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Welcome back!
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This week, we're looking at the 10 most difficult words that ESL students...
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Welcome back!
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This week, we're looking at the 10 most difficult words to pronounce if you're an ESL learner!
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Today, I'm gonna teach you how to kind of cheat at saying them.
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So you'll still have the correct pronunciation,
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but...
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it's little bit cheating.
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The first word :
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Asked
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Like many regular verbs in the past tense,
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ESL learners have problems with them.
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This is definitely no exception.
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So,
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"Asked" /ɑːskt/
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That's the correct way to pronounce it, however,
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usually, you'd just hear people say
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for example,
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"I asked him blah blah blah"
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Listen again!
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"I asked him blah blah blah"
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That doesn't sound like "I asked him", it sounds like "I ast"
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"I ast him"
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Again, British English can be quite lazy,
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so, if you pronounce it like "I ast him",
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it basically sounds the same!
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Now, it'll be easier for you to pronouce!
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"I asked him blah blah blah"
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Next one!
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Clothes
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Oh my God, this one is ridiculous for non-English speakers to pronounce!
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Firstly, mostly, because it's got the 'th' /ð/ sound,
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which most languages don't have.
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Clothes
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"Clothes" is the correct way of saying it,
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but,
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if you say this word,
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"close"
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again, in lazy English, it kind of sounds the same!
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So, for example, if you said :
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"I am not wearing any clothes"
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I said "I am not wearing any close"
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But, in general speech, you won't hear people pronounce "clothes",
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you'll hear real British people say "close",
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which is natural!
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Again, it's got that 'th' sound,
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but this time, not a /ð/, but a /θ/
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The correct way :
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Months /mʌnθs/
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But how do you say the easy way?
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Say this word : Munts
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If you say it a little bit fast, it sounds the same.
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"I've been here for 6 months (munts)"
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This one causes a lot of problems :
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How do we pronouce this?
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You've seen in one of our videos that the "el" cound sound like a "ew",
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so,
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first part of the word :
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Jewel
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you could just say like "jool"
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What's left?
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"ry"
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Jewellery (jool-ry)
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You say it : jewellery
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"I'm wearing a watch, but I don't like wearing jewellery"
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You trying to say it :
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Sausage
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Sau - sage
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Sausage
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Sausage
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That's a fun way to say it!
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Next one is what I am right now, because this is very "this word" :
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Come - for - table? No!
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Comfortable /kʌmftəbl/
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Take out the middle :
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We really only pronouce it :
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Comf -
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- table
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Comf - table
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Comf - table
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Comfortable
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The same with this word :
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Vegetable
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We don't say ve - ge - ta - ble, no,
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Vegetable /veʤtəbl/
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A comfortable vegetable
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This one is pretty difficult..Ok, let's try!
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Let's break it down in easy sections :
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so, "Li-"
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" - tra -" (tera)
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" - cha" (ture)
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Li - tera - ture
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So, this T would be like a glottal T.
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Li /lɪ'/
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tera /ʧrə/
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ture /ʧə/
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Literature /lɪʧrəʧə/
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You try it : Literature
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Then, speed up : literature
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"What did you study?" - "I studied literature"
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The end finishes in "-ture"
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The first :
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Culture (cool)?
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No, it's a /kʌ/
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Culture /kʌlʧə/
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Culture
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Culture
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"In London, you'll see many many different cultures"
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The next two kind of go together :
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I always hear this pronounced as /su:ɪt/
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or "sweet"
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Yes, there's an "I" there, but we don't pronounce the "I"
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It just sounds like /su:t/
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The same with this one :
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Fruit
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Fruit /fru:t/
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Challenge for you! In the comments section, make the longest sentence possible using all of these words!
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Ready for the next lesson?
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Click here!
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Non-automatic English subtitles by Julie Descaves