You didn't take it seriously."
1756
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5660
100:50
What is it in this sentence?
1757
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2239
100:52
It's school, you didn't take school seriously.
1758
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4371
100:57
This is a wonderful expression to take something seriously.
1759
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3880
101:00
Let's listen to that clip again and now that you know which sentence you're listening for
1760
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3550
101:04
and you kind of know the general idea of the clip, hopefully, you'll be able to hear it
1761
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4880
101:09
clear.
1762
6069360
1000
101:10
Dan: I had probably kind of poor work ethic.
1763
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2779
101:13
Vanessa: Oh yeah?
1764
6073139
1000
101:14
You didn't take it seriously?
1765
6074139
1000
101:15
Dan: But I didn't have to try very hard in high school.
1766
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2511
101:17
I had probably kind of poor work ethic.
1767
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2870
101:20
Vanessa: Oh yeah?
1768
6080520
1000
101:21
You didn't take it seriously?
1769
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1000
101:22
Dan: But I didn't have to try very hard in high school.
1770
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1980
101:24
Vanessa: Did you hear you didn't take it seriously?
1771
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3760
101:28
I hope so.
1772
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1209
101:29
Let's go on to quiz question number two.
1773
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2811
101:32
While you listen to this clip, I want you to guess which one of these sentences you're
1774
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3810
101:36
actually hearing.
1775
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1360
101:37
Is it number one, you have be like five or six years old.
1776
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5560
101:43
Number two, you have to be like five or six years old.
1777
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4390
101:47
Or number three, you have to been like five or six old.
1778
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4719
101:52
Let's listen to the clip and choose which one you're hearing.
1779
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2841
101:54
Vanessa: So they have it for all ages?
1780
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1980
101:56
James: Yes.
1781
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1000
101:57
Well, I think you have to be a certain age.
1782
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2621
102:00
[Listen carefully!]
1783
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1869
102:02
Vanessa: Oh, got you.
1784
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1000
102:03
So at least at that studio, are there quite a few adults who are a part of the program?
1785
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4640
102:08
James: Yes, there are definitely more people there.
1786
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3060
102:11
I'm typically the oldest one in the place for the most part.
1787
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4210
102:15
I'm 45.
1788
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1259
102:16
Vanessa: So they have it for all ages?
1789
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2101
102:18
James: Yes.
1790
6138700
1000
102:19
Well, I think you have to be a certain age.
1791
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2690
102:22
[Listen carefully!]
1792
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1740
102:24
Vanessa: Oh, got you.
1793
6144130
1000
102:25
So at least at that studio, are there quite a few adults who are a part of the program?
1794
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4770
102:29
James: Yes, there are definitely more people there.
1795
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3050
102:32
I'm typically the oldest one in the place for the most part.
1796
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4020
102:36
I'm 45.
1797
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1000
102:37
Vanessa: Which sentence did you hear?
1798
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1899
102:39
Did you hear, number two, you have to be like five or six years old?
1799
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5891
102:45
Here in this clip, James is talking about the minimum age to participate in the martial
1800
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5609
102:51
arts club that he's a part of.
1801
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2381
102:53
It's five or six years old.
1802
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2489
102:56
Did you also hear how old he is?
1803
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2730
102:58
Hmm.
1804
6178969
1000
102:59
Did you catch that number?
1805
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1000
103:00
He said 45.
1806
6180969
1000
103:01
All right, we're going to listen to that key sentence a couple times so that you can hear
1807
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4860
103:06
you have to be like five or six years old.
1808
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4081
103:10
Let's listen.
1809
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1000
103:11
Vanessa: So they have it for all ages?
1810
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1570
103:13
James: Yes.
1811
6193480
1000
103:14
Well, I think you have to be a certain age.
1812
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2520
103:17
You have to be like five or six years old.
1813
6197000
2199
103:19
Vanessa: So they have it for all ages?
1814
6199199
2091
103:21
James: Yes.
1815
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1000
103:22
Well, I think you have to be a certain age.
1816
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2611
103:24
You have to be like five or six years old.
1817
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2109
103:27
Vanessa: Did you hear you have to be like five or six years old?
1818
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3310
103:30
I hope so.
1819
6210320
1000
103:31
Let's go on to quiz question number three.
1820
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2000
103:33
I want you to listen for which one of these three sentences you here.
1821
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3360
103:36
Number one, she spent up living with me for seven months.
1822
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4300
103:40
Number two, she went up living with me for seven months.
1823
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4369
103:45
Number three, she ended up living with me for seven months.
1824
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3611
103:48
Let's listen to the clip and I want you to choose which sentence you hear.
1825
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3130
103:52
David: Actually, when I was there, I met a girl from Montreal.
1826
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3250
103:55
Chantelle, her name was.
1827
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1649
103:56
I saw her on the beach and I said, "Oh, she's beautiful.
1828
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5021
104:02
I must meet her."
1829
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1839
104:03
She spoke no English.
1830
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2471
104:06
I spoke no French.
1831
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1319
104:07
Vanessa: Oh, that didn't matter.
1832
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1381
104:09
David: She had a friend that was with her.
1833
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1760
104:10
They had come down from Montreal for a vacation a couple of weeks and
1834
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6640
104:17
[Listen carefully!]
1835
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2600
104:20
David: Actually, when I was there, I met a girl from Montreal.
1836
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4160
104:24
Chantelle, her name was.
1837
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1820
104:26
I saw her on the beach and I said, "Oh, she's beautiful.
1838
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4630
104:30
I must meet her."
1839
6270630
1839
104:32
She spoke no English.
1840
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2471
104:34
I spoke no French.
1841
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1330
104:36
Vanessa: Oh, that didn't matter.
1842
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1380
104:37
David: She had a friend that was with her.
1843
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1759
104:39
They had come down from Montreal for a vacation a couple of weeks and
1844
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6641
104:46
[Listen carefully!]
1845
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2169
104:48
Vanessa: Which sentence did you hear?
1846
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1630
104:49
Did you hear number three?
1847
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1601
104:51
She ended up living with me for seven months?
1848
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2381
104:53
I hope so.
1849
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2339
104:56
In this quick conversation, David's talking about a special girl who he met and they didn't
1850
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5380
105:01
speak the same language, but it didn't matter.
1851
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2939
105:04
They lived together for seven months.
1852
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3021
105:07
He uses a great phrasal verb to end up.
1853
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2919
105:10
She ended up living with me for seven months.
1854
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3571
105:14
We use this phrasal verb to end up to talk about a conclusion, but it's usually a surprising
1855
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5530
105:19
conclusion.
1856
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1140
105:20
For example, I checked in to my flight to go to New York City and I ended up getting
1857
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6330
105:27
moved to first class.
1858
6327000
2139
105:29
Whoa, this is a surprising conclusion because I didn't pay for first class, I didn't expect
1859
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5531
105:34
to be in first class.
1860
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1509
105:36
Maybe they had some extra seats or they needed to put someone else in the back of the plane,
1861
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4821
105:41
so we could say, "I ended up getting moved to first class."
1862
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3780
105:44
Great.
1863
6344780
1000
105:45
All right.
1864
6345780
1000
105:46
Let's listen to that original clip again so that you can hear a little bit more accurately
1865
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3649
105:50
everything that we say.
1866
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1121
105:51
David: She had a friend that was with her.
1867
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2030
105:53
They had come down from Montreal for a vacation a couple of weeks and she ended up living
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6639
106:00
with me for seven months.
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2061
106:02
David: She had a friend that was with her.
1870
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2510
106:04
They had come down from Montreal for a vacation a couple of weeks and she ended up living
1871
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6639
106:11
with me for seven months.
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2151
106:13
Vanessa: Did you hear ended up?
1873
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2889
106:16
I hope so.
1874
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1000
106:17
Let's go on to quiz question number four.
1875
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2371
106:19
I want you to listen for which one of these three sentences you're about to hear.
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4210
106:24
Number one, I just kind of self got myself the rest.
1877
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4950
106:29
Number two, I just kind of self taught myself the rest.
1878
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4530
106:33
Number three, I just kind of self bought myself the rest.
1879
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4430
106:37
Let's listen.
1880
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1000
106:38
Jesse: It actually started with a friend of mine that was not Cherokee at all.
1881
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2529
106:41
Even though she had no native American heritage, she was still interested in it.
1882
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4621
106:46
She taught me and I make the rooms with different types of sticks, all different types.
1883
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7469
106:53
Vanessa: Yeah, it looks definitely natural.
1884
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1681
106:55
Jesse: All different types.
1885
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1450
106:56
Vanessa: She got into making dream catchers.
1886
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2029
106:58
Jesse: Mm-hmm (affirmative).
1887
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1000
106:59
And she showed me and then [Listen carefully!]
1888
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3071
107:02
Jesse: It actually started with a friend of mine that was not Cherokee at all.
1889
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3720
107:06
Even though she had no native American heritage, she was still interested in it.
1890
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4299
107:10
She taught me and I make the rooms with different types of sticks, all different types.
1891
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7511
107:18
Vanessa: It looks definitely natural.
1892
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1540
107:19
Jesse: All different types.
1893
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1549
107:21
Vanessa: She got into making dream catchers.
1894
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2051
107:23
Jesse: Mm-hmm (affirmative).
1895
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1000
107:24
And she showed me and then [Listen carefully!]
1896
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3030
107:27
Vanessa: Which sentence did you hear?
1897
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2020
107:29
Did you hear number two?
1898
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1690
107:31
I just kind of self taught myself the rest?
1899
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3649
107:34
I hope so.
1900
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1500
107:36
In this quick conversation clip, Jesse is talking about learning a native American craft
1901
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6611
107:42
called dream catchers.
1902
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2159
107:45
She explains that her friend who has no native American heritage taught her some basics about
1903
6465139
6801
107:51
how to make them, but Jessie self-taught.
1904
6471940
4270
107:56
She taught herself the rest.
1905
6476210
3710
107:59
What is this expression, the rest, mean?
1906
6479920
2659
108:02
This means that she learned the remaining part by herself.
1907
6482579
4640
108:07
For example, I cleaned most of my house in the morning and then I cleaned the rest in
1908
6487219
6460
108:13
the afternoon.
1909
6493679
1191
108:14
I cleaned the remaining part of my house in the afternoon.
1910
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3809
108:18
All right.
1911
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1020
108:19
Let's listen to that original clip again so that you can hear and hopefully catch those
1912
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4351
108:24
expressions.
1913
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1000
108:25
Let's listen.
1914
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1000
108:26
Vanessa: She got into making dream catchers.
1915
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1450
108:27
Jesse: Mm-hmm (affirmative).
1916
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1000
108:28
And she showed me and then I just kind of self taught myself the rest.
1917
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3000
108:31
Vanessa: She got into making dream catchers.
1918
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2340
108:33
Jesse: Mm-hmm (affirmative).
1919
6513840
1000
108:34
And she showed me and then I just kind of self taught myself the rest.
1920
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3089
108:37
Vanessa: Did you hear I just kind of self taught myself the rest?
1921
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3831
108:41
I hope so.
1922
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1169
108:42
Let's move on to the final quiz question number five.
1923
6522929
2691
108:45
This one's a little bit tricky because we speak at the same time as each other, but
1924
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4570
108:50
you've got it.
1925
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1279
108:51
Listen carefully.
1926
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1000
108:52
Which one of these three sentences are you going to hear?
1927
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2360
108:54
Number one, they're coming to the restaurant to avoid that.
1928
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4330
108:59
Number two, they come in to the restaurant to avoid that.
1929
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3931
109:03
Number three, they're come to the restaurant to avoid that.
1930
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3799
109:06
Let's listen.
1931
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1000
109:07
Kevin: I'd never got an autograph except one time in all these years and it was from David
1932
6547889
4631
109:12
Bowie, because my chef was in love with David Bowie and it was just a big deal.
1933
6552520
5400
109:17
Vanessa: Yeah, you can't be the paparazzi when [Listen carefully!]
1934
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3270
109:21
Kevin: Right.
1935
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1000
109:22
Vanessa: ... [Listen carefully!]
1936
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1000
109:23
Kevin: I mean, tourists find out where they are.
1937
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2260
109:25
Kevin: I'd never got an autograph except one time in all these years and it was from David
1938
6565450
5350
109:30
Bowie, because my chef was in love with David Bowie and it was just a big deal.
1939
6570800
5399
109:36
Vanessa: Yeah, you can't be the paparazzi when [Listen carefully!]
1940
6576199
3221
109:39
Kevin: Right.
1941
6579420
1000
109:40
Vanessa: . [Listen carefully!]
1942
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1000
109:41
Kevin: I mean, tourists find out where they are.
1943
6581420
1880
109:43
Vanessa: Which sentence did you hear?
1944
6583300
1839
109:45
Did you hear sentence number one?
1945
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2940
109:48
They're coming to the restaurant to avoid that?
1946
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2951
109:51
I hope so.
1947
6591030
1490
109:52
In this conversation clip, Kevin is talking about his experience as a server in one of
1948
6592520
5110
109:57
the most popular restaurants in Hollywood where celebrities like to go to avoid tourists,
1949
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5770
110:03
to avoid paparazzi.
1950
6603400
1529
110:04
It's kind of a hidden spot where they can feel safe.
1951
6604929
3611
110:08
The second sentence that you were listening for, they come in to the restaurant to avoid
1952
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5199
110:13
that, it's grammatically correct, but it's not what I said.
1953
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3791
110:17
So make sure you're listening for exactly what I said.
1954
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3450
110:20
They're coming to the restaurant to avoid that.
1955
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3240
110:24
All right, let's listen to that quick clip again so that you can pick up on this expression.
1956
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3780
110:28
Vanessa: Yeah, you can't be the paparazzi when they're coming to the restaurant-
1957
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3170
110:31
Kevin: Right.
1958
6631170
1000
110:32
Vanessa: ... to avoid that.
1959
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1000
110:33
Kevin: I mean, tourists find out where they are.
1960
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1780
110:34
Vanessa: Yeah, you can't be the paparazzi when they're coming to the restaurant-
1961
6634950
3260
110:38
Kevin: Right.
1962
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1000
110:39
Vanessa: ... to avoid that.
1963
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1000
110:40
Kevin: I mean, tourists find out where they are.
1964
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2009
110:42
Vanessa: How did you do?
1965
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1730
110:43
Did you hear they're coming to the restaurant to avoid that?
1966
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3880
110:47
I hope so.
1967
6647829
1191
110:49
How did you do on this quiz?
1968
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1619
110:50
Let me know in the comments what was your score.
1969
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2541
110:53
Did you get all of them correct, or maybe none?
1970
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2440
110:55
I hope that you can do this quiz again and again so that you can test your listening
1971
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4420
111:00
skills.
1972
6660040
1000
111:01
If the quiz was easy, like I mentioned at the beginning, go back, don't look at those
1973
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4100
111:05
sample sentences, but just listen to the audio and try to write exactly what you hear.
1974
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6020
111:11
See if you can pick up on every single word without any hints from me.
1975
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6460
111:17
Vanessa: So your goal is to be a fluent English speaker, but what does that mean?
1976
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6079
111:23
Today, I want to give you a little fluency test.
1977
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3290
111:26
This isn't going to be like tests that you had in high school with grammar and vocabulary.
1978
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4831
111:31
I know people who have a great degree in English or they get the highest scores on English
1979
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4950
111:36
exams, but they're still not fluent English speakers, so this is a real test to tell if
1980
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5699
111:42
you're really fluent.
1981
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1130
111:43
Vanessa: I'm here in my sunny backyard to share 10 fluency statements with you.
1982
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6000
111:49
If you can say yes to each of these statements, then congratulations, you're a fluent English
1983
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6471
111:56
speaker.
1984
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1000
111:57
But if there are any statements that you can't say yes to, this is what I want you to do.
1985
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4529
112:01
I want you to write down that statement, either on paper or mentally, and I want you to create
1986
6721599
6000
112:07
some specific actions that you can take to increase that statement so that you can say
1987
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6020
112:13
yes to that statement.
1988
6733619
1951
112:15
Throughout today's lesson, I'm going to be giving you some actionable tips so that you
1989
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3600
112:19
can follow through and really increase your overall English fluency.
1990
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3150
112:22
Vanessa: Are you ready to get started with fluency statement number one?
1991
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4240
112:26
Test yourself.
1992
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1070
112:27
I can smoothly have a conversation about almost any topic in English.
1993
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7390
112:35
This is essential.
1994
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1539
112:36
In your native language, you can probably talk about your vacation and then instantly
1995
6756559
4270
112:40
jump to talking about how public transportation is always late.
1996
6760829
4281
112:45
You can easily jump from topic to topic without much hesitation.
1997
6765110
4640
112:49
So this is what you need to do in English as well to be fluent.
1998
6769750
2969
112:52
Of course, there will be topics that you won't be able to talk about smoothly in English,
1999
6772719
3841
112:56
but those should also be topics that you can't talk about smoothly in your native language.
2000
6776560
5030
113:01
Vanessa: For example, last week, I was talking with my friend about a Star Wars movie.
2001
6781590
5100
113:06
I don't know much about Star Wars movies, but I was trying to have a conversation with
2002
6786690
3570
113:10
her about it and I was trying to explain, "You know that guy who wears the white suit,
2003
6790260
5729
113:15
he's kind of like a soldier?"
2004
6795989
1331
113:17
I couldn't remember the word Stormtrooper.
2005
6797320
1819
113:19
And so she said, "Oh, do you mean Stormtrooper?"
2006
6799139
4471
113:23
Great.
2007
6803610
1000
113:24
We continued our conversation even though I didn't know exactly what that word is.
2008
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4699
113:29
So if you don't know a word in your native language or you feel uncomfortable talking
2009
6809309
4791
113:34
about a topic in your native language, it's okay if it's the same in English, but those
2010
6814100
4300
113:38
two should be a balance.
2011
6818400
1659
113:40
Vanessa: Fluency statement number two, I can think in English and not translate in my head.
2012
6820059
6521
113:46
I like to think of it like a light switch.
2013
6826580
2230
113:48
You can turn it on for English or off for English.
2014
6828810
3789
113:52
When someone says a word in my second language, in French, when someone says Paris with a
2015
6832599
5870
113:58
French accent, my brain immediately switches to French because it was kind of triggered
2016
6838469
5141
114:03
by that French sounding word.
2017
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2339
114:05
But if you said Paris with an English accent, well, it doesn't make my brain start to think
2018
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6451
114:12
in French.
2019
6852400
1000
114:13
So this is kind of like the light switch idea.
2020
6853400
2520
114:15
It is on or off, and you need to be able to keep English on so that you're not translating
2021
6855920
5850
114:21
in your head.
2022
6861770
1000
114:22
So when you're speaking in English but you can't remember a word, let's say that you're
2023
6862770
3700
114:26
telling me about a car accident that you had yesterday.
2024
6866470
2609
114:29
You might say, "I was driving and then a bird flew at my car and I drove into a," and you
2025
6869079
5961
114:35
can't remember the word, so you explain it in English.
2026
6875040
2940
114:37
Vanessa: "You know that dip or that hole on the side of the road, usually for water or
2027
6877980
6290
114:44
rain?"
2028
6884270
1000
114:45
And then your friend says, "A ditch?"
2029
6885270
1860
114:47
And you say, "Yes, I drove into a ditch."
2030
6887130
3480
114:50
You explained the word ditch in English instead of immediately saying it in your native language
2031
6890610
5339
114:55
because the light switch was turned on to English.
2032
6895949
3611
114:59
You probably couldn't even remember that word in your native language because you weren't
2033
6899560
4900
115:04
thinking in your native language, you weren't translating in your native language.
2034
6904460
3590
115:08
Instead, your brain was all in English, and you just didn't know that word ditch.
2035
6908050
5250
115:13
So instead, you're trying to explain it in English.
2036
6913300
3000
115:16
Vanessa: If you've ever had this happen to you, it's the strangest sensation.
2037
6916300
3980
115:20
I remember one time, I ripped my shirt and I was trying to ask my French friend if she
2038
6920280
5560
115:25
had a thread to sew it, but I couldn't remember the word thread, [foreign language 01:55:31].
2039
6925840
5260
115:31
So I just tried to explain it, but do you know what?
2040
6931100
2380
115:33
I couldn't remember the English word for it either.
2041
6933480
2420
115:35
It's as if English was completely turned off and instead, my brain was turned on to the
2042
6935900
5409
115:41
other language.
2043
6941309
1061
115:42
So if you have experienced this, congratulations, you're fluent.
2044
6942370
3769
115:46
Vanessa: The third fluency statement is I can use English all day and not feel tired.
2045
6946139
6080
115:52
Of course, if you have a busy, busy, busy day in your native language, you're going
2046
6952219
3511
115:55
to feel tired.
2047
6955730
1190
115:56
But when you use English normally throughout a normal day, you shouldn't feel tired at
2048
6956920
5660
116:02
the end of the day.
2049
6962580
1190
116:03
This means...
2050
6963770
1000
116:04
Vanessa: ... Day, you shouldn't feel tired at the end of the day.
2051
6964770
1000
116:05
This means that you listened to English radio on the way to work.
2052
6965770
1870
116:07
You spoke with your coworkers in English.
2053
6967640
2059
116:09
You used an English recipe to cook for dinner and in these situations you're not mentally
2054
6969699
5331
116:15
exhausted because it's tough to think in English.
2055
6975030
4169
116:19
Instead, if you feel comfortable and not tired, congratulations, you're fluent.
2056
6979199
5210
116:24
Vanessa: The fourth fluency statement is, "I can speak and other people don't slow down
2057
6984409
5851
116:30
their speaking for me."
2058
6990260
2040
116:32
This is a great way to test your English fluency.
2059
6992300
2870
116:35
When you have a conversation with someone else, if you can tell that they're using different
2060
6995170
4430
116:39
language for you compared with other people in your conversation, it means that they don't
2061
6999600
6249
116:45
see you as a fluent English speaker.
2062
7005849
2611
116:48
But, when someone can speak with you without slowing down because they realize, "Oh, you
2063
7008460
5250
116:53
can understand.
2064
7013710
1000
116:54
It's going to be fine.
2065
7014710
1000
116:55
We're going to be able to have a normal conversation."
2066
7015710
1850
116:57
Great.
2067
7017560
1000
116:58
You're fluent.
2068
7018560
1000
116:59
Vanessa: This is especially true when you're speaking with someone who isn't an English
2069
7019560
4429
117:03
teacher.
2070
7023989
1000
117:04
English teachers tend to slow down when they're speaking with an English learner because it's
2071
7024989
4311
117:09
part of our job.
2072
7029300
1439
117:10
But when you're talking with someone who's not an English teacher...
2073
7030739
2670
117:13
Maybe you're talking to customer service on the phone about a problem that you had with
2074
7033409
3411
117:16
a product, or maybe you're talking with a cashier at the grocery store.
2075
7036820
4080
117:20
If they speak with you at a normal speed, the same speed that they're talking with everyone
2076
7040900
5090
117:25
else at, great.
2077
7045990
1310
117:27
Congratulations, you're fluent.
2078
7047300
1589
117:28
Vanessa: Our fifth fluency statement is, "I can say something but I can't explain the
2079
7048889
5290
117:34
grammar because it just feels right."
2080
7054179
2681
117:36
If you're speaking but you have no idea why you correctly used, "I have eaten," instead
2081
7056860
4990
117:41
of, "I ate," well, great.
2082
7061850
1970
117:43
That means that you've internalized the grammar.
2083
7063820
2830
117:46
Maybe you can't explain why this was correct and why that one's not correct.
2084
7066650
4630
117:51
You've just internalized it.
2085
7071280
1950
117:53
Great.
2086
7073230
1000
117:54
You're fluent.
2087
7074230
1000
117:55
Vanessa: A good way to test this is by writing the same way that you speak.
2088
7075230
3780
117:59
You could just ask yourself the question, "What did you do this weekend?"
2089
7079010
4229
118:03
And as you're writing your answer, try to write exactly in the same way that you would
2090
7083239
4210
118:07
speak.
2091
7087449
1000
118:08
"Well, this weekend, I went to a friend's house and then I decided to leave early because
2092
7088449
4051
118:12
I was feeling a little bit under the weather."
2093
7092500
1711
118:14
And as you're writing this, are you thinking about the specific grammar verb tenses, about
2094
7094211
6530
118:20
the sentence structure, or are you just writing naturally and correctly?
2095
7100741
4369
118:25
And this is the same way that you're speaking.
2096
7105110
2339
118:27
If you have internalized English grammar and you can use it correctly without thinking
2097
7107449
4841
118:32
about the rules, congratulations.
2098
7112290
1650
118:33
You're fluent.
2099
7113940
1070
118:35
Vanessa: The sixth fluency statement is, "I can be myself."
2100
7115010
4870
118:39
I hear a lot of my English students say that they want to accurately express themselves
2101
7119880
4500
118:44
in English.
2102
7124380
1000
118:45
And when I hear them say this, what it makes me think is, "I want to be myself in English."
2103
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118:51
You want to show your same personality in English as you have in your native language.
2104
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4821
118:56
So, if you're clever and humorous in your native language, you want to also be clever
2105
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119:01
and humorous in English.
2106
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1490
119:03
If you're kind and thoughtful in your native language, well, you want to also show those
2107
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119:07
character traits in English as you speak.
2108
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2581
119:10
When you feel like your true self is showing in English, congratulations.
2109
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4510
119:14
You're fluent.
2110
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1179
119:15
Vanessa: A good way to practice this is by following the steps that I mention in this
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119:20
video up here about how to start speaking English without fear.
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119:23
Make sure you check out that lesson.
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119:25
Vanessa: Fluency statement number seven.
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1699
119:27
"I can watch English TV shows and movies without subtitles, just like a native English speaker."
2115
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119:34
In my opinion, I feel like TV shows and movies are a little bit more difficult to understand
2116
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119:39
than just daily conversation because it's scripted.
2117
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3190
119:42
They use sometimes words and humor that's extra clever or extra advanced, but if this
2118
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119:49
is something that you want to do and you can actually watch movies and TV shows without
2119
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4760
119:54
subtitles, congratulations.
2120
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1000
119:55
You're fluent.
2121
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1000
119:56
Vanessa: If you'd like to take it to the next level and be able to understand movies and
2122
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119:59
TV shows, but also be able to talk about them, make sure you check out this lesson I made
2123
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4901
120:04
here about how to talk about movies and TV shows in English.
2124
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3620
120:08
You'll learn a lot of great phrases and expressions so that you can enjoy those activities and
2125
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120:13
then talk about them in English with other people.
2126
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120:15
Vanessa: Fluency statement number eight.
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120:17
"I can understand different accents in English, native and non-native."
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6480
120:24
A lot of you need to use English for your jobs and that's great.
2129
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3011
120:27
That's a great way to be able to use English on a daily basis.
2130
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3120
120:30
Some of you work with Americans, British people, Australians.
2131
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4060
120:34
But a lot of you work with non-native English speakers.
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120:37
People from Germany, Indonesia, Brazil, all places around the world.
2133
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5210
120:43
When you can understand all English accents, congratulations.
2134
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3650
120:46
You're fluent.
2135
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1100
120:47
Vanessa: I remember the first time that I heard someone speaking French from Canada
2136
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4400
120:52
and I realized, "Oh, the way that they speak is different than the way I hear people speaking
2137
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4500
120:56
in France."
2138
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1160
120:58
When I could hear that they had a different accent, I felt so proud of myself because
2139
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5179
121:03
I realized, "I can understand them and I can understand that they have a different accent
2140
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4841
121:08
than what I'm used to hearing in France."
2141
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1780
121:09
Vanessa: This can be a tough skill to master, but with YouTube, there's a great way to do
2142
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4340
121:14
this.
2143
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1000
121:15
If you have some coworkers who are from Germany and you often speak with them in English,
2144
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4620
121:19
you can try to watch videos of Germans speaking English on YouTube.
2145
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3860
121:23
That way you can feel comfortable with the way they speak, the language choice, the accent,
2146
7283620
4860
121:28
the intonation.
2147
7288480
1000
121:29
You can just test yourself with YouTube and kind of train so that when you speak with
2148
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4740
121:34
your German coworker in English, great.
2149
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2500
121:36
You're already prepared.
2150
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1109
121:37
Vanessa: Fluency statement number nine.
2151
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1741
121:39
"I can understand humor and jokes."
2152
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4160
121:43
Of course, the humor and jokes may not be funny to you, but at least you understand
2153
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4550
121:48
why they're supposed to be funny.
2154
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2859
121:51
There's nothing worse than sitting at a dining room table with a lot of English speakers
2155
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4310
121:55
and they're all laughing and having a good time, laughing at jokes, and then you're just
2156
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4461
121:59
sitting there thinking, "I have no idea what's funny.
2157
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3640
122:03
Why are they laughing?"
2158
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1100
122:04
You feel really left out and lonely, but on the other hand, there's nothing better than
2159
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4900
122:09
understanding the humor and laughing with them.
2160
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2950
122:12
It's a great way to bond, to form relationships.
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2710
122:15
When you can understand humor and jokes in English, congratulations.
2162
7335210
3190
122:18
You're fluent.
2163
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1080
122:19
Vanessa: Fluency statement number 10.
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2030
122:21
"I can read an article, listen to a podcast, watch a movie in English, and forget what
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122:28
language it was in."
2166
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1670
122:29
This is such a strange sensation when this happens.
2167
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3391
122:33
I remember one time I was listening to a French podcast while I was cooking dinner, and then
2168
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4470
122:37
during dinner I was asking Dan, my husband, some questions about the podcast.
2169
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4990
122:42
He doesn't speak French.
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7362720
1061
122:43
And he looked at me like, "What are you talking about?"
2171
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3029
122:46
And then I realized, "Oh yeah, I forgot.
2172
7366810
2510
122:49
That podcast was in French, so you couldn't understand it."
2173
7369320
3759
122:53
So when you can seamlessly jump from one language to the other, congratulations.
2174
7373079
5151
122:58
You're fluent.
2175
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1280
122:59
Vanessa: There's one movie called Paris, Je T’aime, and it's a movie about different
2176
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4939
123:04
areas in the city of Paris.
2177
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2360
123:06
And in this movie, a lot of the characters speak in English and then jump immediately
2178
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4841
123:11
to French.
2179
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1160
123:12
And I remember watching that movie and listening to all the different languages that they were
2180
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4320
123:17
speaking and realizing, "I can understand this.
2181
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4049
123:21
I'm so happy.
2182
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1371
123:22
I don't have to use subtitles for part of it, or feel uncomfortable when they switched
2183
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4360
123:26
to French."
2184
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1000
123:27
Because I could easily understand both languages, I felt so happy and so proud of myself.
2185
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6600
123:34
And I want you to have that as well.
2186
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1740
123:36
So, if you can understand a podcast, a movie, a TV show, read an article, and then forget,
2187
7416250
6370
123:42
"Oh yeah, it was an English," congratulations.
2188
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1939
123:44
You're fluent.
2189
7424559
1000
123:45
Vanessa: So now I have a question for you.
2190
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2361
123:47
In the comments, let me know what is your fluency score according to this test?
2191
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5190
123:53
Can you relatively use grammatical structures without thinking, but it's difficult for you
2192
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5779
123:58
to understand all accents in English?
2193
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2420
124:01
I want you to take actionable steps so that you can say, "Yes," to each one of these 10
2194
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7741
124:09
fluency statements.
2195
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1250
124:10
Vanessa: Do you have good pronunciation?
2196
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3000
124:13
How do you know?
2197
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1390
124:14
The best way to test your pronunciation is to speak with someone else and see if they
2198
7454690
3910
124:18
can understand you, because understanding is the purpose of pronunciation and of speaking.
2199
7458600
5200
124:23
But unfortunately, here on YouTube, I can't listen to you.
2200
7463800
3870
124:27
Maybe YouTube will create that technology someday in the future.
2201
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2560
124:30
So for now, I'd like to give you a different type of pronunciation test.
2202
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5020
124:35
Vanessa: The next best way to test your pronunciation is to shadow or imitate exactly after a native
2203
7475250
5829
124:41
speaker, so that you can see if your pronunciation is similar to mine.
2204
7481079
3971
124:45
Is it different?
2205
7485050
1140
124:46
What are the specific areas that are difficult for you?
2206
7486190
2719
124:48
I'm going to be testing your pronunciation on 16 challenging words.
2207
7488909
4651
124:53
But the best way to test your pronunciation is not with individual words, but with a whole
2208
7493560
4019
124:57
sentence.
2209
7497579
1000
124:58
So this is what we're going to do.
2210
7498579
1230
124:59
I'm going to show you a challenge sentence that uses four difficult words, and this is
2211
7499809
4171
125:03
what I want you to do.
2212
7503980
1179
125:05
I want you to say that sentence out loud before I talk about anything.
2213
7505159
3841
125:09
Vanessa: This is your original pronunciation.
2214
7509000
2389
125:11
I want you to hear your original pronunciation, and then I'm going to read that sentence,
2215
7511389
5611
125:17
but I'm going to mispronounce one word.
2216
7517000
3450
125:20
I want you to guess which word is mispronounced.
2217
7520450
3689
125:24
There are sometimes multiple ways to pronounce each word.
2218
7524139
3020
125:27
But I want you to be listening for what is the most natural way to pronounce each word
2219
7527159
4460
125:31
in fast English.
2220
7531619
1020
125:32
Vanessa: And finally, I'm going to be saying the sentence correctly, and I want you to
2221
7532639
4100
125:36
be able to say it with me.
2222
7536739
1050
125:37
So I want you to repeat the correct sentence with me.
2223
7537789
2700
125:40
Are you ready to get started with sentence number one?
2224
7540489
2360
125:42
Let's do it.
2225
7542849
1000
125:43
Vanessa: This is sentence number one.
2226
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1540
125:45
I want you to say this sentence all by yourself.
2227
7545389
2830
125:48
Test your original pronunciation.
2228
7548219
1281
125:49
Go ahead.
2229
7549500
1099
125:50
Say it out loud.
2230
7550599
2111
125:52
Vanessa: Okay.
2231
7552710
3300
125:56
Now, I'm going to say the sentence and I'm going to mispronounce one word.
2232
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5280
126:01
Can you guess which word I mispronounce?
2233
7561290
2980
126:04
I buy cloth-es through the internet.
2234
7564270
4869
126:09
I buy cloth-es through the internet.
2235
7569139
5141
126:14
Which word did I say incorrectly?
2236
7574280
3839
126:18
Did you hear clothes or cloth-es?
2237
7578119
6111
126:24
You heard the second one, but really that's not correct.
2238
7584230
3440
126:27
Instead, when we speak in fast English, we often pronounce, "clothes" a lot like, "Close
2239
7587670
6889
126:34
the door."
2240
7594559
1321
126:35
I buy clothes through the internet.
2241
7595880
3529
126:39
Vanessa: All right, let's go through each of these challenging words, and I want to
2242
7599409
3761
126:43
help you say them correctly.
2243
7603170
1929
126:45
That first word, buy, buy.
2244
7605099
3290
126:48
It sounds exactly like, "Bye, see you later."
2245
7608389
4221
126:52
Buy.
2246
7612610
1000
126:53
And then we have clothes, which I just mentioned sounds a lot like, "Close the door."
2247
7613610
7700
127:01
Close the door.
2248
7621310
1160
127:02
When native speakers are speaking a little bit slower, they might add a th sound clothes,
2249
7622470
6419
127:08
clothes.
2250
7628889
1411
127:10
You see how my tongue comes out a little bit for that T-H?
2251
7630300
2350
127:12
Clothes, but really when we're speaking quickly, it just sounds like close.
2252
7632650
6130
127:18
Close.
2253
7638780
1080
127:19
Vanessa: And then we have the word through.
2254
7639860
2530
127:22
Oh, this word is lovely.
2255
7642390
3340
127:25
We have a T-H followed by an R. Let's practice it slowly.
2256
7645730
6469
127:32
Your tongue is coming out between your teeth and there's some air.
2257
7652199
3250
127:35
That's a wonderful T-H sound.
2258
7655449
4290
127:39
Through.
2259
7659739
1431
127:41
It sounds like, "I threw the ball."
2260
7661170
2640
127:43
This is the past tense of throw.
2261
7663810
1710
127:45
I threw the ball.
2262
7665520
2329
127:47
So, let's try to say this.
2263
7667849
2330
127:50
Through, through.
2264
7670179
2181
127:52
Vanessa: And then we have our final word, internet.
2265
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4680
127:57
What's happening to that middle T?
2266
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2570
127:59
Internet?
2267
7679610
1290
128:00
You can say internet with a clear T if you're speaking a little bit slower, but when native
2268
7680900
5400
128:06
speakers are speaking quickly, we're going to cut out that T completely, and just say
2269
7686300
4660
128:10
in inner-net, inner-net.
2270
7690960
3040
128:14
Vanessa: Let's go back and try to say this full sentence clearly and naturally together.
2271
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6300
128:20
Are you ready?
2272
7700300
1700
128:22
I buy clothes through the internet.
2273
7702000
6099
128:28
I buy clothes through the internet.
2274
7708099
3591
128:31
Were you repeating with me?
2275
7711690
1799
128:33
I hope so because we've got three more challenge sentences, and I want you to test your pronunciation.
2276
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4681
128:38
Vanessa: Let's go to number two.
2277
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1840
128:40
Here's sentence number two.
2278
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1570
128:41
I'm going to pause and I want you to try to say this sentence all by yourself.
2279
7721580
4190
128:45
Test your original pronunciation.
2280
7725770
1960
128:47
Go ahead.
2281
7727730
2480
128:50
Vanessa: Okay.
2282
7730210
2480
128:52
Now I'm going to say it, but I'm going to mispronounce one word.
2283
7732690
3900
128:56
Can you guess which word is incorrect?
2284
7736590
2210
128:58
A little girl took the recept to the bus.
2285
7738800
6170
129:04
The little girl took the recept to the bus.
2286
7744970
5180
129:10
Which word is wrong?
2287
7750150
4160
129:14
Did you hear receipt or recept?
2288
7754310
4389
129:18
You heard number two, but that's not correct.
2289
7758699
3261
129:21
Instead, the P is silent, so you're going to say receipt, receipt.
2290
7761960
5560
129:27
Just completely forget about that P in there.
2291
7767520
3550
129:31
Vanessa: All right, let's go through each of these challenging words because I want
2292
7771070
3390
129:34
to make sure that you can pronounce them correctly.
2293
7774460
2490
129:36
The first one is little, little.
2294
7776950
1860
129:38
You see there's two T's in the middle of this word, but really in American English, those
2295
7778810
6670
129:45
Ts are going to become D sounds.
2296
7785480
1850
129:47
So it's going to sound like lid-le.
2297
7787330
1710
129:49
Little, like a lid that you put on a container, little.
2298
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6050
129:55
Vanessa: And then we have girl.
2299
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2779
129:57
A lot of these words, girl, world, early.
2300
7797869
4531
130:02
Those words can be a little bit tricky.
2301
7802400
1929
130:04
So, let's break this one down.
2302
7804329
5040
130:09
Grr-l, grr-l.
2303
7809369
2290
130:11
When you want to talk about the sound that an angry dog makes, you could say grr, grr,
2304
7811659
6451
130:18
and then we're going to add le the end.
2305
7818110
3449
130:21
Girl.
2306
7821559
1091
130:22
Girl, girl.
2307
7822650
2190
130:24
Notice that my mouth isn't really moving here.
2308
7824840
3649
130:28
It's all inside my mouth and in my throat.
2309
7828489
2940
130:31
Girl, girl.
2310
7831429
2551
130:33
And with the L, my tongue is coming beside my teeth.
2311
7833980
2900
130:36
Girl.
2312
7836880
1000
130:37
It's right there girl.
2313
7837880
2040
130:39
Girl.
2314
7839920
1000
130:40
Vanessa: All right, and the next word is receipt, receipt.
2315
7840920
5830
130:46
Re-seat receipt.
2316
7846750
3150
130:49
This is the piece of paper you get after you make a purchase.
2317
7849900
2989
130:52
The cashier will give you a receipt.
2318
7852889
2511
130:55
Vanessa: And then our final word is bus.
2319
7855400
3089
130:58
Sometimes this short u sound can be a little bit tricky, so I want to make sure you're
2320
7858489
4710
131:03
not saying boose, boos, boss.
2321
7863199
3730
131:06
Make sure you say, uh, bus.
2322
7866929
2960
131:09
Bus.
2323
7869889
1000
131:10
Bus.
2324
7870889
1000
131:11
Vanessa: All right, let's go back and say this full sentence together.
2325
7871889
4721
131:16
The little girl took the receipt to the bus.
2326
7876610
6430
131:23
The little girl took the receipt to the bus.
2327
7883040
5550
131:28
Did you say that with me?
2328
7888590
1470
131:30
Let's say it one more time.
2329
7890060
1769
131:31
The little girl took the receipt to the bus.
2330
7891829
6080
131:37
Great work.
2331
7897909
1000
131:38
Let's go onto the next challenge sentence.
2332
7898909
1431
131:40
Vanessa: All right, here's sentence number three.
2333
7900340
2589
131:42
I want you to say it all by yourself.
2334
7902929
2060
131:44
Are you ready?
2335
7904989
1351
131:46
Test your original pronunciation.
2336
7906340
2180
131:48
Go ahead.
2337
7908520
2740
131:51
Vanessa: Okay, now it's my turn.
2338
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3470
131:54
I'm going to mispronounce one word.
2339
7914730
2239
131:56
Listen carefully.
2340
7916969
1190
131:58
In the early winter, I didn't miss the warum weather.
2341
7918159
6460
132:04
In the early winner, I didn't miss the warum weather.
2342
7924619
6730
132:11
In the early winter, I didn't miss the warum weather.
2343
7931349
5440
132:16
Which one of these challenge words did I mispronounce?
2344
7936789
4781
132:21
Did you hear warm or warum?
2345
7941570
5140
132:26
You heard that second one, but that's not correct.
2346
7946710
2849
132:29
Instead, the word warm has just one syllable, not warum.
2347
7949559
6041
132:35
Instead warm, warm.
2348
7955600
3689
132:39
Notice how my lips are in an oh shape.
2349
7959289
4910
132:44
Warm, warm with a clear R. Warm.
2350
7964199
3411
132:47
Vanessa: All right, let's go through each of these challenge words so that you can say
2351
7967610
4720
132:52
them correctly.
2352
7972330
1000
132:53
The first one is early.
2353
7973330
2820
132:56
This is similar to what we talked about with girl.
2354
7976150
4180
133:00
Er-lee.
2355
7980330
2479
133:02
Let's break it into two sections.
2356
7982809
3501
133:06
Er, and then lee, lee.
2357
7986310
5159
133:11
Early.
2358
7991469
1940
133:13
Make sure that when you say the L, your tongue is touching the back of your teeth, lee, early,
2359
7993409
8051
133:21
early.
2360
8001460
1550
133:23
Don't add another sound in there.
2361
8003010
1520
133:24
I often hear English learners say earaly, er-a-lee, but that a in the middle isn't natural,
2362
8004530
7649
133:32
so let's make sure you say er-lee and put it together, early.
2363
8012179
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133:34
Vanessa: Next, we say winter.
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What is happening to the T in the middle of this word?
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You might hear native speakers say winter with a clear T if they're enunciating clearly,
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and maybe speaking a little slowly.
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It's fine to do that, but when native speakers speak fast, you're going to hear winner.
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Winner.
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133:57
When's the Winter Olympics?
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Winner.
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This is the same as a winner and a loser.
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It's the same pronunciation, so make sure that the context helps you to know which word
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it is.
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134:09
Does this sound familiar?
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134:11
Internet winner.
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Yeah.
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We're cutting out that T especially when there's an N-T in the middle of a word internet, internet.
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Winter, winner.
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134:24
You're going to hear that a lot in fast English.
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Vanessa: Next we have the word didn't.
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Didn't.
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But this is the clear pronunciation.
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When native speakers are speaking quickly, we do not say didn't with each sound pronounced.
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Instead you're going to hear did-n.
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Did-n.
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There's a lot going on here in your throat.
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134:52
D-n.
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So that final D is cut short and the final T as well is cut, so it's really going to
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be just your throat.
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Can you say that with me?
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D-n didn't, didn't, didn't, didn't.
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135:07
Vanessa: If you have trouble pronouncing or hearing or understanding contractions, it's
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probably because we cut off a lot of those sounds.
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135:18
We reduce them.
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135:19
That's something that's natural in English.
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I made a video about how to pronounce 81 different contractions.
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135:25
You can check it out up here because this happens to a lot of different contractions
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135:29
and I want to make sure you can pronounce them, but also you can understand them.
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135:33
The difference between a positive word, did, and didn't is very important when you're having
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a conversation.
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135:40
Vanessa: All right, let's go to the last word.
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Warm, warm, warm.
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135:46
Make sure that this is one syllable.
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Warm.
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Warm.
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135:50
Do you think you could put all of these words together?
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You got it.
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135:54
Let's say it together.
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135:55
Vanessa: In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
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In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
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In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
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In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
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136:18
Great work.
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136:19
All right, let's go to the final challenge sentence.
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136:20
Vanessa: Here's our final challenge sentence.
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136:23
Can you say this all by yourself?
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136:27
Go ahead.
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136:30
Vanessa: Now it's my turn.
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I'm going to mispronounce one word.
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136:34
I want you to guess which one it is.
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I definitely sought the water at the beach was salty.
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136:41
I definitely sought the water at the beach was salty.
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136:48
Which word is incorrect?
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136:53
Did you hear thought or sought?
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136:58
You heard the second one, sought, but does this word start with an S?
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137:03
Nope.
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137:05
Instead it starts with a T-H.
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137:06
So you need to make sure that your tongue is between your teeth and there's that stream
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137:12
of air coming through.
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137:14
Through.
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137:15
We already talked about that word.
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137:17
Thought.
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137:18
Thought.
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137:19
Vanessa: All right, let's go through each of these challenge words so that you can pronounce
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them correctly.
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137:26
What's happening with this word, definitely?
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Definitely.
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137:30
I feel like words like definitely, certainly, probably, those words can be a little bit
2439
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tricky.
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137:38
I talked about some of those in this pronunciation lesson up here, but the word definitely, we
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137:42
use a lot and you probably would like to use a lot, but you need to pronounce it correctly,
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137:46
so let's break it down.
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137:49
Def-in-it-lee.
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Def-in-it-lee.
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Definitely, definitely, definitely, definitely, definitely.
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138:00
It's definitely a beautiful day.
2447
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138:06
This is definitely a helpful lesson.
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I hope so.
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138:10
Vanessa: The next word is that lovely word we just talked about thought.
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138:14
Thought.
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Make sure that your tongue is between your teeth.
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138:18
I often hear English learners switching an S and a T-H sound.
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138:25
Sought instead of thought.
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138:28
And in some situations, this could be a little bit difficult for other English speakers to
2455
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138:33
understand you, so make sure that you say this correctly.
2456
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138:36
Thought, thought.
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138:38
Vanessa: And then we have the word water.
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138:41
Water.
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138:43
What's the sound that you hear in the middle of this word?
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138:45
Wad-er, wad-er?
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138:47
Well, it's not a T sound, water.
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138:50
Instead it's a D. Here we have, again, the T is changing to a D.
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138:55
This is typical in American English.
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138:57
Wad-er.
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138:58
Wad-er I want you to say that with me.
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139:01
Water, water.
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139:02
Vanessa: And finally we have the word beach.
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139:06
Beach.
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139:07
A lot of you are concerned that you might say a rude word instead.
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139:12
So let's practice that vowel sound.
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139:13
It needs to be a long E. Bee-ch.
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139:17
Bee-ch, beach.
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139:20
And really the context here is going to help you a lot.
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139:23
So when we're talking about, "The water at the beach is salty," you're most likely talking
2475
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139:29
about the ocean, the sea.
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139:31
You're not talking about a rude word.
2477
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139:33
So I think the context is going to help you a lot, but make sure that when you pronounce
2478
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139:37
it you say E. Beach.
2479
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139:39
Vanessa: All right, let's go back and say that full sentence.
2480
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139:42
I definitely thought the water the beach was salty.
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139:48
I definitely thought the water at the beach was salty.
2482
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139:53
I definitely thought the water at the beach with salty.
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139:57
Great work.
2484
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1000
139:58
I hope that you had a chance to say that sentence out loud with me and test your pronunciation.
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140:02
Vanessa: Are you ready for a final challenge?
2486
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140:04
We're going to go back and say all four of those sentences and I want you to say them
2487
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140:08
out loud with me.
2488
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1000
140:09
I'm going to say them two times so that you can listen and then you can also repeat.
2489
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140:13
Are you ready?
2490
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1000
140:14
Let's say them together.
2491
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1000
140:15
Vanessa: I buy clothes through the internet.
2492
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140:19
I buy clothes through the internet.
2493
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140:24
The little girl took the receipt to the bus.
2494
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4549
140:28
The little girl took the receipt to the bus.
2495
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4540
140:33
In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
2496
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140:38
In the early winter, I didn't miss the warm weather.
2497
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4800
140:43
I definitely thought the water at the beach was salty.
2498
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4930
140:48
I definitely thought the water at the beach was salty.
2499
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140:53
Vanessa: Great work testing your pronunciation muscles, and now I have a question for you.
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140:58
Let me know in the comments which one of these words is the most difficult for you to pronounce.
2501
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141:03
Let me know.
2502
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1000
141:04
I'm sure that there will be people around the world who have the same feelings as you.
2503
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141:07
It's always good to feel like you're in this together.
2504
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141:11
Vanessa: Wow, you made it.
2505
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141:14
Congratulations.
2506
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1000
141:15
Now I have a question for you.
2507
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141:16
Which English test was the most challenging for you?
2508
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141:20
Let me know in the comments.
2509
8480060
1000
141:21
I look forward to hearing your replies and thanks so much for learning English with me.
2510
8481060
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141:25
I'll see you again next Friday for a new lesson here on my YouTube channel.
2511
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141:29
Bye.
2512
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1000
141:30
Vanessa: The next step is to download my free ebook, Five Steps to Becoming a Confident
2513
8490880
5660
141:36
English Speaker.
2514
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1430
141:37
You'll learn what you need to do to speak confidently and fluently.
2515
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141:42
Don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel for more free lessons.
2516
8502090
3370
141:45
Thanks so much.
2517
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141:46
Bye.
2518
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670
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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