Subtitles section Play video
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(soft music)
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- Hello everyone, welcome back to English with Lucy.
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Today is a video that can be appropriate
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for both native speakers,
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all you people who have English as a mother tongue,
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and also non-native speakers, people who are learning
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English as a second or as an additional language.
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It might be your third language.
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I know some of you are completely crazy
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and are on your seventh language.
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Comment down below and tell me how many languages you speak.
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I'm going to talk to you
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about words that are hard to pronounce.
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There will be 20 words in total
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and it's going to be a bit of a tongue twister even for me.
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I love doing these pronunciation videos.
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I've done a couple before.
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I did one on commonly mispronounced words
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by non-native speakers,
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the 10 words that you might pronounce incorrectly,
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which you can watch by clicking here.
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And also 10 words that native speakers
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might pronounce incorrectly as well,
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and you can click here as well to see that.
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Yep, these videos have been really, really popular
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and whenever I ask you guys
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what kind of videos you'd like to see, you want to see
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pronunciation videos of commonly mispronounced words.
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So here it is!
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Before we get started,
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this video is very kindly sponsored by Lingoda,
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the company that I've been working with for ages.
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If you don't know about Lingoda,
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it's an online language academy.
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You can learn French, Spanish, English, or German
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with real native teachers in both private and group lessons.
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If you want to see a review I did of the platform
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then you can click here.
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And that's a full review of Lingoda.
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And they've very kindly given me a discount for that.
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It's 50 euros, or 50 US dollars,
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off your first month at Lingoda.
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It's a great offer.
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Don't miss out.
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You can claim that by clicking on the link
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in the description box and using the code ENGLUCY5.
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The code is also in the description box, don't worry.
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Right, let's get started with the video.
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Now the first word I want to talk to you about is this one.
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How do you saw it?
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Go on, give it a go.
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(laughing)
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The word is choir.
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Choir.
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The next word, number two, is this one.
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It's difficult because we've got the er sound twice.
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Rural, rural.
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(mumbles), it doesn't sound nice when I say it.
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Rural.
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Now the next one, number three, is actually a place name.
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It's a county in the UK.
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Is Worcestershire.
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Worcestershire.
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So people want to say Worcestershire, or Worcestershire,
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but it should be woosta, woosta, Worcestershire.
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How do we pronounce, and that brings me on to my next one,
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number four, which is this.
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Is it shire, is it shire, or is it shire?
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The answer is it can be all of them.
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Officially it should be shire, or shire,
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but a lot of people blend the two and say shire.
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That's what my family and I say.
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We're from Bedfordshire.
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I'm living in Cambridgeshire.
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The next one, number five, is prelude, prelude.
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A lot of people want to say prelude, or prelude,
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but it should be prelude.
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The next one, number six, are we on number six?
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Yes.
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The next one, number six,
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is a word that most native people will know
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but when I was teaching Spaniards English
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they never knew how to pronounce it
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because it's quite a complicated spelling.
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It's this one.
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How do we say it?
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It's squirrel, squirrel.
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And that irrel, irrel,
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people with Chinese as their mother tongue,
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that might be a really difficult one
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because ir and ul often get confused.
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So squirrel, squirrel.
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Two syllables there.
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The next one, number seven.
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This one.
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We've got that er sound again.
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Juror, juror.
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Also people suffer with the juror, er sound.
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Juror.
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It's a very complicated mouth movement
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that you have to make.
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Er.
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I almost stick my chin when I say it.
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Juror, juror.
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Beautiful angle there.
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The next one, number eight.
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Spherical, spherical.
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It's a very satisfying one to say, isn't it?
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Spherical.
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A lot of people say spherical
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because we have a sphere and a sphere is spherical.
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But it should be eh, not ir, eh.
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Spherical.
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Number nine, this one.
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Frenchies, where are you, because this one is yours.
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Valet, valet.
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But you will hear some people saying valet, valet.
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That pronunciation is accepted by some dictionaries
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but come on, guys.
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Let's say valet.
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Number 10, pronunciation.
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(laughing)
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Now this one is a really common mistake.
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Pronunciation, how you pronounce something.
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A lot of people will say pronunciation.
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Sometimes I get accused of saying pronunciation in my videos
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but really it is just my accent.
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Pronunciation, nunciation.
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I say it so quickly and people like to pick at me
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and wait for me to make a mistake
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because I'm meant to be correct all the time.
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Number 11.
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This one I've heard so many different pronunciations
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that I honestly before researching this video
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didn't know which one was right.
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It should be mauve, mauve.
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Many people will say mauve or mauve
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but it should be mauve.
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The next one, number 12.
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Regime, regime.
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Which one should it be?
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It should be regime.
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I've got a new regime.
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The next one, number 13, is this one.
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Now because it comes from French
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it should be pronounced niche with a shh,
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a soft shh sound at the end, unvoiced.
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But many people will pronounce it niche,
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which sounds so ugly compared to niche,
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which is so beautiful and airy and breathy,
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and then niche.
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Niche?
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Yes, niche!
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The next one, number 14,
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is more a confusion between two words.
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It's moot, moot.
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It's a matter about which
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there may be discussion or confusion
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but people generally confuse it with mute,
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which means silent, not speaking, not making a noise.
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Moot, mute.
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The next one, this one.
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You might ask for a nice beer.
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It's draught.
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I used to work in a pub
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and I heard people ask for a draught beer a couple of times,
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but it's a draught, draught beer.
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Number 16, this one.
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Yes, in my lifetime I have heard someone say albeit.
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Albeit?
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And I was thinking albeit?
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What do they mean?
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Turns out it's albeit, albeit.
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The next one, and this is one that my Italian ex-flatmate
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used to pronounce incorrectly all the time.
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He used to say lettuce.
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(laughing)
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"Lettuce in the house!"
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No, it's lettuce, lettuce.
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Yeah, confusing spelling there.
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The next one,
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a word that you might not use in everyday conversation,
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but it's an interesting one because it's such a bizarre
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spelling and pronunciation difference,
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colonel, not colonel.
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Colonel.
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Why, why?
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I'm sure there's a fabulous reason behind it, actually.
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(electronic notification)
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I just researched it.
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It was colonel and then colonel
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and that's where the modern pronunciation came from.
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Colonel, just a squashed up version of colonel.
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The next one, number 19, is another place name
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and this one is important because we have GMT.
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I hear a lot of people saying Greenwich
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and I can totally understand why you would say that,
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because reading it, Greenwich, it makes sense.
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But no, it's Greenwich, Greenwich.
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The next one, infamous.
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I've heard a couple of people pronounce it infamous,
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which is incorrect.
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Infamous.
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Number 20, this one.
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I used to pronounce this incorrectly.
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This one is gauge,
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but it looks like it should be pronounced gorg.
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But no, it's gauge.
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You're gorg, this is gauge.
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Gorgeous, you all look gorgeous.
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That's it for today's video.
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Thank you so much to Lingoda for sponsoring the video
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and making this all happen.
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Don't forget to check out the link in the description box
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and use the code ENGLUCY5
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to gain your 50-euro or 50-US-dollars discount
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off your first month at Lingoda.
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Loads and loads of lucifors have tried it out
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and they're really, really happy.
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I don't think I've ever heard
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a negative comment about it, actually.
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Don't forget to connect with me on all of my social media.
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I've got my Facebook, my Instagram, and my Twitter.
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And I will see you soon for another lesson.
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Bye!
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(soft music)