Subtitles section Play video Print subtitles Today, we're taking a scene from TV. An episode of Friends. They're talking about New Year's Eve and making a pact. I say this year, no dates, we make a pact, just the six of us, dinner. We're going to study that conversation, actually, four conversations, to learn some vocabulary words, idioms, but more importantly, to study the rhythm of American English. How do Americans speak so fast? And why do they speak so fast? We'll study reductions and you'll get fast English. Also, we'll have fun talking about the culture of New Year's in the United States as we go. I make new videos every Tuesday to help you speak faster and more natural English, you'll even be watching TV without subtitles. If you like this video, or you learn something new, please give it a thumbs up and subscribe with notifications. I'd love to see you back here. For the next four weeks, we're taking four scenes, all from the same Friends episode, season 1 episode 10, all about their New Year's eve pact. We're going to do an in-depth analysis of the pronunciation. Studying this way is critical to understanding Americans and being easily understood yourself. Here's the scene we'll study today. Hey, do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? Wait, what? What is wrong with New Year's? Well, nothing for you. You have Paolo, you don't have to face the horrible pressures of this holiday. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops, man, I'm talking loud. Well, for your information, Paolo is going to be in Rome this New Year so I'll be just as pathetic as the rest of you. It's just that I'm sick of being a victim of this Dick Clark holiday. I say this year, no dates, we make a pact. Just the six of us, dinner. You know, I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. Next up is our in-depth analysis. When we study like this, you can really start to see the give and take. Stressed and unstressed, and the linking between words. These are the things that make up the character, the feel of American English. But also, they're the very things that make understanding English so hard if what you've learned is that each word is separate and fully pronounced. Hey, do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? We start with the word hey. But it's said pretty quickly, it sort of has an abrupt stop. Hey. Hey. Hey. So it still has that up down shape, but it doesn't go hey. Hey. Hey. Hey. Hey So this word can be a greeting word, when you see someone on the street that you know. Hey, how are you doing? Or you walk into work and you see a co-worker there. Hey, how are you doing today? This is not being used as a greeting here. They're already there. She probably greeted them when they walked in. Here, it's being used a little bit differently, it's just to get their attention to announce that she's about to say something. Hey. Hey. Hey,. Hey, do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? Then she asks her question. Do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? So more stress on you, do you guys know what you're doing, also doing, for New Year's, and then the event, New Year's, compound word, first word will get more stress, New Year's, like eyeball or basketball. It's the first word of a compound word that is more stressed. Do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? And it's all extremely smooth. It's not do you guys know what, but do you guys know what, do you guys know what. Knowing your stressed syllable can help you smooth things out. There's no stopping, no breaks you just smoothly glide your energy towards that stressed word. Do you guys know what you're doing. Do you guys know what you're doing. See if you can imitate it that smoothly. It might feel unclear to you, but this is what's natural in American English. do you guys know what you're doing. I would put a little bit of length on know as well. Do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? Know what you're, know what you're. Do you know what's happening here? Do you hear that? It's not what you're, but it's what you're, what you're-- do you guys know what you're doing-- When a word ends in a T and the next word begins with Y, most commonly you or your, it's pretty common to make that final T a CH instead. So it's not what you're, but what you're, what you're, what you're, what you're. And the word 'you're' reduces. It's not you're but it's said very quickly: you're, you're, you're, you're. You can't make that quickly enough. What you're, what you're, what you're doing. What you're doing, for New Year's? And then we have another reduction: for New Year's, for New Year's, it's not for, but: fur, fur, fur. And when we reduce it like we want to, we want to make sure that it glides really smoothly, connects with no break into the next word. So it's not for New Year's, but for New Year's, for New Year's, uuh. As if it's just another syllable in the same word. For New Year's. For New Year's. For New Year's? It's so different speaking this way. Most of my students have learned to make words separate, clearer, do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? But that's not at all how Americans speak, we glide it together so smoothly. No breaks in sound. Do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? New Year's is short for New Year's Eve, the night before New Year's Day, when we celebrate. If we were going to talk about New Year's Day, we would probably say all of that, if you hear just New Year's, that means the night before New Year's day. New Year's-- Gee! What? Oh my gosh, guys. I almost forgot. I want to let you know that in January, right here on this channel, I'm doing a 30 Day Vocabulary Challenge. A new video every day for 30 days, we're learning words off the academic word list over 100 words, with a download that includes quizzes to make sure you're really getting them. If you want to officially join this challenge with me, and get the download, please follow the link in the video description, or click the link right here in the card. Let's supercharge your vocabulary in January. And now back to the analysis. Gee! What? Big, up down shapes of stress there. Gee! What? Her pitch is a little bit higher. She's surprised that question got this reaction. Gee! What? The exclamation 'Gee!' the letter G there makes the Jjj-- J sound. It's not gee, gee, with a hard G, but jjj--- gee! Gee! Gee! What? Gee! What? Really light release of the true T there. It's not what, but what, super light. What? What is wrong with New Year's? What is wrong with New Year's? And then she starts laughing towards the end of her phrase. What is wrong with New Year's? What, wrong, new, our three most stressed words there. What is, I would say here the stress is going up, what is wrong with New Year's? And then on new, it starts coming down. What is wrong with New Year's? Notice how these two words link together? What is, what is, they link very smoothly with the flap T. When a word ends in a vowel or diphthong plus T, and the next word begins a vowel or diphthong, that's going to be a flap T to link: what is, what is. What is wrong with New Year's? In the word wrong, the W is silent, and actually, in the word what, the H is silent. Now, there is a pronunciation where there is a little escape of air. What, what, but that's not very common anymore. Now really we just do a clean W sound: what, what, what is wrong? What is wrong with New Year's? What is wrong with New Year's? The word with, this word is unstressed. What is wrong with New Year's? And the unvoiced TH here said so quickly, I almost don't even hear it. With New Year's? With New Year's? With New Year's? It's almost as if it's dropped to help link those words smoothly, and to help make this word 'with' said very quickly, because it's unstressed, and we want that contrast with the longer stressed words. Again, everything links together very smoothly. What is wrong with New Year's? Well, nothing for you. You have Paulo. You don't have to face the horrible pressures of this holiday. Now he has a really long thought group here. I would write it with several different periods to break it up into different sentences, when he says it, he really doesn't take any breaks. He says the whole thing connected smoothly until he gets to the end of holiday where he puts a break. Well, nothing for you. You have Paulo. You don't have to face the horrible pressures of this holiday. Well, nothing for you. Well, said very quickly and the word 'for' how was that pronounced? Well, nothing for you. Nothing for, nothing for, it's reduced, again, it's not for, it's for, and that's said quickly, it's unstressed, it's lower in pitch. Nothing for, both of these syllables unstressed, coming down from that peak of stress in 'noth--' Now this is the letter O, it makes the UH vowel like in love, butter, stuff. Nuh--nuh-- nothing for, nothing for. Nothing for, you. Nothing for you. You, stressing you, kind of an up down, and then up again, you, that really brings those changes of pitch, really brings stress to that word. Nothing for you. Nothing for you, You have Paolo. You have Paolo. You have Paolo. The peak of stress there, the stressed syllable of her boyfriend's name Paolo, and then it falls down in pitch afterwards. You and have, both go up towards that. You have, you have, you have. Do you notice he's dropping the H there. That's a common reduction in the word have. You have, you have, you have, you have, you have Paulo. You have Paolo. Linking and reductions. Such an important part to sounding natural speaking English. You have Paolo. You have Paolo. You have Paolo. You don't have to face the horrible pressures-- You don't have to face the horrible pressures-- Some stress on face, the adjective, horrible, and the noun, pressures. Both of those have first syllable stress. You don't have to face the horrible pressures. You don't have to-- now we have four words there before our stressed word face. What do you think are they pronounced? You don't have to, you don't have to. No, I doubt it. That's too clear isn't it? These are unstressed words. Let's listen to how just those four words are pronounced. You don't have to-- You don't have to-- you don't have to-- you don't have to-- you don't have to-- It's very different, isn't it? Linking together very smoothly. You don't, I would say the T there is dropped, N apostrophe T. We have a couple different pronunciations. It can be don't, with the true T, that's the least common. It can be: don't have, don't have, with a stop T, that's common, but it can also be don't have, don't have, with no T, that's also pretty common. Here, he's dropped the T completely, you don't have to, don't have, the N goes right into the AA vowel of have, because guess what? He also dropped the H just like he did here. You don't have to-- You don't have to-- You don't have to-- You don't have to-- The V very very week, the T certainly not a true T You don't have to-- And it's a very week flap T then schwa for the word to. So I'm going to say it slowly so we can hear it but of course it isn't the right pace. don't have to-- don't have to-- but it's said much more quickly. Don't have to-- don't have to-- don't have to-- You don't have to-- You don't have to-- You don't have to-- You don't have to-- If everything was said that way, Americans wouldn't be able to understand English, but it's funny, we can say half of our words that way, but when we have our stressed syllables and our stress words in there too, we understand everything. You don't have to-- face the horrible pressures of-- Face, on the other hand, is quite clear. Face the horrible, Face the horrible, face the, face the, much clearer than what we've just heard you don't have to. The word the, it's unstressed, it's a quick little word linking these two stressed syllables. The the the the the. When we have an unstressed word like this, where it begins with a voiced TH, the, this, these, those, you don't have to bring the tongue tip through. The tongue tip can touch the backs of the teeth, you don't want it at the roof of the mouth coming down, because that's going to sound like a D, duh, but just touching the backs of the teeth, the the the the, straight ahead in the back, the the the, face the horrible. Face the horrible, So the word horrible has first syllable stress. I would pronounce it with the AW as in law, followed by R. That's the most common pronunciation. When this vowel is followed by R, it's not pure, but it becomes ho-oh-oh-- horrible, a little bit more lip rounding, and the tongue shifts back a little bit more. He's pronouncing it with a vowel more like the AH vowel like in father, har har har horrible, horrible, but this one's more common. Hor hor hor horrible, horrible. Horrible, pressures of this holiday. Horrible pressures of this holiday. So we have stress on horr-- press-- hol-- also the first syllable of holiday. Horrible pressures of this holiday. Pressures of this, the unstressed syllable of the word pressures, and the words of and this , are all unstressed, said more quickly. Ssures of this, ssures of this. Pressures of this-- holiday. The word 'of', he's actually not reducing that to just the schwa. He is making the v sound. Pressures of this, of this. The word this rising up towards the peak of stress in holiday. This holiday. And notice the double S here in pressures is the SH sound. Pressures. Pressures of this holiday. Pressures of this holiday. Don't separate your words out with gaps and spaces. Link them together smoothly. Pressures of this holiday. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Man, I'm talking loud. Now, again another very long thought group. This should be written as multiple sentences, but he doesn't stop, he just keeps his energy going, linking word after word after word. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Man, I'm talking loud. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips-- Can you sense the stressed syllables there? Let's listen to just that on a loop three times. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips-- Desperate scramble to find anything with lips-- Desperate scramble to find anything with lips-- Those are our four stressed words, stressed syllables. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips-- Let's talk about the first word: desperate. So this is one of those words that can be pronounced as two syllables or three, just like family and camera. Desperate. It's a little bit more common to just make it two syllables, so instead of des-per-ate, it becomes desperate, desperate. Desperate, desperate, desperate. The first syllable ends in S, and the second syllable has the PR cluster. Desperate. Desperate. First syllable stress there. Desperate scramble. Now the T in desperate is a stop T, because the next word begins with a consonant. So it's not desperate, but desperate, desperate scramble. That stop of air is what signifies the T. Desperate scramble. Desperate scramble. Desperate scramble. Desperate scramble to find-- Desperate scramble to find-- scramble to find-- Before our next stressed syllable, anything, the EH as in bed vowel, we have unstressed syllables, the second syllable of scramble, the word to, and the word find. They're all lower in pitch, flatter. Scramble to find anything-- Scramble to-- ble to-- Do you notice that's not a true T? That's a flap T. Scramble to-- The tongue just flaps or taps against the roof of the mouth. It's said quickly, it's not the OO vowel, but the schwa. Scramble to-- scramble to find. Scramble to find-- And he doesn't really make a D here. I've played it in slow motion, and I don't really hear any of that D sound. I certainly don't hear ddd-- a released D. Let's listen to this in slow motion. Find, find anything with lips-- And he just keeps on going, doesn't he? He speaks pretty quickly here, and it's not just the pacing but it's that there are no breaks, that's what makes it harder to bring in, and it's part of his character, I've noticed that Chandler does this a lot when he's speaking. He runs sentences together. Find anything with lips. Anything with lips. So the TH in anything, that's unvoiced, the tongue tip does have to come through the teeth for that. Anything with lips. Anything with lips. And the unvoiced TH in 'with' said very very quickly: with lips, with lips, with lips. With lips. just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Just so you can have somebody-- just so you can have somebody to-- Wow a lot of words there that are less stressed and flatter before our next stressed word 'kiss'. Kiss when the ball drops-- Just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Just so you can have somebody to-- That's not how that's pronounced, we have some reductions, and it's said very quickly. The word just, it's really common to drop that T when the next word begins with the consonant. So these two words link together with an S. Just so, just so, just so, just so, just so, just so. Just so-- you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops. Just so you can-- can can can. The word can reduces. That schwa is said instead of the AA vowel, can becomes can. Just so you can, just so you can, just you can, just so you can. The word so, it's that OH diphthong, so, but it's not said that clearly, is it? It's not just so, but it's just so you can, I think I would write that with the schwa. Just so you can, just so you can, just so you can, just you can. Just so you can-- So you can have somebody, so you can have, so you can have, so you can have. I don't think I hear an H there. Again, dropping the H in half, the N linking into the AA vowel. Can have, can have, can have, can have, can have somebody, can have somebody, can have somebody. A little bit of stress on our stressed syllable there. So you can have somebody, so you can have somebody, so you can have somebody. Again, the letter O, makes the UH vowel like and butter. Some, some, some, somebody, somebody, somebody. It's not some body. This word by itself, body, but in the whole word, body. Body. Somebody. Somebo-- that's the schwa. Somebody. Somebody. Somebody. Somebody-- Now, the word to. How is it pronounced? Somebody to-- Somebody to-- body to-- The tongue flaps for the D because it comes between two vowels and it flaps for the T. It actually sounds the same. Flap T, flap D, they sound the same. Somebody to, somebody to, and again, the vowel in 'to' reduces, it's the schwa, it's not the OO vowel. Somebody to, somebody to, somebody to kiss. Somebody to kiss-- when the ball drops. Kiss when the ball drops. You can really feel that shape of stress. Kiss when the-- When and the, lower in pitch, not stressed, less important. Kiss when the ball drops. Kiss when the ball drops. Kiss when the ball drops. Kiss when the ball drops. Ball drops. The DR cluster, you know, there's a pronunciation that's more common than DR, and it's JR. Jr jr jr draw, draw, draw. So rather than draw, it's draw, you can make a J sound there. Drops. Ball drops. Ball drops. Ball drops. Man, I'm talking loud. Man, I'm talking loud. Lots of stress on man. Man, I'm talking loud. A little bit on loud. Man, I'm talking loud. The word man, if you looked it up in the dictionary, you would see the AA vowel, but it's not pure when it's followed by N. The back of the tongue relaxes, so it goes through another sound, mauh-- uh uh uh uh-- you can think of it as being the UH as in butter vowel, or the schwa. Man, man, man, I'm talking loud. Man I'm talkin-- Talking. The L in this word is silent. Man, I'm talking loud. And rather than making an ING ending, He drops the NG and makes just an N. Talkin, talkin, talkin loud, talkin loud. Talkin loud. The final D in loud is not released like that. It's not loud, but it's loud. Tongue goes up into position, the vocal cords vibrate, but it's unreleased. That's the most common pronunciation for a D at the end of a thought group. Loud. Loud. Loud. Loud. Well, for your information. Well, for your information. Here, Rachel slows down and gets extra clear with her pronunciation, because Chandler's made an assumption about her and it's wrong. He thinks that her boyfriend will be in town for New Year's, she won't have to worry about being alone, so, but he's going to be out of town. So she slows down, she pronounces things a little bit more carefully, because she's calling him out on his assumption. She's saying you made an assumption, and it was wrong. Well, for your information. Well, well, well, this is just like when she said: hey, hey. It's got a quick up down shape but it feels a little abrupt. Well, well, now the for reduction, you know, it's unstressed, but I don't know that I would write it with a schwa. Like I said she's being a little bit more clear here than normal conversation. For your, for your, for your. I think I am hearing more of that AW, R combination rather than: fer yer fer yer fer yer, which would be a little bit more conversational, much more common would be the reduction. But she's being extra clear here. She wants to set the record straight. Well, for your information. For your information. So a little bit of shape of stress on your, and information. Notice we have FOR in this word, it's not information, it's always information, it's always the schwa in the pronunciation. That's an unstressed syllable in a word that may be stressed, but still unstressed syllables will be unstressed. Information. --mation. TION, making the sounds SH, schwa, N. For your information. Paulo is going to be in Rome this New Year's. Paolo is going to be in Rome this New Year's. Paolo, stressed, is going to be in Rome, stressed, this New Year's, she stresses new but it's going up, because she's going to keep going, she's not done talking. Paolo is going to be in Rome this New Year's. What about 'is going to be' in our unstressed words here? Is going to be in-- is going to be in-- is going to be in-- Is going to be in-- Do you hear, when we listen to just those unstressed words, how much they're on the same pitch, it's so different than our stressed words that really have a change in pitch. Paolo, uh-- is going to be in-- uhhh-- I love that about studying pronunciation. Stressed syllables have a pitch change happening ,unstressed syllables tend to have much less pitch change happening. Now, sometimes they're coming down from a stress syllable, or leading up to a stressed syllable, but they don't have a change of direction, and this set here, this set of unstressed words is so flat. Is going to be, becomes: is gonna, is gonna, gonna, gonna. Is gonna be in, be in, be in, be in, linking together really smoothly, no break. Is going to be in, Rome this New Year's. Rome this New Year's. This, said quickly. Rome this New Year's, and it's going to be lower in pitch. Rome this New Year's. So I'll be just as pathetic as the rest of you. So I'll be just as pathetic as the rest of you. Just, pathet-- our stressed syllable of pathetic, and rest, are our most stressed words there. Let's look at 'so I'll be'. So I'll be-- So I'll be-- so I'll be-- so I'll be-- so I'll be-- Her pitch is pretty high here, it's a little bit flatter, so I'll be just-- the energy going towards our stressed syllable there. Just. This word is so often pronounced as 'all' but I do hear it a little bit more with that AI diphthong. I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll, I'll. So I'll be-- so I'll be-- so I'll be-- so I'll be-- So I'll be-- just as pathetic as the rest of you. Just as pathetic-- just as-- So here we have an ST cluster. The next word begins with a vowel, so you do link the T in. It's not 'as' though. She makes that a schwa. The word as, often becomes uz, just as, just as. Just as, just as, just as pathetic as the rest of you. Just as pathetic as-- again, the word as becomes: uz uz uz uz, uz the uz the uz the. Lower in pitch, two unstressed words here. Just as pathetic as-- Now, our stress word, pathetic. The TH there is unvoiced. Bring your tongue tip through the teeth. Then we have a letter T, it comes between two vowels, that's a flap, not a true T but ra, a flap T. Pathetic. Rarara, rerere. Pathetic. Pathetic. Pathetic as the rest of you. Pathetic as the rest of you. Rest of you. The word of reduces, of of of of of. Schwa, said more quickly. Rest of you. And that T links into the vowel with a light true T release. Rest of you. The rest of you. It's just that I'm sick of being a victim-- It's just that I'm sick of being a victim-- He's really angry here, isn't he? Sick of being a victim. He's holding on to that V a little bit which brings more stress into that syllable. A victim is someone who's harmed by something unpleasant. Or someone who's fooled by something, cheated by something, or someone. He feels that he's a victim of this holiday. He's harmed by the expectations that you bring a date on this holiday. It's too much pressure, and it makes his life difficult at this time of year. It's just that I'm sick of being a victim-- It's just that I'm-- said really quickly. It's just that I'm-- I don't even really hear it 'it's'. It's more like I'm hearing the sound starting with just, even though I know 'it's' belongs there grammatically. Just that I'm, just that I'm, just that I'm, just that I'm. T dropped in just, vowel reduced in that, it becomes the schwa, that that that, just that I'm, just that I'm. And the T that links these two words together is a flap because it comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds. Just that I'm, just that I'm, just that I'm. Just that I'm-- sick of being a victim-- Sick of being a victim-- sick of being a-- Unstressed words, less clear, the word 'of' say that quickly with a schwa. Sick of being-- I'm not really sure if I'm hearing a V. You can definitely get away with dropping it and just link that schwa into the B sound. A being, a being, a being, a being a, being a. The letter A also just the schwa in IPA. Being a, being a. Sick of being a victim. Sick of being a victim-- of this Dick Clark-- Victim of this, of this, of this, of this-- Again, the word 'of' just the schwa. Linking into the next word. In this case, the word this. Of this-- of this-- of this-- of this-- victim of this Dick Clark-- Victim of this Dick Clark-- Dick Clark. So we have two ending K's. He puts a little break here, he does release that K. This sound, he doesn't. When the next word begins with a consonant, and we have an ending K, it's pretty common to drop the release and just stop the air by lifting the back of the tongue against the soft palate. That's the position for K. Dick-- but skipping that release of air. Instead of the release of air, you just go into the next sound, in this case, it's another K sound. Dick Clark. Dick Clark. Dick Clark-- Dick Clark used to host a show every New Year's Eve, televised from New York City, where there would be concerts, different bands would play, I think there was a parade maybe, a lot of energy around times square, lots of people gathered there. And then at midnight the ball would drop. So Dick Clark was the TV host of this event. Dick Clark-- holiday. I say this year, no dates-- Holiday. I say this year-- so again, he links the sentences together with no break. Holiday. I say this year-- Holiday. I say this year-- Holiday I-- hol-- Stress on holiday. Holiday. I say this year. I say this year. Holiday. I say this year-- no dates-- This year-- this year-- No dates. More stress on this and no. This year, no dates-- we make a pact. We make a pact. A pact is an agreement that you enter into with other people. Or it could also be between two companies, organizations, or countries. Make and pact, stressed. We make a pact. The words we and a, unstressed, lower in pitch, we make a pact, and everything does link together. We make a pact. The ending K here links into the schwa, and he does do a full release of the KT cluster. We make a pact. Just the six of us, dinner. Now let's listen to this next sentence. I'm not going to tell you what the most stressed syllables are. I want you to listen to it three times and you tell me what you think the most stressed syllables are. Just the six of us, dinner. Just the six of us, dinner. Just the six of us, dinner. Some stress on just. Just the six of us, dinner. And then dinner. Even though just has some stress, the T is still dropped because it comes between two consonants. And that's just so common. Just the six of us. The letter X makes the sounds KS here. Six of us. Six of-- links right into the schwa of 'of' and I do hear the V. Six of us-- which links into the UH vowel for us. Six of us. Six of us, dinner. Dinner. Dinner. First syllable stress. DA-da. Dinner. Dinner. Sure! Sure! Sure! Rachel gives a quick up down shape high pitch, sure, sure. There are a couple different ways to pronounce this word. She did it with the UR vowel R combination, like in bird. Ur ur ur. So it's really just two sounds SH and R. Sure. Sh-rr. Sh-rr. Sure. Sure. Sure! You know, I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. You know, you know, the word you, said so quickly, you almost don't hear it. You know, you know, you know. In this phrase, it's really common to reduce the word you to ya ya ya. You know, and stress is there on the verb. You know. You know, I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. Enthusiasm. And actually, he wasn't done there. He said: I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. Enthusiasm than that. I didn't even write it down because I didn't even notice at the beginning. It's so low in pitch, coming down after the stress of enthu-- and then also other people start cheering over it. Enthusiasm than that. Enthusiasm than that. Enthusiasm than that. I was-- these two words become: I was, I was, low in pitch, flatter, I would write was with the schwa. Was, was, I was, I was. I was-- I was-- I was-- I was-- I was hoping. I was hoping. I was hoping. I was hoping. Hoping. I'm having a hard time deciding, I think he does change the NG to just N, but this is said so quickly, I almost can't tell. Hoping for a little, hoping for a little. Definitely the word for becomes fur, the R links into the schwa, for a, for a, for a, for a. Hoping for a little, more enthusiasm. Hoping for a little more enthusiasm. So little and more, also flatter. They don't really have the stressed shape that hopin' and enthusiasm have. Little, little, little, rararararara. Do you hear that? It's a flap T. That's because it comes between two vowels. Now you're probably looking here and you're saying, wait, the L is a consonant, that's not a vowel. True. But we're talking not about the letters here, but about the sounds, and in IPA, that ending is written schwa L. So now you see the T sound does come between two vowels, therefore, it's a flap T. Little, little, little, little more, little more, little more. Little more, enthusiasm. Enthusiasm. The TH there is the unvoiced TH, and the tongue tip does have to come through the teeth for that. Enthusiasm. Both of these letters S make a Z sound. Enthusiasm. Enthusiasm. Enthusiasm. Let's listen to this whole conversation one more time. Hey, do you guys know what you're doing for New Year's? Wait, what? What is wrong with New Year's? Well, nothing for you. You have Paolo, you don't have to face the horrible pressures of this holiday. Desperate scramble to find anything with lips just so you can have somebody to kiss when the ball drops, man, I'm talking loud. Well, for your information, Paolo is going to be in Rome this New Year so I'll be just as pathetic as the rest of you. It's just that I'm sick of being a victim of this Dick Clark holiday. I say this year, no dates, we make a pact. Just the six of us, dinner. You know, I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm. So what happens with the pact? Next week, we're going to study this scene. I just want to be with him all the time. You know, day and night, and night and day, and special occasions. Wait a minute. Wait, I see where this is going. You're going to ask him the New Year's, aren't you? You're going to break the pact. She's going to break the pact. No. No. No. No. No. No. Yeah, could I just? Yeah, 'cause I already asked Janice. Come on! This was a pact! This was your pact! I snapped, okay? I couldn't handle the pressure and I snapped. Yep, but Janice, that was like the worst breakup in history. I'm not saying it was a good idea. I'm saying I snapped. If you didn't understand all that, don't worry about it. We're going to do an in-depth analysis of it next week. But needless to say, the pact has been broken. And it deteriorates further. This is the third scene that we'll study. Tell me something. What does the phrase 'no date pact' mean to you? Look, I'm sorry, okay? It's just that Chandler, has somebody, and Phoebe has somebody, I thought I'd asked fun Bobby! Fun Bobby? Your ex-boyfriend, fun Bobby? Yeah! Okay, so on our no date evening, three of you now are gonna have dates. Uh, four. Four? Five. Five. Sorry! Paolo's catching an earlier flight. Okay, so I'm gonna be the only one standing there alone when the ball drops? Oh, come on! We'll have, we'll have a big party and no one will know who's with whom. Who's with whom. She got a little cut off there. And we'll finish with a fourth scene at the stroke of midnight. In 20 seconds, it'll be midnight. And the moment of joy is upon us. Looks like that no date pact thing worked out? Happy New Year! You know, I just thought I'd throw this out here, I'm no math whiz but I do believe there are three girls and three guys right here. Oh, I don't feel like kissing anyone tonight. I can't kiss anyone. So I'm kissing everyone? No. No. No. You can't kiss Ross, that's your brother. Oh yeah. Well perfect, perfect. So now everybody's gonna kiss but me? All right, somebody kiss me. Somebody kiss me! It's midnight! Somebody kiss me! It's midnight! So stick with me. All of December, we're learning English with TV. We're going to follow the pact and watch how it falls apart, and you're going to improve your listening comprehension along the way. If you love this kind of analysis video, I have over 150 that aren't on my YouTube channel, in my online school Rachel's English Academy. There's also audio that goes with each lesson to help you train your imitation skills, and really change your habits, this kind of training will transform your voice and your confidence. To sign up, visit rachelsenglishacademy.com While you're waiting for next week's video to drop, check out more of the videos on my YouTube channel, including this one. And don't forget to subscribe with notifications. I make new videos on the English language every Tuesday. And I don't want you to miss any in this awesome December 2020 series, where we study four scenes from the Friends New Year's episode of season one. Okay guys, that's it, and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.
B1 stressed unstressed scramble pact vowel desperate FAST ENGLISH: You CAN! 5 0 Summer posted on 2020/12/01 More Share Save Report Video vocabulary