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Today we're studying English with news.  We're looking at how people speak so quickly   and so smoothly while still being clear. Two news  hosts. One doctor, whose being interviewed and   we are going to study their beautiful voices to  find tips that can help you with English fluency. Let’s start right off with  Gayle King’s first sentence. This morning we're looking at increased screen  time during the pandemic is affecting our vision. Increased screen time. So, right  away she’s giving us an example   of one of the main points that Americans do  for smoothness changing T pronunciations. In   this case, the ED ending of increased is  a T sound. Increased. Increased, tt.   But she said increased screen time with  no T. Listen. I’ll slow that down for you. No T, no ED ending. One of the rules of  pronunciation of T is that we often drop the   sound between two other consonants. In this  case, S and S. So the past tense, increased   sounds just like the present tense increase  because we dropped the T. And we’ll hear T   pronunciations dropped or changed all the time.  Why? Let’s look at the pronunciation of T. T,   a stop of air, a release, it’s a sharp sound.  But the character of American English has a lot   of smoothness. No sharp points. We value  linking and smoothness from word to word.   So by dropping the T here, it’s a smoother  link. With the T, increased screen time.   Increased screen time. Not that smooth. Let’s  drop the T. Increase screen time. More smooth.   More sloppy, more lazy, more drunk sounding. Maybe  that’s what it feels like to you if your native   language is very sharp and clear. Embracing this  sloppiness can help you find your American voice   as you speak English. You know, the rules for how  Americans pronounce ED endings are actually pretty   complicated. I’ll put a link to the playlist that  covers that topic in the video description. Let’s   listen to Gayle again. But first, if you like  this video or you’re learning something new,   please like and subscribe with notifications,  continue your studies with me every Tuesday. No T in increased. Just in time. It’s  important that as you study a tip like this,   you also practice it. We’re going to  play it again. Twice in slow motion,   say it with her the second time. Then twice at  regular pace, say it her out loud the second time. This morning we're looking at how increased screen time during the pandemic is affecting our vision-- Let’s keep going. Since this pandemic first hit the average screen   time per person has spiked more  than thirteen hours a day that’s a lot. One of the ways thirteen is  different from thirty is the T.   Thirteen. That’s a true like what Gayle did. Thirteen Thirteen. She did first syllable stress,  thirteen. You’ll hear it both ways. Thirteen   and thirteen. Thirty always has first  syllable stress and always has a flap T. Let’s keep going. According to Eyesafe Nielsen estimates  of 60 percent of people in one recent   survey say they were worried about  how this will affect their eyes. Affect their eyes. Looking at the text, what  do you notice about the T in affect? It comes   between two other consonant sounds. The K  sound before it and the TH sound after it.   The T may have been dropped, was it? Let’s listen. affect their-- Affect their. No T. Affect their eyes.  Try that with me. Affect their eyes.   Affect their eyes. Let’s keep going. Doctors also say they’re seeing uptick in  vision issues like dry eye yup, I got that.   Doctor Christopher Starr, he  was an ophthalmologist said,   while Cornell medical in,  medicine rather in New York. Did you hear how she corrected herself?  She misspoke, she corrected it and then   she said rather. So the word she meant  wasn’t medical rather it was medicine. While Cornell medical in,  medicine rather in New York. Let’s keep going. Joins us with some solutions and whether he  thinks products like blue-like glasses can help.   Good morning to you doctor, good to see you. What a nice greeting she gave him. Good morning to you doctor, good to see you. Let’s talk about that phrase “Good to see you”.  This is a phrase I use quite a lot when I spend   times with friends or family. It’s so good  to see you. Do you see we have one letter T   here in the word “to”? To is a word that reduces  and that means we change a sound. We almost always   change the vowel to the schwa and sometimes,  we change the true T to a flap T. The flap   T sounds like the D in American English. The D  between vowels. So here it comes after a D and   guess what? She just attaches the schwa to good.  Goodto, goodto, good to see you. Take a listen. good to see you. Now since this is a common phrase, let’s  practice it. You’ll hear it in slow motion twice,   say it out loud the second time. Sing that song.   Good to see you. Then you’ll hear it at regular  pace twice, say it with her the second time. Let’s keep going. Hi Gayle, how are you? I’m alright with my dry eyes sitting up here but a   lot of people are looking at  their screens more than ever. A lot of. This three-word phrase is very common.  The T comes between two vowels and pretty much   all the time, a native speaker will make this  a flap T. You won’t hear a true T. A lot of,   a lot of. It’s a flap T linking,  smoothing things out. A lot of.   A lot of. You can say that V sound or not.  A lot of or a lot of. She drops the V,   that’s a reduction and of is a word that we  usually reduce. A lot of. A lot of. That phrase   begins and ends with a schwa. You want  it to be as fast and simple as possible.   A, a. A lot of. A lot of. Let’s listen  to just that in slow motion a few times. And now let’s hear it at regular pace. Changing that T, smoothing  out English. Let’s keep going. Can you explain why it’s such a bad, why  it’s bad for your eyesight to begin with? Yeah, it’s multifactorial. We call it the  “Computer Vision Syndrome”. And it uh,  it combines-- It combines. We’ve studied a drop T, a flap T  and now Dr. Starr is giving us an example of   another way we change the T, the true T sound.  It’s a stop T. For this we stop the air. It.   But we skipped that T release. Instead,  we’re going to the next word. So there’s   really a quick stop of air and that’s the  stop T. That’s not actually a sound rather   it’s an abrupt stop of sound. It combines.  It combines. Let’s look back at that stop.   Here, I slowed down the clip to  just twenty five percent and you   can see the volume of the voice below.  Let’s just listen to this clip once. This gap here is the stop T. Let’s take just this  part here and listen to it by itself so we can see   is it really silent, is there  really a stop of air of sound.   So I’ve isolated just that  spot let’s listen to it.   Sort of strange isn’t it? It’s just the room noise  really. He hasn’t really engaged his voice here.   Let’s go back to the original clip.   There’s another spot over here where we see  something similar and guess what that is. It’s   the B on combines, combines, bb, B is also a  stop consonant. Let’s listen to this phrase again. So it becomes ihh, ihh.   And then a little stop of air, and then the next  word. So, true True T, tt, Flap T, [flap] drop   T and now stop T. These are our four T  sounds. Let’s listen again to this stop. It combines-- Actually there’s one more kind of  T. Let’s see if we can find it. Both eyes strain from just staring at the  computers which are right in front of you. Okay there we had it. Eye strain. When  we have a T followed by R like in train,   try or in this case, strain. It’s  pretty common for that T to become a CH.   S-CH-rain. Strain. It’s not very strong  but it’s not a T, a T either. T,t, train.   It's more common to hear ch, ch  train.. It’s light. C h,ch, strain.   We’re going to listen to just strain in slow  motion. You won’t hear T but you will hear CH. strain-- So when do you do a true T? T. Let’s  keep listening and I’ll tell you. For all those hours as you  said thirteen hours of more,   but it also when we’re on the computers,  when we’re staring and fatiguing our eyes-- There were several true Ts there. Thirteen  hours with a true, ttt teen. Thirteen.   Also fatiguing, tt, fatiguing. In these  cases, the T sound begins a stressed syllable.   Thirteen, fatigue. So a T that starts a stressed  syllable is a true T. Unless it’s part of the   TR cluster then it’s probably a CH. Fatigue.  Fatiguing. A T is usually a stop T when it’s at   the end of a thought group or followed by another  consonant. For example “It combines “or “what”?   End of the thought group stop T. A T is  usually a flap T between vowels like ‘a lot of’  [flap] a lot of. But not if that starts a stressed  syllable. Look a t fatiguing. The T sound there   is between two vowels but it starts  a stressed syllable so it’s a true T.   A T is also a flap T after an R before  a vowel like in party. Rarara, party.   A T is often dropped between two other consonants  like “Affect their”, affect their eyes and there’s   also one other time where we often drop the T.  We’re going to skip ahead to find an example. Uh taking breaks we recommend  every twenty minutes or so. Twenty. Dropping the T after N, that’s  a common pronunciation. Internet,   twenty, I want another. Internet. Drop T. Twenty.  Drop T. I want another. Drop T. The doctor said   twenty several times. Sometimes a true T but  most of the time it’s dropped. Let’s listen. Uh taking breaks we recommend every twenty  minutes or so. Take a break, look away,   look into the distance at an object that’s twenty  feet away of further. Looking out the window   is actually perfect for twenty seconds or more.  That’s what we used to call the 20-20-20 Rule-- There’s another broadcaster in on this interview.  Let’s hear what he’s doing with his Ts. It can be a really hard to take a break from this. Hard to take a break. Hard to. This is just  like when Gayle said good to, good to see you.   Hard to, hard to take a break. Taking the word to,  making it just the schwa, attaching it to a word   that ends with a D. Hard to. Hard to. Say that  with me. Hard to, hard to. Hard to take a break. It can be a really hard to take a break from this. Oh you know, I thought of   one other time we usually have a  true T. When it’s part of a cluster. Looking at a window is actually perfect. Perfect. Perfect, ttt. True T release. But you  know what? If that links in to another word that   starts with a consonant like ‘It’s the perfect  place’. then we'll usually drop the T because it   comes between two consonants. Perfect place, no T.  Or at the end of a thought group “It’s perfect!”.   A true T release. Are you feeling confused? The  more you study spoken English, now that you know   the rules, the more you’ll notice this and the  more natural it become for you to do this. Now   where going to skip around in the interview.  If you want to watch the full interview,   I’ll put a link to that in the video description.  But we’ll skip around here for a short quiz. I’ll   play a snippet and I’ll highlight in red the  T to listen for. You tell me if it’s a true T,   flap T, stop T or if it’s dropped.  You’ll hear each example three times. Eight blinks. Eight blinks.  That’s a stop T. Listen again. Try this one: Did you hear T? I did. That’s a true T.  A T at the end of the word at the end   of a thought group, that could also  been a stop T. But he did a true T. What about this one? Computer [flap]. Computer,  flap T. T between vowel sounds,   doesn’t starts a stressed syllable, that’s a flap. This next one is tricky. You’ll  be listening for three Ts. Irritated. Irritated. The first T  is a true T because of this mark.   This is the mark of secondary stress.  Stressed syllable even if it’s secondary   stress that will be a true T. But the  second sound there, T between vowels,   not starting a stressed syllable, that’s a  flap T. Same with gritty. Irritated and gritty. By changing so many ttt, sharp true Ts were  able to smooth out the sound of English.   In coming weeks and months, we’re going to  study more ways to smooth out your speech   to sound more natural and fluent when speaking  English. Keep your learning going now with this   video and be sure you subscribe and have  notifications turned on for the channel   so you’ll know when something new is coming your  way. Also, be sure to check out my online school   at rachelsenglishacademy.com to train your  body and your voice for more comfortable   English speaking. That’s it and thanks  so much for using Rachel’s English.
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Channel: Rachel's English
Views: 130,605
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Keywords: learn English with news, Learn English speaking with the news, English news, American news, news in english, Free English lesson based on current events, Free English lesson, How to Learn English Vocabulary, English conversation training, Rachel's english, rachel english, learning english with news, learning English With CBS News, learn english with news video, English With CBS News, cBS News, us news, learn english vocabulary, english pronunciation, English vocabulary
Id: aMBm75dFfXo
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Length: 16min 47sec (1007 seconds)
Published: Tue Apr 20 2021
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