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Hi. James from EngVid. Just looking at my work. I don't know when I'm going to get any more downtime.
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I mean, I haven't had spare time or time off in so long. I haven't done any of my interests or hobbies and --
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you know what I mean, right? You don't? Oh, that's today's lesson.
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We're going to talk to you about conversation skills and how you can improve them.
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While talking about your downtime, hobbies, and time off. You know? Oh, you don't know? Let's do it, then. Let's go to the board.
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Well, let's start off with what is a "hobby".
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Well, a "hobby" is something -- and you can think of the word "habit".
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I think most of you know "habit" is something you do regularly. Well, a "hobby" starts with a "h", and it means "something you do regularly".
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But in this case, it's something that's fun, you do it regularly, and you don't get paid for it.
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That's what we usually call your "hobby".
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So you might even spend money and time to do it, but you get a lot of fun from it, and you do it regularly.
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Now, another word for "hobby" is "interest".
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And the funny thing about "interest" is that I could say to you, "What are your hobbies?" Or I could say to you "What are your interests?"
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And it's almost the same. And we use them, English speakers, almost interchangeably,
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which means we can just change them, and it doesn't really matter.
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But there's a slight difference. Remember "hobby" and "habit" go together, you do regularly.
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Well, "interest" means "I like it". Like, I'm interested in the theater, but I don't go all the time, maybe once every two years.
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But my hobby is collecting comic books, which means I actually -- every week -- buy the comic books.
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Like, I have it, and I get enjoyment from both.
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So remember, you can use the words, but one is more specific, all right?
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So you could say, you know, you could say, "I'm interested in reading." -- I don't have time to do it, but I like the idea of it.
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versus "My hobby is reading.", which is, that's what I do when I don't have anything to do. All right?
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So let's go over here. What kind of hobbies or interests can a person have? Well, one
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of them is collecting. Now, what does "collecting" mean? It means "to bring together a group of things",
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All right? But in this case, collecting is very specific. Personally, I collect comic books.
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And I dare you to go back and watch how many videos I've done wearing a Batman T-shirt, and you'll know I'm a real collector, okay?
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I love Batman. But let's just say I bought Batman No. 1.
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Now, if I'm a collector, I'll also buy Batman No. 2 and Batman No. 3 and so on and so on.
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I'll continue to buy. And I will keep them. I'm not going to sell them.
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I'm not trying to make money, and I'm going to enjoy them as a collector.
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I will go back after reading them and read them again. Just like when you collect -- we say comics; you can collect books.
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You can also collect art and music. You guys know -- you collect music.
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You like Duran Duran, right? -- that great group. "Girls on Film" ~ oh, I'm old.
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No, that new guy, Justin Timberlake, yeah? "Mirror" -- yeah. I can't sing that song.
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But you know what I mean. You can collect music. You can collect art -- Van Gogh, Picasso
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-- music, again -- Beethoven, Bach, Brahms. Collect and enjoy, right?
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For yourself or your friends. What else can you do? Well, you can also play.
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And in this case, we're talking about playing sports. I enjoy playing sports. I enjoy playing golf? No, I don't.
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But sports. You can enjoy playing cards or games. So sports: "I enjoy playing soccer." I'm saying "i-n-g".
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"I enjoy playing soccer." or "I enjoy playing volleyball at the beach."
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Cards: "I enjoy playing poker, solitaire" -- "Nobody loves me" because "solitaire" means to be by yourself.
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Or I enjoy playing poker. Five-card stud, because I'm a stud, baby. Okay.
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Now -- or games. Now, when I enjoy playing games, right, I can do "gaming".
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It's a little different. Games can be board games like chess or checkers or Monopoly, and "gaming"
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-- which we changed to "I enjoy gaming", so you would just say "gaming" instead of "playing" that.
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It's a "Gaming" -- everybody knows it's electronic, okay? Good.
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Now, "traveling" -- but I'll explain because it seems obvious. "Traveling" means anything outside of your city.
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If you go to the library in your city, you're not travelling, boys and girls. You're just going to the library.
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But if you have a big country -- like, I'm in Canada.
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We like traveling to other parts of Canada because it's like going to Europe.
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But you can travel in North America. You can travel in Europe. You can travel to Africa -- leave Europe.
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Oh, my gosh, yes. You can travel between countries, continents, and large regions.
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So when you say, "I enjoy travelling", it can be from a city in one part of your country to another,
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or to different countries, or different continents. Cool? You should leave.
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Travel a little, learn a little. "Going to": "Going to" means -- because I'm going from one place to another to do the activity,
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and that is the activity, "going to" to do it, all right?
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In this case, movies: "I enjoy going to the movies." That's my hobby.
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Every week I see a new movie. I have a friend who watches one movie every night.
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He goes to a cheap theater, and he watches movies. He loves them. That's his hobby.
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Two hours a day, he gets to heaven. You know, he flies away and enjoys them, you know?
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Or going to the beach. Some people like going to the beach. Like little turkeys, they lie in the sun --it's called "tanning"
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-- and then they turn over at two o'clock and turn over at three o'clock and turn back.
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And they cook themselves. I don't know why, but they enjoy going to the beach.
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Some people like going to the theater. You know, masterpiece theater. Watch the theater. It's very intellectual, theater.
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And you get to say "theater". Can't say that with movies.
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It doesn't -- "movies". Sounds like a -- well, whatever.
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Okay: baking and cooking. So another hobby is baking and cooking, and it's not just for women anymore.
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No, sir. I like cooking too. I like cooking shows, Top Chef and whatnot, right?
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Iron Chef. So you watch, and then you copy the recipe, and you make it.
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So you say, "My hobby is cooking." If it is, please send me an invite, me and the worm. We're coming over.
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I don't care where you live. We're coming for a visit. And make it good, son, because I don't travel for no reason,
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All right? Next, this is going to be funny. I know some of you are laughing right now because,
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you know, "James, we do things we enjoy, yes?"
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But in school, I have to read and write. You're telling me this is hobby? Yeah, there are.
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some crazy people who like to read and write. Well, reading anyway, like, I enjoy a good book.
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I enjoy comic books. But some people enjoy writing and doing poems and stories,
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and some people enjoy reading books, horror, drama, and whatnot, right? "Whatnot" means
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"anything". So, this is what we're talking about here. These are things that could be hobbies,
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but we have to talk about questions because I said
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this is going to help you with conversation. You don't walk up to people and go, "I enjoy
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cooking. I enjoy reading, and I enjoy playing soccer." They
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will say, "Why are you talking to me? I didn't ask you that." So we can look at the questions
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that you can ask somebody or they might ask you, and when you respond, you'll find out that
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-- well, guess what? You have things -- what we call "things in common" -- that
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help us talk to each other and get to know each other. Our interests, when they are similar,
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we can become friends. Or even if they are different, we can learn from each other.
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Let's go to the board, shall we? All right, so the first thing we look at is,
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"What do you do in your" -- there's a "d". "D" is for "dummy". Wait. Don't be so rudy.
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"D" is for "downtime". Downtime.
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Downtime. "What do you do in your downtime?" Now, you notice it says, "in".
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The preposition is "in". Well, because we are "in" time, right? There's a
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beginning to time and an end to time, and you're somewhere "in" this time. So we say
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"downtime": this is your relaxing time -- time when you're not "up" and working; you're "down" in time.
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So you can relax. So a lot of native speakers go, "Hey, what do you do in your downtime?"
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What time you're not working -- relaxing time, okay?
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Next one we're going to do is, "What do you do with your spare time?" Well, we know what "time" is,
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but what does "spare" mean? "Spare" means "extra". It has many meanings, but today,
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the basic meaning is "extra". Now, we have spare change. When you have paper money -- a dollar --
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and you go to the store and they give you money back and it's little metal money,
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that's called your "spare change" or "coins". You do -- your spare change isn't enough to buy big things,
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You buy usually gum or candy or pay for parking. Yeah, that's fun -- fun things with the spare change.
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We do the same thing with our spare time. With our "spare" time --
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it's our "extra" time -- remember, "spare." Because you sleep for eight hours,
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you work for eight hours, you have to eat and poo-poo -- I said it. I'm sorry. --
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but then you only have two or three hours a day for yourself, and that's your "spare" time.
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What do you do for fun with your spare time, right? We use this preposition, "with",
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to say, "Look. There's you, and there's time. How do they come together?" Well, they come together for me
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for collecting things, like comics, right?
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Now, we've got one more. What could that be? "What do you do when you have time off?"
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"Time off". Well, what do you do when you have time off? Time off from what? From life? No. No.
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I was thinking, "Could it be possible?" Time off from work, right? That's when travelling would come in.
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"In my time off, I'm going travelling." Because it's usually a longer period of time, right?
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So you say, "travelling" -- so your time off. We could also use it for other things,
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like collecting and that -- probably "spare time", you would say, or "downtime".
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Your hobbies are collecting, but time off most likely travelling, but you can still use it.
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It's something we say, right? So, what do you do when you have time off?
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What do you do? You can say, well, "I enjoy" or "I like to. James, 'enjoy’ and 'like' are the same."
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I know, and I'm separating them for a reason. There're another couple reasons that
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I don't have time to go into, but the key here is, if you remember this simple rule,
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you can use it, and you'll be right, like, 90 percent of the time, no problem.
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"You enjoy" -- don't use "to". Don't use this particle, this preposition "to". Don't use it.
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But you can say, "I enjoy i-n-g." So I enjoy --sorry. Give me a second here.
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Take a good look. You got that? But you can say this. Now, ready? Read it with me.
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"I enjoy i-n-g. I enjoy i-n-g." What am I saying? "I enjoy playing." "I enjoy dancing."
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"I enjoy singing." "I enjoy going." That's right. Okay? So that's, "I enjoy 'i-n-g.'"
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What about "I like to"? Because we know I enjoy 'i-n-g'-ing, but "I like to". Well,
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here -- "I like to" -- the verb that follows has to be in the base form, okay?
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"Base form" means don't change it, so "travel", "play", "collect", right? "I like to" collect comic books."
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"I enjoy collecting comic books." Do you see the difference? So we can do it with anything here, right?
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"I enjoy travelling to different countries." "I like to travel."
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I'm going to put "base", base form. So this means, don't change the verb, okay? So if
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you can remember these two words -- if you're going to say "I enjoy 'i-n-g'", and
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"I like to base". How low can you go? Turn it up. I'm just joking.
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That's an old rapper reference, all right? But "base verb", so you want to use the base verb here, okay?
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So let's give an example. "I enjoy traveling." "You like to -- that's right -- travel." Cool.
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Excellent. All right? Now, the response to all of this when you go through this long conversation with somebody --
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"yadda yadda", or, you know, "blah, blah"
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-- when they finish, you go, "Hey, man, that's cool. Yeah, that's really cool." or "Dude,
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that's interesting." You don't have to the "dude" part. You don't have to say that, but you can go,
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"That's rather interesting. You enjoy the theater. Wow. I like to go swimming. That's cool, isn't it?The water is cool."
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Made a funny, okay? Wait -- not that funny.
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But to wrap up the lesson -- remember "wrap up" means "finish" or "complete", okay?
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"What are your hobbies?" These are -- remember, "h" for "habits". These are things that I like to do,
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enjoy doing, and do regularly, and I don't get paid for it, right?
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Another word is "interests", but "interests" could be "what do I like" -- it doesn't mean it's a hobby,
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but I'm interested in this and that, okay? We talked about that.
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We've got three others here: "Downtime", "spare time", and "time off" are all similar, right? And finally, "enjoy".
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"I enjoy i-n-g. I enjoy i-n-g." Yeah, you like that. Can't see my butt move, my butt -- my bottom.
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It's really nice, though. It's cute. It's good. And finally, "base"
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-- how low do you go? "I like to ’verb in the base'", all right? Now, and the final thing is,
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"Oh, that's cool. That's really interesting." Those are good responses after someone tells you these are the -- these are their hobbies, okay?
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So I got to go. Hey, it's like Superman. I just popped that shirt. See that?
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I enjoy being Superman. That's my secret identity -- my hobby. Okay, Mr. E and I are out.
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We're going to have some fun right now -- going to go play sometimes. We're not going to go read anything.
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That's his thing. I lied. I hate reading. I don't know how to read. I'm illiterate. Illiterate. You know that?
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Anyway. So -- okay. I'm out, but before I go, you have to go to www.engvid.com,
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where "eng" stands for "English" and "vid" stands for "video" -- okay?
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-- where myself -- Mr. E is always present, and there's, like --
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I think there're like 975 new teachers. It's incredible. It's just crazy out there.
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I'm just playing with you. It's my hobby. See? I enjoy doing that.
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I'm really interested in what you have to say, though, so don't forget to go do the quiz when you're done.
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Got to go. Bye.