STOP Making 6 Common Mistakes: Advanced English Lesson

482,938 views ・ 2019-09-27

Speak English With Vanessa


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Hi, I'm Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.
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Don't make these mistakes.
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Let's talk about it.
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Have you ever watched an English TV show and realized, whoa, these guys speak way different
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than any English I ever heard in my English class?
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Yeah, it's pretty true that English spoken in real life is way different than textbook
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English.
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But never fear, today I'm going to help you with three pairs of commonly-misused words,
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and I hope if you misused these words before this lesson, I hope you won't misuse them
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afterwards.
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Let's start.
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The first pair of commonly-misused words are either and neither.
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Did you learn in your classroom English that you should use either for positive sentences?
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I want either cake or ice cream for dessert.
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And that you should use neither for negative sentences?
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I want neither cake nor ice cream for dessert.
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Well, even though these sentences are both grammatically correct, that second sentence,
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oh boy, we hardly ever use that in daily spoken English.
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In fact, if you said, "I want neither cake nor ice cream for dessert," people would look
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at you with little slits in their eyes and say, "What?
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Is he a literary professor from the 1800s?"
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So what should you use instead?
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Well, we usually just simply use or for negative sentences.
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Take a look at what happens to this sentence.
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I don't want cake or ice cream for dessert.
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We use the negative word not, I don't, that's a contraction using do and not, and then instead
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of using the kind of archaic neither/nor comparison, we're going to instead use just or.
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Or, we could say this in a shortened way.
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I don't want either.
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There's a word that's actually omitted here, but it's understood.
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That means that we know it's there, but we don't say it.
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Do you know what that should be?
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I don't want either option.
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We don't need to say the word option because either already implies that there is at least
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two things here, so you can say, "Oh, I don't want either," meaning I don't want care or
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ice cream.
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Now that you know we shouldn't say neither nor, is there ever a correct and natural way
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to use the way neither?
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Yes.
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Let me tell you.
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The most common situation to use neither is if I said, "I don't like politics," and you
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responded, "Me neither."
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You're agreeing with my negative statement.
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But, here's the tricky part.
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I could say, "I don't like politics," and you could say, "Me either."
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You could use this positive word to agree with my negative sentence.
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So which one of these is actually correct?
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Well, we have a negative sentence, "I don't like politics," so we need that negative word
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to respond to it.
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"Me neither."
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Technically this is correct, and you should probably use this in maybe business situations
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or those kind of formal situations, but in daily spoken English, you are definitely going
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to hear people say, "Me either."
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This is grammatically incorrect, but native speakers use this a lot.
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And I don't know exactly why, but I kind of feel like it's because we feel a little strange
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using the word neither because we don't use it that often, and we use the word either
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a lot.
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So maybe people just feel a little more comfortable saying, "Oh yeah, me either.
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I don't like politics, too."
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But technically, it should be me neither.
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So in this situation, you've got two options, but technically me neither is a little better.
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The second pair of commonly-misused words in English is actually and now.
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If you speak a Romance language, listen carefully.
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I'm going to give you a sentence, and I'm going to give you two options, so you can
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guess what this sentence means.
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I can't believe that I actually fell asleep on the plane.
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I never fall asleep on flights.
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Does this mean, number one, now I fell asleep?
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Or number two, in reality I feel asleep?
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What does this mean?
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Think about that word actually.
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Well, don't listen to your heart when you're trying to guess which one's correct.
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It's going to lead you astray.
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If you speak French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, a Romance language, you probably
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have a word in your language that looks like the word actually, like the word “actuellement”
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or maybe “atualmente.”
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I don't know how to say it in Portuguese.
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But there's a word that looks almost exactly like the word actually and it means no in
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your language.
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But, in English, don't listen to your heart.
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In English, this means in reality.
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It does not mean now.
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So we are comparing something to reality.
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Let's take a look at a couple examples.
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The food looked strange, but actually, it tasted good.
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Here we have a comparison between the way the food looked, which was strange, and the
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way the food tasted, which was good.
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So we have reality, the taste, and the way it looked, maybe the way I perceived it in
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my mind.
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The other day I was going to go to a museum, and I said, "Oh, we can't go to the museum
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because I saw that it's closed on Mondays."
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And my friend said, "Actually, in the summer it's open on Mondays."
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So she was comparing my reality to her reality, that well, in reality, it's open on Mondays
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in the summertime.
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So she was correcting my reality.
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Or, you might say, "She's actually dating someone?
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I can't believe it."
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This is a shocking reality, like in our first sentence.
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"I actually fell asleep on the flight?"
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You could say, "She's actually dating someone?"
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Here we're comparing what I thought would happen, that she would never date someone,
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to the reality, "Who, she's actually dating someone."
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What about the word now?
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This means in this moment, at this moment.
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This is a little more straightforward and easy than the word actually.
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But, let's talk about a couple sample sentences anyway.
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I can't watch the movie because I have to study now.
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At this moment, I have to study.
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He finished his degree, and now he's a mechanical engineer.
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All right, let's go to the last pair of commonly-misused words in American English.
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I have a little test for you.
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I want to know which one of these two sentences do you think is correct.
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Although it was raining, we still went on a hike.
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Though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
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The two words here are although and though.
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Which one of these feels the most correct to you?
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I have some bad news.
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This was a trick question.
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Both of these are grammatically correct, but we use neither of these in daily conversation.
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The word although is rarely used in daily conversation.
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It feels a little bit formal.
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The only way that I use it is when I'm talking about changing my mind.
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I could say, "Oh, the wedding was so boring, although the food was pretty good."
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So I'm changing my mind about the wedding.
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The wedding was boring, okay, although the food was pretty good.
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So there was one thing that was good about it, the food.
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This is almost the same as adding the word but.
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The wedding was boring, but the food was pretty good.
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What about the word though?
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What's wrong with saying, "Though it was raining, we still went on a hike."
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Well, we hardly ever use the word though at the beginning of a sentence.
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It sounds too stiff and formal.
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Though it was raining ... No, we hardly ever use this.
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If you want to use the word though at the beginning, it's better to add the word even.
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Even though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
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That sounds much more natural.
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Let's go back to that wedding example, the boring wedding.
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You might say, "The wedding was boring, but the food was pretty good though."
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We're using the word though at the end to indicate that there's kind of an exception.
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Oh, the wedding was boring overall, but the food was good though.
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You could even take out the word but and make two sentences.
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The wedding was boring.
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The food was good though.
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Okay, great.
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If you'd like to study the word though in depth, I recommend checking out this lesson
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that I made up here that uses a lot of examples and all of the different nuances of the word
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though.
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All right, before we go, let's do a quick review.
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I don't want cake or ice cream for dessert.
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I don't want either.
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I don't like politics.
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Me neither.
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I can't believe that I actually fell asleep on the flight.
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The food looked strange, but it was actually good.
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Actually, the museum is open on Mondays in the summer.
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I can't watch a movie because I have to study now.
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The wedding was kind of boring, although the food was pretty good.
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The wedding was kind of boring, but the food was pretty good though.
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Even though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
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I hope you enjoyed this quick but intense common mistakes correction lesson.
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I want to know in the comments which one of these mistakes did you used to make but now
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I hope you won't make it anymore because you know the correct way to use these commonly-misused
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words.
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Thanks so much for learning English with me, and I'll see you again next Friday for a new
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lesson here on my YouTube channel.
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Bye.
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The next step is to download my free e-book, Five Steps to Becoming a Confident English
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Speaker.
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You'll learn what you need to do to speak confidently and fluently.
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Don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel for more free lessons.
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Thanks so much.
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Bye.
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