STOP Making 6 Common Mistakes: Advanced English Lesson

484,018 views ・ 2019-09-27

Speak English With Vanessa


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

00:00
Hi, I'm Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.
0
140
4560
00:04
Don't make these mistakes.
1
4700
1630
00:06
Let's talk about it.
2
6330
5790
00:12
Have you ever watched an English TV show and realized, whoa, these guys speak way different
3
12120
5299
00:17
than any English I ever heard in my English class?
4
17419
3190
00:20
Yeah, it's pretty true that English spoken in real life is way different than textbook
5
20609
4821
00:25
English.
6
25430
1000
00:26
But never fear, today I'm going to help you with three pairs of commonly-misused words,
7
26430
5249
00:31
and I hope if you misused these words before this lesson, I hope you won't misuse them
8
31679
4351
00:36
afterwards.
9
36030
1000
00:37
Let's start.
10
37030
1000
00:38
The first pair of commonly-misused words are either and neither.
11
38030
5110
00:43
Did you learn in your classroom English that you should use either for positive sentences?
12
43140
6030
00:49
I want either cake or ice cream for dessert.
13
49170
3580
00:52
And that you should use neither for negative sentences?
14
52750
2989
00:55
I want neither cake nor ice cream for dessert.
15
55739
3221
00:58
Well, even though these sentences are both grammatically correct, that second sentence,
16
58960
6150
01:05
oh boy, we hardly ever use that in daily spoken English.
17
65110
4940
01:10
In fact, if you said, "I want neither cake nor ice cream for dessert," people would look
18
70050
6120
01:16
at you with little slits in their eyes and say, "What?
19
76170
4210
01:20
Is he a literary professor from the 1800s?"
20
80380
4020
01:24
So what should you use instead?
21
84400
3039
01:27
Well, we usually just simply use or for negative sentences.
22
87439
4011
01:31
Take a look at what happens to this sentence.
23
91450
1989
01:33
I don't want cake or ice cream for dessert.
24
93439
3241
01:36
We use the negative word not, I don't, that's a contraction using do and not, and then instead
25
96680
7930
01:44
of using the kind of archaic neither/nor comparison, we're going to instead use just or.
26
104610
7160
01:51
Or, we could say this in a shortened way.
27
111770
4070
01:55
I don't want either.
28
115840
4569
02:00
There's a word that's actually omitted here, but it's understood.
29
120409
4271
02:04
That means that we know it's there, but we don't say it.
30
124680
2689
02:07
Do you know what that should be?
31
127369
2500
02:09
I don't want either option.
32
129869
3721
02:13
We don't need to say the word option because either already implies that there is at least
33
133590
4940
02:18
two things here, so you can say, "Oh, I don't want either," meaning I don't want care or
34
138530
7679
02:26
ice cream.
35
146209
1211
02:27
Now that you know we shouldn't say neither nor, is there ever a correct and natural way
36
147420
5200
02:32
to use the way neither?
37
152620
2020
02:34
Yes.
38
154640
1000
02:35
Let me tell you.
39
155640
1000
02:36
The most common situation to use neither is if I said, "I don't like politics," and you
40
156640
6209
02:42
responded, "Me neither."
41
162849
3481
02:46
You're agreeing with my negative statement.
42
166330
3489
02:49
But, here's the tricky part.
43
169819
2721
02:52
I could say, "I don't like politics," and you could say, "Me either."
44
172540
7369
02:59
You could use this positive word to agree with my negative sentence.
45
179909
4580
03:04
So which one of these is actually correct?
46
184489
2750
03:07
Well, we have a negative sentence, "I don't like politics," so we need that negative word
47
187239
5780
03:13
to respond to it.
48
193019
2501
03:15
"Me neither."
49
195520
1530
03:17
Technically this is correct, and you should probably use this in maybe business situations
50
197050
4880
03:21
or those kind of formal situations, but in daily spoken English, you are definitely going
51
201930
4820
03:26
to hear people say, "Me either."
52
206750
2790
03:29
This is grammatically incorrect, but native speakers use this a lot.
53
209540
3919
03:33
And I don't know exactly why, but I kind of feel like it's because we feel a little strange
54
213459
4780
03:38
using the word neither because we don't use it that often, and we use the word either
55
218239
5261
03:43
a lot.
56
223500
1000
03:44
So maybe people just feel a little more comfortable saying, "Oh yeah, me either.
57
224500
4049
03:48
I don't like politics, too."
58
228549
2140
03:50
But technically, it should be me neither.
59
230689
1940
03:52
So in this situation, you've got two options, but technically me neither is a little better.
60
232629
5611
03:58
The second pair of commonly-misused words in English is actually and now.
61
238240
7440
04:05
If you speak a Romance language, listen carefully.
62
245680
3309
04:08
I'm going to give you a sentence, and I'm going to give you two options, so you can
63
248989
3590
04:12
guess what this sentence means.
64
252579
2031
04:14
I can't believe that I actually fell asleep on the plane.
65
254610
3150
04:17
I never fall asleep on flights.
66
257760
2160
04:19
Does this mean, number one, now I fell asleep?
67
259920
5510
04:25
Or number two, in reality I feel asleep?
68
265430
4180
04:29
What does this mean?
69
269610
2240
04:31
Think about that word actually.
70
271850
1800
04:33
Well, don't listen to your heart when you're trying to guess which one's correct.
71
273650
5140
04:38
It's going to lead you astray.
72
278790
2010
04:40
If you speak French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, a Romance language, you probably
73
280800
6910
04:47
have a word in your language that looks like the word actually, like the word “actuellement”
74
287710
6130
04:53
or maybe “atualmente.”
75
293840
1510
04:55
I don't know how to say it in Portuguese.
76
295350
3570
04:58
But there's a word that looks almost exactly like the word actually and it means no in
77
298920
4641
05:03
your language.
78
303561
1099
05:04
But, in English, don't listen to your heart.
79
304660
4090
05:08
In English, this means in reality.
80
308750
2730
05:11
It does not mean now.
81
311480
2440
05:13
So we are comparing something to reality.
82
313920
4150
05:18
Let's take a look at a couple examples.
83
318070
2090
05:20
The food looked strange, but actually, it tasted good.
84
320160
6840
05:27
Here we have a comparison between the way the food looked, which was strange, and the
85
327000
5390
05:32
way the food tasted, which was good.
86
332390
3150
05:35
So we have reality, the taste, and the way it looked, maybe the way I perceived it in
87
335540
5730
05:41
my mind.
88
341270
1000
05:42
The other day I was going to go to a museum, and I said, "Oh, we can't go to the museum
89
342270
3480
05:45
because I saw that it's closed on Mondays."
90
345750
2500
05:48
And my friend said, "Actually, in the summer it's open on Mondays."
91
348250
7130
05:55
So she was comparing my reality to her reality, that well, in reality, it's open on Mondays
92
355380
8930
06:04
in the summertime.
93
364310
1000
06:05
So she was correcting my reality.
94
365310
2340
06:07
Or, you might say, "She's actually dating someone?
95
367650
3590
06:11
I can't believe it."
96
371240
1940
06:13
This is a shocking reality, like in our first sentence.
97
373180
2820
06:16
"I actually fell asleep on the flight?"
98
376000
2760
06:18
You could say, "She's actually dating someone?"
99
378760
3420
06:22
Here we're comparing what I thought would happen, that she would never date someone,
100
382180
4540
06:26
to the reality, "Who, she's actually dating someone."
101
386720
3920
06:30
What about the word now?
102
390640
2270
06:32
This means in this moment, at this moment.
103
392910
4170
06:37
This is a little more straightforward and easy than the word actually.
104
397080
4430
06:41
But, let's talk about a couple sample sentences anyway.
105
401510
2750
06:44
I can't watch the movie because I have to study now.
106
404260
3920
06:48
At this moment, I have to study.
107
408180
3560
06:51
He finished his degree, and now he's a mechanical engineer.
108
411740
4330
06:56
All right, let's go to the last pair of commonly-misused words in American English.
109
416070
5380
07:01
I have a little test for you.
110
421450
1480
07:02
I want to know which one of these two sentences do you think is correct.
111
422930
4340
07:07
Although it was raining, we still went on a hike.
112
427270
3760
07:11
Though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
113
431030
4020
07:15
The two words here are although and though.
114
435050
3070
07:18
Which one of these feels the most correct to you?
115
438120
4060
07:22
I have some bad news.
116
442180
1440
07:23
This was a trick question.
117
443620
1300
07:24
Both of these are grammatically correct, but we use neither of these in daily conversation.
118
444920
8770
07:33
The word although is rarely used in daily conversation.
119
453690
3430
07:37
It feels a little bit formal.
120
457120
1730
07:38
The only way that I use it is when I'm talking about changing my mind.
121
458850
3510
07:42
I could say, "Oh, the wedding was so boring, although the food was pretty good."
122
462360
6670
07:49
So I'm changing my mind about the wedding.
123
469030
2350
07:51
The wedding was boring, okay, although the food was pretty good.
124
471380
5300
07:56
So there was one thing that was good about it, the food.
125
476680
3650
08:00
This is almost the same as adding the word but.
126
480330
2800
08:03
The wedding was boring, but the food was pretty good.
127
483130
4460
08:07
What about the word though?
128
487590
2600
08:10
What's wrong with saying, "Though it was raining, we still went on a hike."
129
490190
5340
08:15
Well, we hardly ever use the word though at the beginning of a sentence.
130
495530
5390
08:20
It sounds too stiff and formal.
131
500920
2750
08:23
Though it was raining ... No, we hardly ever use this.
132
503670
3780
08:27
If you want to use the word though at the beginning, it's better to add the word even.
133
507450
6390
08:33
Even though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
134
513840
4110
08:37
That sounds much more natural.
135
517950
2060
08:40
Let's go back to that wedding example, the boring wedding.
136
520010
2710
08:42
You might say, "The wedding was boring, but the food was pretty good though."
137
522720
7610
08:50
We're using the word though at the end to indicate that there's kind of an exception.
138
530330
5200
08:55
Oh, the wedding was boring overall, but the food was good though.
139
535530
7530
09:03
You could even take out the word but and make two sentences.
140
543060
2940
09:06
The wedding was boring.
141
546000
1480
09:07
The food was good though.
142
547480
1770
09:09
Okay, great.
143
549250
1580
09:10
If you'd like to study the word though in depth, I recommend checking out this lesson
144
550830
4470
09:15
that I made up here that uses a lot of examples and all of the different nuances of the word
145
555300
4930
09:20
though.
146
560230
1000
09:21
All right, before we go, let's do a quick review.
147
561230
2080
09:23
I don't want cake or ice cream for dessert.
148
563310
4000
09:27
I don't want either.
149
567310
1980
09:29
I don't like politics.
150
569290
1990
09:31
Me neither.
151
571280
1310
09:32
I can't believe that I actually fell asleep on the flight.
152
572590
3900
09:36
The food looked strange, but it was actually good.
153
576490
3640
09:40
Actually, the museum is open on Mondays in the summer.
154
580130
4340
09:44
I can't watch a movie because I have to study now.
155
584470
3710
09:48
The wedding was kind of boring, although the food was pretty good.
156
588180
4550
09:52
The wedding was kind of boring, but the food was pretty good though.
157
592730
4810
09:57
Even though it was raining, we still went on a hike.
158
597540
3280
10:00
I hope you enjoyed this quick but intense common mistakes correction lesson.
159
600820
4610
10:05
I want to know in the comments which one of these mistakes did you used to make but now
160
605430
5570
10:11
I hope you won't make it anymore because you know the correct way to use these commonly-misused
161
611000
4280
10:15
words.
162
615280
1000
10:16
Thanks so much for learning English with me, and I'll see you again next Friday for a new
163
616280
3970
10:20
lesson here on my YouTube channel.
164
620250
2050
10:22
Bye.
165
622300
1000
10:23
The next step is to download my free e-book, Five Steps to Becoming a Confident English
166
623300
5870
10:29
Speaker.
167
629170
1000
10:30
You'll learn what you need to do to speak confidently and fluently.
168
630170
3910
10:34
Don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel for more free lessons.
169
634080
3730
10:37
Thanks so much.
170
637810
1000
10:38
Bye.
171
638810
500
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.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7