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  • Understanding English speakers can be difficult, especially when they do not speak clearly.

  • Maybe, you have been trying for months or years to understand most native English speakers.

  • But you are still struggling to understand what they are saying.

  • The problem may be that you do not recognize common differences between written English

  • and spoken English. I'm not talking about different words but different ways of communicating

  • those words.

  • Here are 7 listening skills that you need to develop if you are going to understand

  • most native English speakers.

  • First, recognize dropped consonants.

  • A dropped consonant is a letter that appears in a word but is not pronounced. English speakers

  • often drop consonants at the beginning of the word, at the end of the word, or in the

  • middle of the word.

  • A game of HORSE is one kind of basketball game, but listen to President Barack Obama

  • drop the consonant off the word "of."

  • I'll play a game of HORSE

  • I'll play a game of HORSE

  • Mr. Obama changed "A game of HORSE" to "A game o' HORSE"

  • Second, recognize reduced forms.

  • A reduced form is a different form of an expression after it has been reduced (that is, made smaller

  • or spoken more quickly).

  • The Vice President of the United States, Joe Biden, changes "it's going to grow" to "it's

  • gonna grow."

  • It's only gonna grow in the United States.

  • It's only gonna grow in the United States.

  • Reduced forms occur more frequently when people speak quickly.

  • Third, don't get distracted by fillers.

  • A filler is a word, an expression, or even just a sound that we make when we are trying

  • to decide what to say next.

  • It might be a sound like "uh" or "um." Try not to get distracted by these. A filler might

  • be a word like "just" before a verb. It might be the expression, "you know."

  • Listen to Mr. Obama use "uh," "just," and "you know" as fillers.

  • During, say, the health care debate, when things are just, you know, going crazy over

  • on Capitol Hill

  • Did you hear the fillers?

  • Don't focus on fillers and what they mean. They include very little meaning or no meaning.

  • Fourth, recognize words without stress.

  • Stressed vowels are generally louder and longer. The English language stresses content words

  • like nouns, main verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. The English language does not stress pronouns,

  • helping verbs, determiners, conjunctions, and prepositions. So these words may be more

  • difficult to hear and to understand.

  • So listen to this sentence: We'll bring you guys into the kitchen in the White House.

  • We'll bring you guys into the kitchen in the White House.

  • When Michelle Obama or I speak this sentence, we stress the main verb bring, the nouns guys

  • and kitchen, and the compound noun White House. We do not stress the contracted pronoun we'll,

  • the pronoun you, the prepositions into and in, and the determiner the. These words may

  • be more difficult to hear because they receive less stress.

  • Fifth, focus on words with stress.

  • Although you need to recognize words without stress, the words that have the most meaning

  • are the words with stress: nouns, main verbs, adjectives, and adverbs. Listen again to this

  • sentence: We'll bring you guys into the kitchen in the White House.

  • We'll bring you guys into the kitchen in the White House.

  • So even if you do not understand all the unaccented words, you can still understand a lot if you

  • understand the accented words: bring, guys, kitchen, and White House. These are the most

  • important words in the sentence.

  • Sixth, understand fast English speaking.

  • When I speak in these videos, I speak more slowly than I usually do so that you will

  • understand what I am saying. But you do need to develop the ability to understand those

  • who speak more quickly.

  • Seventh, ignore extra noise.

  • In the video clip that I am about to show you, you may need to especially concentrate

  • because the speaker speaks quickly, and the extra noise around the speaker might be distracting.

  • It is a thrill to be here for Nickelodeon's Worldwide Day of Play. The First Lady was

  • here earlier helping coach the young people that were doing this obstacle course to get

  • them moving and active. They're running through tires; they're racing around. And as you know,

  • there's slime always associated with Nickelodeon. And so a lot of the kids are getting slimed

  • as well. But it's fun, it's all about physical activity, getting moving and living a healthy

  • lifestyle.

  • Understanding spoken English has a lot of differences from understanding written English.

  • But if you follow these 7 tips, you will have a great start to improving your understanding

  • of native English speakers.

Understanding English speakers can be difficult, especially when they do not speak clearly.

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