In the US, summer is for sand, sun, and blockbuster
movies. And this summer, we're going to use those movies to learn English and study how
to sound American. Every video this summer is going to be a study English with movies video. We'll pull scenes from the summer's hottest movies, as well as favorite movies from years past. It's amazing what we can discover by studying even a small bit of English dialogue. We'll study how to understand movies, what makes Americans sound American, and of
course, any interesting vocabulary phrasal verbs or idioms that come up in the scenes
we study. I call this kind of exercise a Ben Franklin Exercise. First, we'll watch the
scene. Then we'll do an in-depth analysis of what we hear together. This is going to
be so much fun! Be sure to tell your friends and spread the word that all summer long,
every tuesday, we're studying English with movies here at Rachel's English. If you're new to my channel click subscribe
and don't forget the notification button. Let's get started. First, the scene. You want to get personal. Where were you born? Huntsville, Alabama. But technically, I don't
remember that part. >> First job?
>> Soldier. Straight out of high school. >> Left the ranks a full bird colonel.
>> Then? >> Spy.
>> Where? >> It was the Cold War, we were everywhere.
>> Now? Been riding a desk for the past six years,
trying to figure out where future enemies are coming from. Never occurred to me they
would be coming from above. Now the analysis. You want to get personal. I love this sentence because there's such contrast between the stressed and unstressed
syllables and words. He really stresses the word 'you' at the beginning. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. And in the stressed
syllable of 'per', the first syllable is also stressed, but the three words 'want to get'
are all much lower in pitch, much less clear, flatter than the 'you', up-down shape, higher
pitch of the stressed word 'you'. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. Listen to just 'want to get'. Want to get-- Want to get-- want to get-- want to get--
Much less clear than 'you'. Now listen to the word 'you' with 'want to get' together,
stressed and then unstressed. You want to get-- A big difference there in the quality of those
stressed versus unstressed syllables. We have a reduction. 'want to' becomes 'wanna'. Want to get-- want to get-- want to get-- And the word 'get' has a Stop T because the
next word begins with a consonant. Get, get, get, get, want to get, want to get. Want to get--
want to get-- want to get personal. Hey guys! I wanted to pop in here to tell you that Skillshare is again sponsoring this video. Now, I know that you do a lot of learning online and I do too! And Skillshare is a great place to go and to continue that learning. You may have noticed about a month ago, I made a video called my morning routine. And in that video, as I was making it, I found out that vlogging is actually kind of hard. It's definitely its own separate skill. I found Skillshare has a course from an awesome YouTuber on vlogging that I'd like to take. Come to Skillshare and search on whatever your interest is. You'll find courses in English so you'll be able to study vocabulary, and phrases used when talking about this topic you're passionate about. It's twice the learning! If you sign up, tell me in the comments below what course you end up taking I'm so interested in learning more about you guys! Follow this link or the link in the video description for your own code to get 2 months FREE! Okay, let's get back to the analysis. You want to get personal. Then the unstressed syllables, son--, al--,
both said really quickly, those both have the schwa, and in both of these cases, they're
followed by a syllabic consonant, that means the consonant takes over the schwa. We don't
make a separate vowel sound. So we go right from S into N. Sn, sn, sn-- person, person.
And then right from N into L, without making any kind of vowel sound. Nal, nal, nal, nal. Now, this is a Dark L, which does have a vowel-like quality. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. You want to get personal. Whoa! Different day, different outfit, important
announcement. Did you know that with this video, I made a free audio lesson that you
can download? In fact, I'm doing this for each one of the youtube videos I'm making
this summer, all 11 of the learn English with movies videos. So follow this link, or find
the link in the video description to get your free downloadable audio lesson. It's where
you're going to train all of the things that you've learned about pronunciation in this
video. Back to the lesson. Now, here is how Americans make the L in this
case. It's a Dark L, it's at the end of a thought group, it doesn't link into anything.
We make that without lifting the tongue tip. Can you do that too? We make the Dark L with
the back part of the tongue. Uhl, uhl. Back part of the tongue presses down a little bit,
uhl, uhl, while the tongue tip stays forward. I find that most of my students are so heavily
trained in lifting their tongue tip, that it's a very difficult habit to break. I want
to challenge you to do this. Per-so-nal-- uhl-- your tongue is lifted for the N, bring
it back down, nal-- uhl-- and use the back of the tongue to make the dark sound for the
Dark L. Personal. Where were you born? She's speaking quickly here without much emotion,
very straight faced. Where were you born? Where and born, both are stressed words there. Where were you born? Where were you born? Where were you born? Where were you born?
They both have that up-down shape, were you-- on the other hand, are much flatter, much
faster. Were you, were you, were you. The word 'born' this would be written with the
AW as in law vowel, followed by R. When these two sounds come together in the same syllable,
like here, the AW as in law vowel is not pure. It's not AW but it's owh. My lips round more,
the tongue pulls back a little bit, born, born. Where were you born? Where were you born? Where were you born? Where were you born? Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't remember that part. So this is a longer thought group. He says:
Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't remember that part. No brakes. If it's no
brakes, then that means it's one thought group. So I've written in here with Huntsville Alabama,
on this slide, and on the next slide, is the second half of the thought group, but he didn't
actually put a break there. Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't
remember that part. Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't
remember that part. Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't
remember that part. The stress of these multi-syllable words,
we have huntsville, first syllable stress, Alabama, so the most stressed syllable is
bam--, and the first level has a little secondary stress, so I would put the primary stress
marker there, secondary stress marker there. The other two A's are schwas. Actually, just
a few weeks ago on the channel, I made a video of how to go over the pronunciation of the
50 states and their capitals, we talked about the four A's in this word. Click here or in
the video description to check out that video that goes over the pronunciation of the 50
states. Huntsville, Alabama Huntsville, Alabama Huntsville, Alabama but technically, I don't
remember that part. But technically, I don't remember that part.
Our stressed syllables, very clear, but tech-- but technically, I don't remember that part.
Those have higher pitch, they have the up-down shape, that curve. The rest is a little bit
flatter. It's either leading up to a peak, or falling away from a peak. But tech-- but, but-- But technically, I don't remember that part. But technically, I don't remember that part. But technically, I don't remember that part. Now we have an ending T, and a beginning T.
Those will combine into a single sound, one true T, but technically, but technically. But technically, but technically, but technically. He's pronouncing this word as three syllables,
first syllable stress, tech-- and the ch here makes a hard K sound. Tech-nic-- the C here
makes a hard K sound. Tech-nic-lly-- and then he's not pronouncing this at all, just an
LY ending then. Tech-nic-lly-- technically. Technically. Technically, I don't
remember that part. And all of these words linked together really
smoothly. Technically, I don't re-- Okay what's happening with the N apostrophe
T contraction? We have lots of different ways we pronounce that. And in this particular
case, I think I'm actually hearing the whole thing dropped. Doh remember-- doh, doh. So
we have the D consonant, oh diphthong, and then I hear that linking right on to the next
sound, which is the R. I don't remember that part. I don't remember that part. I don't remember that part. Now, it doesn't sound like 'do' because 'do'
has different sounds. It has the D consonant, and the oo vowel. So the fact that we have
this oh diphthong, that's how we know it's the negative. Doh-- don't remember. Don't
remember. But I actually, I definitely don't hear the T. For a second, I listened to it
on a loop, I was asking myself: do I hear a light quick N? I don't think I really do.
I think it's just dropped. Don't remember. Don't remember. Don't remember. Don't remember.
Doh, oh, oh, oh, oh. Just the OH diphthong right into the R. Isn't it crazy? We can pronounce
this contraction without the N apostrophe T at all, without the part that makes it a
negative. But I still hear it as that word because of the OH diphthong. I don't remember that part. I don't remember that part. I don't remember that part. Are you pronouncing this word? Remember? Try
to pronounce it with the schwa. Remember, re-re-re, remember remember, I want you to listen to just the last three
words. Remember that part. Remember that part. Kind of mumbly, it's at the end of the thought
group, it's losing the vocal energy, and when I'm listening to the word 'that', which would
have a Stop T in most cases because it's followed by the P here, I actually think I am also
not hearing that. That part, that part, that part, that part, that part. I think he drops
it. TH, quick AA vowel, and then right into the P. That part, that part, that part, that
part. The ending T, he's also not really pronouncing
that too clearly. I would still write that as a Stop T, I don't think it's dropped, that
would sound like par-- and I don't hear that. I hear: part, part, and that more abrupt end
is the Stop T. But let's listen to these last three words on a loop again and think about
how you have to simplify everything in your mouth to be able to say this this quickly
and this unclearly. It's a little bit mumbled. This is pretty common for how words come out at the end of a thought group. They're definitely less clear. Remember that part. First job? First job? First job? Two stressed words.
They're both a little bit longer. First job? And pitch goes up at the end because she's
asking the question. She wants to know what was his first job. Notice how we're pronouncing
the T here. This T is dropped because it comes between two consonants. That's really common
to do that when we have an ending cluster like the ST cluster in 'first' or 'just' or
'must'. When it's followed by a word that begins with a consonant, you'll hear that
T dropped. That helps to link the two words together more smoothly. So right from the
S into the J sound. First job. Also note we have the letter O here. I know my students
see that and they want to do some lip rounding. No lip rounding in this sound. It's the AH
as in father vowel. It is not job, actually, this reminds me of Tom who's a Rachel's English
teacher. His name is the same, single syllable has the letter O. It makes the AH as in father
vowel. And even so, almost all of his students say something like: Tom, Tom, instead of Tom,
ah-ah, with no lip rounding, even though he reminds them it's not an OH sound, it's the
AH vowel. We see the letter O, we have such a strong
association. But in English, one of the challenges is to break your association between what
you see on the page, and the actual natural American pronunciation. Because as you can
see, we change things quite a bit. We drop sounds, vowels are not what we think they
are, so the vowel in 'job' and in the word 'Tom' is the AH as in father vowel. Oh-- First job? First job? >> First job?
>> Soldier. Soldier. Soldier. Two-syllable word, first
syllable stress, soldier. DI here is pronounced as a J sound, which we would write in IPA: dj-- soldier, soldier. Soldier. Soldier. Soldier. And the L here, this is the break of the syllable.
Soldier. So the L comes after the vowel. That makes it a Dark L. He made it without lifting
his tongue tip. I make it without lifting my tongue tip. Soldier. Soldier. I'm not lifting
my tongue tip at all there, I'm using the back of my tongue for a more dark sound, for
the Dark L. I challenge you to do the same thing. Do not lift your tongue tip. An L is
a Dark L when it comes after the vowel or diphthong in a syllable. Soldier. Soldier. Soldier. Soldier. Straight out of high school. Five-word thought group, the word 'straight'
and 'high', most stressed. School also has some length, but it's at the end of the thought
group, the pitch isn't as high. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. We have an STR beginning cluster, strai--
strai-- the T can come out as a CH there. Stch-- strai-- strai-- straight out of-- straight
out of-- Just make sure you make it light. Don't put
too much ch-- air in it. Strai-- strai-- then these four letters, a-I-g-h, all make the
AY diphthong. Straight out of high school. All of the words in this thought group are
really smoothly connected. We have a couple Flap T's linking words together, like connecting
'straight out'. Straight out, straight out, dadadada. Straight out ah-- straight out ah--
Another Flap T connecting here.Straight outta-- The word 'of' reduced, it's just the schwa.
Straight outta-- straight outta-- straight outta-- straight outta-- dadadadada-- two
flaps linking those words. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. Straight out of high school. High school. High school. High school. And again, we have a Dark L. I guarantee you
he is not lifting his tongue tip. Don't lift your tongue tip as you practice this. High school. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. So, the word 'left' stressed, 'ranks' also
sort of stressed, but also not totally clear. We'll talk about that in a second. Then the
last three words, even more clear, even longer. Full bird colonel. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. So the rhythm pattern of these first four
words, I would say, is still: da-da-da-da. Stressed, unstressed, stressed, unstressed.
Even though 'left' and 'ranks' are said more quickly, it really slows down then on 'full
bird colonel'. He's really stressing all three of those words. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. Left the ranks a full bird colonel. Left the ranks, left the ranks. T is dropped,
it comes between two other consonants. Left the, left the. So a quick F goes right into
the voiced TH, which doesn't come through the teeth here, because it's beginning an
unstressed word. Left the, the, the, the-- I make that sound by just pressing my tongue
on the backs of the teeth. It's not at the roof of the mouth, that would make it sound
like a d, but the tongue tip doesn't come through the teeth either. Left the, left the,
left the ranks. Left the ranks a-- Left the ranks-- The N here is the NG sound because it's followed
by the letter k. Ranks, ranks, ranks. And I really feel like it's very subtle here.
He says this word quickly, a little unclearly. It almost sounds like 'rakes' without the
ng to me. Left the ranks-- left the ranks-- left the
ranks a full bird colonel. Full-- we have a Dark L. Don't lift your tongue
tip. Try it: full, full, full bird. 'bird' has the UR vowel, and that's overtaken by
the R so you don't actually need to try to make a vowel at all. Make the B sound, the
R sound, the D sound. Bird, bird. Now the word 'colonel'. Okay, that's obviously... This is one of the weirdest words in American English as far as letters and sounds. Full bird colonel. Full bird colonel. Full
bird colonel. We have the K sound, which we get from the
letter C, then we have the same sound combination as in 'bird', the ur vowel and the R consonant.
Where's the R, exactly? So where's the O? Don't know. Where's this O? Don't know. It's
just very strange. I don't know how this word evolved, it'd be interesting to look into
that. Colonel. Two-syllable word, first syllable stress, K sound, R sound: ker-- ker--, and
then a very quick: nl, nl, nl. And Dark L sound at the end. Colonel. Colonel. Then? Then? Voice goes up in pitch, she's asking a question, it's not a statement. She's saying what's
next? Then? Then? Spy. Spy. So his voice has a little bit of popcorn
quality. There's not a full engagement of the air. Quick up-down shape of a stressed
syllable. That is a statement. It comes down. Spy. Spy. Where? Where? Now this one also comes down and she also has a popcorn quality of her voice. Uhhhh--
where? Where? Instead of: where? Where? Which has more volume, more air. Where? Now, why does this one go down in pitch, where
the other question statement went up in pitch? That's a great question. The general rule
is for the most part, if it's a yes/no question, it goes up in pitch, if not, it goes down
in pitch. But there are always exceptions when she said 'then?' going up here, that
was not a yes/no question, but going up made us know it was a question. Here, the pitch
of 'where' it goes down. We still know it's a question. Where? The word 'where' as a statement wouldn't exist,
wouldn't really make sense. And I'm trying to think: would I ever make the intonation
of 'where' go up? And I would. I would if someone had told me where something was, and
I didn't hear them, and I needed them to say it again, then I would say: where? But this
is her first time asking the question: where? She's making it a statement. Where? It was the cold war, we were everywhere. Okay, this is interesting. We have: it was
the cold war. It was the cold war. Stress on 'cold'. It was the-- those three words,
hmm, how are they pronounced? It was the cold war-- I'm hearing a Z sound, I'm hearing a schwa.
It was the cold war-- it was the cold war-- Now, I know that the phrase grammatically
would be 'it was the cold war.' but he says those three words really quickly, just combines
them into two sounds. It was the cold war-- it was the cold war-- It was the cold war-- We were everywhere. Then the words: we were everywhere. We were--
pitch goes up, energy goes up. We were eh-- we have the peak on the EH vowel, everywhere.
And then the pitch comes down. We were everywhere. We were everywhere. All connected, smoothly
together. We were everywhere. We were everywhere. >> We were everywhere.
>> Now? Now? Now? Again, her pitch goes up, showing
it's a question. Now, this is a word that we could make as a statement. Now? Like if
someone said: hey rachel! When are you leaving? Now. So by making the intonation go up, now?
It's inviting that question by a conversation. Now? Now? Now? Now? Been riding a desk for the past six years, trying to figure out where future enemies
are coming from. Then he has a really long thought group. Actually,
let's add the end of this thought group here to this slide. So we have lots of words that
are a little bit longer, a little bit clearer. Been riding a desk for the past six years-- Been riding a desk for the past six years-- Been riding a desk for the past six years-- Been riding a desk for the past six years, trying to figure out where our future enemies are coming from. Trying to figure out where our future enemies
are coming from. Future. A little bit of length on 'enemies
co--', but we have some reductions, what are you noticing? First let's look at the first word. Been riding, EE is pronounced as the letter IH, that's
actually not a reduction, but it's just the pronunciation, but it's said very quickly. Been, been, been, been. Been riding, been
riding-- Been riding, been riding, been riding a desk-- Riding a desk-- riding a-- riding a-- NG sound is changed to just an N sound. Ridin a-- And that links right into the schwa. Ridin a-- ridin a-- Been riding a, Now, we have 'desk for the'. I want you to listen to those three words, and listen especially for the K. Been riding a desk for the-- Desk for the-- desk for the-- desk for the--
K is dropped. Comes between two consonant sounds, we sometimes do that when we're linking things together. Desk for the-- Been riding a desk for the-- Desk for the-- desk for the-- 'for the', both said really quickly, we have
a for reduction, the word 'the', tongue tip does not need to come through the teeth for that TH, you can just touch it at the back of the teeth, the back of the front teeth.
For the, for the, for the, for the. How fast can you say that? For the, for the, for the. Desk for the, desk for the. Desk for the-- desk for the-- desk for the
past six years. Now look, let's look ahead. We have STS, a cluster, the T comes between two other constant sounds. Do you think it's dropped? I think
it is. Let's hear. The past six years. The past six years. The
past six years. Past six years. Past six years. Past six years. Okay, yup. It is dropped. Past six. Those two words connected with the single S and actually, I'm gonna write a little bit of length on that word too. Past six years, past
six years. I think they all have a little bit of length to them. The past six years. The past six years. The
past six years, trying to figure out where future enemies are coming from. Trying to figure out-- okay, that has... That's
not how it's pronounced. The TR, I am hearing a CHR, trying, trying, that's really common. Now the ING, again, he's dropping the G sound. He's making that an N sound. Tryin, tryin,
tryin. The word 'to' this word is reduced to just the schwa. We don't usually drop the
beginning sound, we do make that a Flap T sometimes. But I have noticed we do sometimes
drop that altogether when the sound before is an N, and that's what's happening here.
Tryna-- tryna-- tryna-- Trying to figure out, Trying to figure out, trying to figure out,
trying to figure out. Figure out. Figure out. Figure out. Figure out. Also said pretty quickly, out, we have a Stop
T here, figure out, figure out, figure out. Because the next word begins with a consonant,
the W sound. Trying to figure out, where our future enemies-- WH word but he makes just a clean W sound.
There's no wh, wh, wh, where in front, it's just: where, where. The word 'our' pretty
unclear. I would probably write that schwa R, it's reduced. Where our, where our, where
our, where our. Where our future enemies-- where our future
enemies-- where our future enemies-- You know, I would normally write this schwa
R, but I actually almost think I'm just hearing it like a schwa. Where our-- where our future--
where our future enemies are-- That's not too common, but I do think that's
what he's doing here. Where our future-- where our future enemies are-- He's just speaking so quickly. This particular
word is said so quickly. Now, when it's all linked together, I totally get it. It would
sound weird to pronounce 'our' that way if it wasn't linked in as part of the sentence. Where our future enemies-- This word 'our' and this word 'are', both
often reduced to something that sounds pretty much the same, schwa R. Of course, over here,
I said the R was dropped but here, I do hear it. Enemies are-- enemies are-- enemies are--
ending Z sound linking right into the next sound. Zar, zar-- enemies are-- Enemies are-- coming
from-- Are coming from-- are coming from-- are coming
from-- so he has three ING verbs here, and for each one of them, he's changed the NG
sound into an end N sound. I do tell my students not to do this all the time. It just doesn't sound quite right, mixed in with other things that students tend to do. There will be some
native speakers that do it all the time, that will definitely sound like an accent, a regional
accent in the us, and that's fine. Especially, you know, if you live there, you might want
to pick that up. Although people in the US move around so much, I can't say that, you
know, everyone in a particular region speaks that way. A lot of people would speak with
a more standard accent. And that's what I teach. So I just want to talk about that here, he's
done it three times, a student watching this might think: oh, it's... We should be doing
this all the time. I wouldn't say that. The last word 'from', not reduced. Sometimes,
we reduce this word to: from, from, but the vowel is not reduced. It is the UH as in butter
vowel. We generally don't reduce the last word in a sentence, or a thought group. Coming from, Never occurred to me they would be coming from above. So let's talk about stress. Never occurred
to me they would be coming from above. And the most stress on that last word because this is what is unusual. The enemies are coming from above. Never occurred to me they would be coming
from above. Never occurred to me they would be coming
from above. Never occurred to me they would be coming
from above. Also, grammatically, we would have the word
'it' here. The word 'it' is implied. It never occurred to me. But he doesn't say that, he
just says: never occurred to me-- Never occurred to me-- Never occurred to me-- Never occurred to me-- Never occurred to me-- So in the stressed syllable of occur, we have that R vowel again. Occur-- ur-- occured-- So you don't need to try to make a vowel there. It's really the R sound. Occurred. Occurred. Occurred. A little bit of stress on the first syllable
of ne-- never uh-- then the R links into the schwa. Never uh, never uh, never occurred-- Never occurred-- to me-- Never occurred to me-- occurred to me-- so
the ED ending here is a little light D sound, not released. Then he makes the word 'to'
with a true T, and the vowel is reduced to the schwa. Occurred to-- occurred to-- do
you hear that D sound in my vocal cords before I make the T? Occurred to-- occurred to me--
occurred to me-- Occurred to me-- occurred to me-- occurred
to me they would be coming from above. So we have the stressed syllable: occurred--
then we have 'to me they would be', all of these words before the next stressed word. To me they would be coming-- To me they would be coming-- To me they would be coming-- To me they would be, to me they would be, to me they would be, to me they would be. A little bit flatter in pitch but you don't
have much of that up-down shape. To me they would be, to me they would be, to me they would be. Now, I hope you're noticing the L in 'would' is always silent. To me they
would be, to me they would be. A very light D sound in the vocal cords here,
again, not released. That would be: they would be. They would be. They would be. We don't hear that. They would be, they would
be, they would be. That's what we hear. They would be. Little D sound, the vocal cords
are vibrating, that's a voiced sound, but it's not released, I go right into the B sound. To me they would be-- coming from above. Coming from above.
We have interesting stress here. He's playing with it a little bit because of the surprise
of the enemies coming from above, from outer space. Coming from above. Da-da-da-da-da.
Really stressing that last syllable. Now, here we have an ING word, he does pronounce that as an ING word. He makes the NG sound instead of an N sound. Coming, coming, coming,
coming, coming from, coming from. Now, here I probably would write this as the
from reduction with a schwa instead of the UH as in butter vowel. Coming from, coming
from above. Coming from above. Coming from above. The last thing I want to talk about is he
does do a little lift here: from above. When I was practicing it one time, I did it with the link: from a, from a, from a, from above, from above. But no, it's not how he does it.
He says: from above, from above, from-- little break, above. Putting that little break there
makes that word even more stressed. If we linked it into the word before, it would sound
a little bit more conversational. But by putting a little lift there, a little break in the
sound, it brings more stress to that word. Wow. The enemies are coming from above. Coming from above. Let's listen to this whole conversation one
more time You want to get personal. Where were you born? Huntsville, Alabama. But technically, I don't
remember that part. >> First job?
>> Soldier. Straight out of high school. >> Left the ranks a full bird colonel.
>> Then? >> Spy.
>> Where? >> It was the cold war, we were everywhere.
>> Now? Been riding a desk for the past six years,
trying to figure out where future enemies are coming from. Never occurred to me they
would be coming from above. We're going to be doing a lot more of this
kind of analysis together. What movie scenes would you like to see analyzed like this?
Let me know in the comments! And if you want to see all my Ben Franklin videos, click here! You'll also find the link in the video description. That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.