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  • [Lightsaber noises]

  • It's time to use the force and learn some English.

  • [Star Wars music].

  • Hey, everyone. I'm Alex. Thanks for clicking, and welcome to this lesson on

  • learning English with Star Wars. So, I am very excited

  • because Star Wars, episode seven, The Force Awakens,

  • is set to come out in theatres all across the world. Maybe it's already out at the time

  • that you're watching this. If you're watching this years from now, maybe Star Wars episode

  • seven is out, episode eight is out, episode nine is out, and we say that they're awesome,

  • maybe they're terrible. Who knows?

  • Anyway, what I thought that I would do in preparation for the movie is go back, watch

  • the original, and teach you guys some English. Those of you who don't know, Star Wars is

  • a very famous space fantasy film.

  • "A-ahem." Yes, Emperor Palpatine?

  • "I thought Star Wars was science-fiction."

  • Well, Emperor Palpatine, that is a common opinion and a common misconception.

  • You see, science-fiction means that it takes the technology, pushes it into the future

  • to its most extreme. Now, Star Wars is closer to, like, Lord of the Rings, or, you know,

  • a fantasy where there are creatures that simply can't exist.

  • "Oh. Hmm. Carry on."

  • Okay, so now that that's clear, what I'm going to do is tell you about the story and the

  • characters of the original Star Wars, and I'm going to go through the movie, from beginning

  • to end, and talk about some of the key dialogue, key vocabulary with you guys. And at the end

  • of this, don't forget to check out the quiz. Hopefully, you'll have learned something.

  • So, let's get on with it and learn English with Star Wars.

  • Okay, so the story of the original Star Wars.

  • In the beginning, there is an evil galactic empire that is spreading across the galaxy.

  • What they're doing, what evil things they are accomplishing, we don't really know.

  • They don't say, we just know they're bad.

  • There's a small rebel group that is fighting back, and they're trying to take down this evil

  • empire, and this rebel group has recently stolen some plans for a powerful weapon.

  • Now, this weapon is being designed by the empire, and they call it the Death Star.

  • And now, the Death Star is this big, round, globe ball battle station in the movie, and the rebels

  • need to destroy it. They figure that if they have the plans, maybe they can find a weakness

  • in the Death Star and destroy it. Will they destroy it? Wait. You'll find out later.

  • And, again, at the beginning of the movie, the empire is chasing a small rebel ship, because

  • they think this ship has the plans, and they're trying to get them back.

  • So, that is the beginning of the movie.

  • Now let's look at some of the characters. We have Luke Skywalker.

  • Luke is a farm boy

  • from the planet Tatooine, and he's the main hero, here. He's the one who's going to learn

  • how to use the force and save the day.

  • We have Princess Leia. She is there at the beginning

  • of the movie on the small rebel ship, and what she's going to do is give instructions

  • to R2D2, the little robot, to find Obi-Wan Kenobi.

  • So, Princess Leia.

  • We have Han Solo and Chewbacca.

  • Han Solo is the pilot of the Millennium Falcon. Chewbacca or Chewy is the

  • guy who just sounds like this: [Roaring noise].

  • He doesn't actually say anything, but somehow,

  • Han Solo can understand him, based on a roar.

  • It was the '70s, you know, people believed these things.

  • C3PO and R2D2... C3PO and R2D2, they kind of just carry us through the whole movie.

  • They're always present, they're two robots, two droids. C3PO is called a protocol droid,

  • whatever that means. And again, R2D2, another person, like Chewbacca, doesn't speak English,

  • just speaks in: [Bleeping noise], in little bleeps and bloops. Okay?

  • Darth Vader, everyone knows Darth Vader.

  • "Alex."

  • Yes, Emperor?

  • "I know Darth Vader."

  • I know you know Darth Vader.

  • Let me continue.

  • And we have Obi-Wan Kenobi. Obi-Wan Kenobi is a wise, old Jedi who teaches

  • Luke all about the force, and he's also enemies with Darth Vader. They have a lightsaber battle

  • at one point in the movie.

  • "A-ahem."

  • Yes, Emperor Palpatine?

  • "Where am I in this?"

  • You're not in this movie.

  • "Oh, that's right. I'm in the second one."

  • Yeah, you're in the second one.

  • Okay, now that we know the story, now that we know some of the characters,

  • let's go and look at the dialogue.

  • So, at the beginning of the movie, C3PO, R2D2,

  • they're running around the rebel ship, and C3PO says:

  • "This is madness! We're doomed!"

  • So: "This is madness!" Not: "This is Sparta!"

  • "This is madness" means, like, this is crazy, this is insane. I don't understand what's

  • happening. "We are doomed" means that we have no chance, we're dead. Okay?

  • So if you have a difficult test coming up, you could say:

  • "I'm doomed. I'm dead. I'm done." Okay?

  • Next, yes, yes, yes, yes. Then Vader comes on to the rebel ship, and he starts asking

  • questions. He starts pushing people around, he picks up one guy, he throws him against

  • the wall, and he asks:

  • "Where are those transmissions you intercepted?"

  • So, again, some of this vocabulary, you know, they are in space,

  • there are spaceships communicating with each other.

  • "Transmissions" are just communications that you intercepted. When you intercept something,

  • it means that you catch it before it gets to where it needs to go.

  • For example, the most common interception I think of is in football.

  • If a quarterback throws the ball and another player from another team catches it

  • before the intended receiver, the person

  • who is supposed to get the football, he intercepts the football. So, Vader is saying:

  • "We know that you got some of our messages.

  • We know you know that we're making a weapon, and I want those plans. Give them back."

  • All right, Vader then instructs his team, his commander, he says:

  • "Tear this ship apart until you've found those plans."

  • So, "to tear something apart", think of "tear", it means

  • [tearing noises],

  • to rip. Okay? So, "to tear apart" means destroy everything. Take... Doesn't

  • matter what you do, just destroy everything until you have found those plans. And then

  • he speaks to Princess Leia, and Princess Leia, she plays like she's stupid. She's like:

  • "I don't know what you're talking about. Plans? What plans? I am, you know, just a diplomat,

  • a politician. We're going to Alderaan, which is my home planet, and you know, I would...

  • I don't know what you're talking about."

  • So, Vader says:

  • "Leia, I know, I know. You are part of the rebel alliance, and a traitor."

  • So, "a traitor" is a person who does not do,

  • you know, what you want them to do, who does not follow, who is not loyal to a specific

  • cause. So, in, you know, the world of Star Wars, in this galaxy, Vader is expecting that

  • everyone follows the empire, listens to the empire. If you do something that is against

  • the empire, you are a traitor. Okay? In any country. You know, if you do something against

  • your country to betray them, you are a traitor. So, let's continue to the next scene.

  • So, Princess Leia actually lied to Darth Vader. What she did was put a copy of the plans into

  • R2D2, and she said, you know:

  • "Help me, Obi-Wan Kenobi, you're my only hope."

  • So what happens on the rebel ship is R2D2 and C3PO

  • go inside and escape pod, and they get blasted off to

  • the desert planet of Tatooine. Now, C3PO, he's not happy, you know, he doesn't like

  • adventure, and now he is very angry at R2D2. R2D2 is set. He really wants to get these

  • plans to Obi-Wan Kenobi so that Obi-Wan can help Princess Leia

  • to defeat, you know, the evil empire.

  • So, they get to the planet, C3PO complains, he complains a lot. He says:

  • "I've got to rest before I fall apart."

  • He's a robot. Why do robots need to rest? Who knows?

  • "Before I fall apart. My joints are almost frozen."

  • Before I fall apart, "to fall apart" is to,

  • again, think of [breaking noises]

  • parts just falling off completely. So, a car can fall

  • apart. Something mechanical can fall apart. You can also say that you are falling apart

  • if, you know, your energy is not the same as it was before.

  • "My joints are almost frozen."

  • So, your joints are these parts of your body that connect, for example, your... One part

  • of your arm to the other part of your arm. Okay? So, if he says:

  • "My joints are almost frozen", this means

  • I can't move because my joints, these parts are almost frozen. Okay?

  • And he tells R2D2, because R2D2 wants to go in one direction in the desert, and C3PO wants

  • to go in another direction. He says:

  • "I've just about had enough of you."

  • So, if you say: "I have had enough", this means I have no more patience for you, I have no more tolerance

  • for you. I'm done. Okay? So, leave me alone. And he said to R2D2:

  • "Don't let me catch you following me."

  • So if you catch someone doing something, this means you see them doing something

  • they are not supposed to do. So, C3PO starts walking, looks behind him, he says:

  • "Don't let me catch you following me." All right?

  • And then C3PO starts talking to himself, he says:

  • "That malfunctioning little twerp."

  • If something malfunctions or is malfunctioning, this means it is not working properly. So

  • you could say, you know: "My laptop is malfunctioning.

  • My phone is malfunctioning." Anything, basically

  • mechanical could malfunction, means not work properly, or "break down" if you want to use

  • the phrasal verb. And "a little twerp", not a very common word in this century, but a

  • twerp, think of like a jerk, someone who is not nice.

  • "A-ahem."

  • Yes, Emperor Palpatine?

  • "I think you're a little twerp."

  • Thank you for that opinion. All right, let's continue.

  • So, eventually, C3PO and R2D2 get caught by these funny little people called Jawas, who

  • don't really speak English very well, and the Jawas sell C3PO, sell R2D2 to Uncle Owen

  • and Aunt Beru who are Luke Skywalker's aunt and uncle. Finally, we meet Luke Skywalker.

  • And, you know, Luke is told to clean up the droids. He says he doesn't want to, because

  • he was going to Tosche Station to pick up some power converters.

  • And C3PO, R2D2, they're

  • with Luke, he's cleaning them up, and the message, you know, comes up. Luke sees Princess

  • Leia, and C3PO tells Luke eventually that, you know, R2D2 kept babbling on about his

  • mission. So, "to babble on" means to talk without stopping. If you're babbling, you're

  • [babbling noises],

  • not making a lot of sense, sometimes, but just speaking, speaking, speaking,

  • speaking, speaking. There's actually one of the first famous translation sites on the

  • internet was called BabbleFish.com, and again, BabbleFish.com means you could trade, you

  • know, one language and translate it to another language by putting any word you want in English,

  • and you could see it in French, or in Polish, or in German, whatever. Okay, and C3PO then

  • mentions that, you know:

  • "We will have no more of this Obi-Wan Kenobi gibberish."

  • talking to R2D2. Now, again, "gibberish" is language that does not make sense. So, if you say that

  • something is gibberish, it means that you do not understand. Like, if I just say:

  • Cat go down... That actually makes sense, cat go down, but any combination... I'm just too

  • trained to say words and sentences that make sense; I can't speak gibberish. But if you

  • say something that makes no sense, and you're like:

  • "What's...? I don't understand what you're saying",

  • you say: "That's gibberish." You know? Like, computer language could be

  • gibberish to someone who is not a computer programmer. So, that's gibberish to me,

  • I don't understand it. Okay?

  • And eventually what happens is Luke meets Obi-Wan Kenobi, and he trains him a little

  • bit, tells him about the force. And Luke says:

  • "What is the force?"

  • And Obi-Wan Kenobi says:

  • "Now, the force is what gives a Jedi his power. It's an energy field created by all living

  • things. It surrounds us, penetrates us, binds the galaxy together."

  • Yes, I have memorized that line since I was like 16 years old.

  • So... Because I wanted to know what the force was.

  • So, again, here we have three important words that I'm going to focus on.

  • "It surrounds us",

  • so if something surrounds you, it means it covers you on all sides. So, for example,

  • if there is a criminal and he's inside a house and the police want to catch the criminal,

  • they will surround the house or surround the building. So, Obi-Wan says:

  • "The force surrounds us. It's all around us."

  • Penetrates us, so to go inside of us, essentially, it breaks

  • through our skin, gets inside our souls and our hearts. Okay? And binds the galaxy together,

  • so when you think of the word "bind", think of something coming together. A police officer

  • will bind the hands of a criminal, or you can bind someone to something. So to tie together

  • tightly, tie together closely. So the empire kills Luke's uncle and aunt. They are dead,

  • just like very, very dead. All right?

  • And what ends up happening is Luke decides... Now, he wants to be a Jedi like his father

  • before him. And then we jump up to space and we have Tarkin who is kind of like Vader's

  • boss, it seems in a way, they have a strange relationship, and they're arguing around a

  • table about the force, about the plans, about Princess Leia because they have captured her

  • and they're trying to get information from her, and everyone's arguing. And Tarkin says:

  • "This bickering is pointless."

  • So, "bickering" means... It's very small arguing. Arguing

  • that is not important. So, if you bicker, you argue back and forth. Stop bickering,

  • stop arguing, stop fighting with your words. Okay? Something is pointless means it is not

  • useful. It is useless, it has no point. You will accomplish nothing by continuing.

  • And then Leia comes into the room, she sees Tarkin, and for some reason she starts speaking

  • in a British accent despite the fact that she was English before, like North-American

  • English, and she says:

  • "Tarkin, I recognized your foul stench when I got on board." So

  • "fowl" means terrible, awful, kind of discussing. And "a stench" is a terrible, terrible smell.

  • Okay? So you can say:

  • "Oh, this stench is so strong. This stench is so powerful. It is a terrible, terrible smell."

  • So, again, foul, bad, terrible, awful. Stench, a bad

  • smell. It's kind of like saying bad, bad. Bad smell. Okay?

  • And now that Luke has decided that he wants to be a Jedi, Obi-Wan starts training him.

  • And they end up at a spaceport, they meet Han Solo, they meet Chewbacca, they get a

  • ship, and they start travelling, you know, to Alderaan, because that's where the Princess'

  • home is. They've seen the message from the Princess, and now they're going to travel

  • there. And Obi-Wan starts training Luke, and Luke has the lightsaber. He's going back and

  • forth, and he keeps getting hit by these lasers from this little machine. And Obi-Wan says:

  • "Your eyes can deceive you. Don't trust them."

  • Okay? So, your eyes can deceive you. "To deceive"

  • means to trick or to fool. Okay?

  • So, we got Luke

  • [lightsaber noises]

  • with his lightsaber, and he puts a blast shield over

  • his face so he can't see, and this little machine is shooting at him, and he's going

  • [lightsaber noises],

  • and he keeps getting hit. And then Obi-Wan gives him this amazing advice:

  • "Don't trust your eyes, Luke. Don't trust them. Use the force."

  • And he's able to block some of the shots.

  • [Lightsaber noises].

  • Let's continue.

  • So the empire blows up Alderaan, they destroy Leia's home planet. And remember everyone

  • on the Millennium Falcon was on their way to this planet. Eventually, they all end up

  • on the Death Star. The Death Star is the big battle station that was being talked about

  • at the start of the movie. And Han Solo, he has a problem with Obi-Wan Kenobi, he starts

  • calling people foolish and fools, and Obi-Wan Kenobi says a very wise proverb, he says:

  • "Who's the more foolish? The fool or the fool who follows him?"

  • So this basically means:

  • Who is a bigger idiot? Who is more foolish:

  • the fool, the stupid person, or the fool who

  • follows him, the stupid person who listens to the stupid person? I've never said the

  • word "stupid" in such a short amount of time so many times. All right.

  • Now, Han Solo, to him, money is the most important thing. He has been, you know, just travelling

  • along with Luke and R2D2 and C3PO, thinking he's going to get a lot of money for this

  • trip. And he wants out. He wants to stop. And then Luke says:

  • "There's a Princess, here, and if you were to rescue her, the reward,

  • the money you would get, would be more wealth than you can imagine."

  • So, here, Luke is using the second conditional. Right? You have your

  • "if" clause: If you were to rescue her, the reward would be more wealth than you can imagine.

  • Look at that. English from a grammar book in a movie. It's wonderful. All right.

  • So, eventually, Luke, everybody, they find Princess Leia, and Luke goes inside, you know,

  • dressed up as a Storm Trooper,

  • one of the guards of the empire. And Leia looks at him and says:

  • "Aren't you a little short to be a Storm Trooper?" She's using a negative question.

  • So, when do we use negative questions? We use negative questions when we expect the

  • answer to be yes, and basically, you know, we're just clarifying with the person. Leia's

  • trying to be funny, said:

  • "Aren't you a little short to be a Storm Trooper?"

  • And then Luke takes off the helmet, says:

  • "I'm Luke Skywalker. I'm here to rescue you!"

  • And then they make their daring escape.

  • And eventually, we come to the big battle between Darth Vader and Obi-Wan Kenobi on

  • the Death Star. So, Luke, Leia, Han, everybody now is trying to escape the Death Star. And

  • Obi-Wan is fighting against Darth Vader. And Obi-Wan Kenobi is having a conversation, because

  • you know, they are teacher and student from the past. Kenobi, Obi-Wan Kenobi says:

  • -"If you strike me down, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine."

  • "A-ahem."

  • Yeah, Emperor Palpatine?

  • "Like, how did Obi-Wan become more powerful?

  • Like, didn't he just, like, sit on a log in the second movie, and just like talk to Luke?

  • And, like, did he actually do anything? Did he become more powerful?"

  • Well, that's actually a very good point, and the movie doesn't really answer that and the series doesn't answer

  • that, so good point, Emperor Palpatine.

  • All right, so Obi-Wan uses the second conditional, again:

  • "If you strike me down", if you do this... Okay?

  • "If you do this, I shall become more powerful than you can possibly imagine.

  • I shall", and again, "shall" is a more formal way of saying "will". "I will become more

  • powerful than you can possibly imagine." And this is... I apologize, the first conditional,

  • not the second conditional. So:

  • "If you strike me down", "now", we're using a present verb,

  • if you do it now, "I shall become more powerful than you can imagine." So, to strike someone

  • down essentially means to kill them. All right?

  • And Vader says:

  • "Your powers are weak, old man. You should not have come back."

  • Now, here, I want to direct your attention to Darth Vader giving some past advice. All right?

  • So Darth Vader, he's a smart guy, he says:

  • "You should not have come back."

  • So, remember,

  • when you want to give advice in the past because, you know, Obi-Wan did come back, but Vader says:

  • "Not a good idea. You should have stayed where you are. You should not have come back."

  • "Should", plus "not", plus "have", plus the past participle: "You should not have come back."

  • All right? Let's continue.

  • I know, man, I was there. It was a great party. It was a great party. I got to get back to

  • this, okay? So, what happens? Oh, yeah. Vader kills Obi-Wan, and Luke sees this, and then

  • Luke, Leia, Han, and not Obi-Wan because he's dead, R2D2, C3PO, Chewy, they all escape the

  • Death Star. Now, the empire puts a tracking device on the Millennium Falcon, on their

  • ship, so they can follow them to the rebel base. Now, Luke, he just saw Obi-Wan Kenobi,

  • the man he loves and respects, even though he's known him for maybe just one day, two

  • days at this point, he's very sad because he watched him get killed. And he's very depressed,

  • you know, he's just sitting there, looking at his fingers, at his thumbs.

  • Leia is trying to comfort him. And Leia says:

  • "Luke, there wasn't anything you could have done."

  • So, Leia, again, talking about past possibility, she's saying:

  • "You could not have done anything. There was not anything you could have done."

  • So, past possibility,

  • you know, "could have", "might have", "may have", "must have". Here, she's saying:

  • "You could not. You did not have the ability to do anything to save Ben." All right.

  • So, they're escaping. And before they get back to their rebel base, they start getting

  • attacked by the empire, by the TIE fighters, who are trying to catch them and shoot at

  • them. And Han and Luke start

  • [shooting noises]

  • firing lasers in all directions, and Luke

  • hits a TIE fighter, and he says: "I got one!"

  • And Han says: "Great, kid! Don't get cocky!"

  • "Cocky" is a great word. "Cocky" means overconfident or a little bit arrogant.

  • So, you know, Han just wants Luke to know that, you know:

  • "Don't get cocky. Don't become overconfident. It's just one guy."

  • Never mind Luke just killed somebody, and he seems pretty cool with it,

  • so I don't know.

  • Then, they get back to the rebel ship and Han says:

  • "Guys, I am done. Give me my money. I am leaving."

  • And then Leia says, very disappointedly because, you know, maybe she likes Han, maybe

  • she doesn't, I don't know at this point. She says:

  • "Han, if money is all that you want, then that's what you'll receive."

  • We're going back to the first conditional again, here.

  • Right? So: "If money is all that you love", not "what you want": "what you love" in the

  • present simple, "then that's what you will receive" in the future. Okay?

  • So, now, things are getting really exciting. We are at the rebel base, everyone is there,

  • the empire is following them and is about to, you know, destroy the rebel base, and

  • we're about ready to get on with the final attack. So, let's do it. Are you ready, Jabba?

  • I don't blame you, Jabba, I would not have known that was Leia either. It was a good

  • costume. All right, so I'm going to get back to this again.

  • So, everyone is back at the rebel base. They are now planning for the final attack on the

  • Death Star. There's an old guy whose name we never learn, and he's giving instructions

  • to Luke and to all the other pilots about this run that they are going to do on the

  • Death Star, and this attack that they are going to engage in something. So, the old

  • guy gives the plan, and he says:

  • "A precise hit will start a chain reaction which should destroy the station."

  • So they have the plans that were inside R2D2, and they have found

  • this one weak point in the Death Star, in the battle station. And the old guy says, you know:

  • "If you hit the small little hole, and it will go inside, and it will start a

  • chain reaction that should destroy the station."

  • "Precise" means exact. Okay? So, a precise

  • hit, a precise answer, a precise calculation or estimate. And "should destroy the station",

  • "a chain reaction". When you think of a chain reaction, think of the game dominoes. When

  • you push one domino, it hits the other domino, which hits the other domino, which hits the

  • other domino. So, this is a chain reaction where one action causes a whole other string,

  • a chain of actions. Okay?

  • And then, you know, they start the attack, they're going up against the Death Star. Luke

  • is inside his X-wing, and he destroys it, he destroys the Death Star. Han says:

  • "Great shot, kid! That was one in a million!"

  • So, the expression "one in a million" means something

  • that is rare, something that does not happen all the time.

  • "A-ahem."

  • Yeah, Emperor Palpatine?

  • "Didn't you think that Vader's TIE fighter was pretty cool?"

  • Yeah, it was pretty cool. It was a little bit different.

  • "Yeah, that... That was my idea."

  • Oh, really? I didn't know that.

  • "Yeah. Anyway, you... You can continue. I

  • just... I really wanted to mention that.

  • I'm very, very, very, very proud of that little TIE fighter."

  • All right, cool.

  • So, you know, Luke destroys the Death Star, and he hears Obi-Wan's voice in his head one

  • more time, telling him:

  • "The force will be with you, always."

  • So, Ben is using a promise.

  • Obi-Wan Kenobi is promising Luke that the force will be with you, always. Like saying:

  • I will always love you, or I will always be there. All right?

  • Whew. And that's the end of the movie, guys. I mean, I think we learned a lot today. Hopefully

  • when you watch this movie again, you'll keep a lot of this stuff in mind. It will make

  • a lot more sense to you. And really, if you enjoyed this video, like it, comment on it,

  • subscribe to the channel, check me out on Facebook and Twitter.

  • If you want to support engVid, you can always donate to the site.

  • And, if you want to check out, you know, maybe

  • the original Star Wars radio drama,

  • you can actually get a free download from Audible.com

  • by also clicking on the link, which is attached to this video.

  • Till next time, thanks for clicking.

  • And the force will be with you, always.

  • [Star Wars music].

[Lightsaber noises]

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