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Yeah, that was fun. I'm looking forward to hearing that from you later.
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Hi. James from engVid. In this video what I would like to do is help you work on vocabulary.
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I want to make it fun, because when things are fun, you work harder and you learn more. And today's
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lesson, I'm going to teach you two ways to not only just remember vocabulary, but learn
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how to use vocabulary in a way that we use it, and you will really understand it, and...
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Heck, it's fun. You're just going to have fun doing it. I'm sure you will. All right?
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It's a little bit creative. So, let's go to the board. Simple lesson. Here we go.
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Two ways to have fun with language. Not just language, but vocabulary. Ways that you may
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not be studying in class, we're going to do here today. The first one I want to talk to
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you about is fill in the gap. Huh? "A gap" means a space, there's a space between something.
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So, here's my hands, in between my hands is a gap. Okay? You have a gap between your eyes.
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One eye, one eye, space. In this case, you see I've got this: "tree _______ chair".
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Now, fill in the gap doesn't mean just one word. It's a couple of ways you can do this.
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In this particular game, we're going to take two vocabulary words, "tree", and take another
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one, "chair", and they're kind of a little obvious to make it easy for you, but what
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I want you to do is one of two things.
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The first thing we can do is use x words. What I mean by that is you could say:
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"I want to use five words, and I want to go from 'tree' to 'chair'." Or:
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"I want to use three words from 'tree' to 'chair'" or two. Huh? Well, okay.
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How do I get from "tree"? Okay. "Tree",
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"cut". You cut the tree down, right? "Lumber". Lumber you make into wood you can use.
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Let's see. "Carpenter". Find a carpenter. "Craft". "Craft" means make. You're like: "What?" These...
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All these words... And then I can say: "Furniture". Okay? Okay, furniture. "Chair", so if I have
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a tree, I cut it down and make it into lumber, I take it to a carpenter, he crafts it into
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a chair. Five words from A to B. So, one game is tell yourself: "I want to go from five...
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One word to another word, and I want five words to get there."
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And you can challenge yourself; maybe go from three words. Right? Or make 10 words. You
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can use it to describe something. How many words you can use to describe a certain thing.
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Right? "I have this word, and I want to go to this word. How many words does it take
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me to get there?" What this does is it teaches you relationship between words, and that also
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can teach you nouns and verbs, and how they function together. Or, we say "syntax", right?
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So, start at A, say: "I want to use five words to get there." This is a great word to do
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with a friend. You can say: "Okay, we're going to do 'tree' and 'chair', you need to do five
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words that make sense to go from 'tree' to 'chair'", and put a clock on for five minutes.
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You go, and she goes, you write together and see what words you get. Compare, check them
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out. "Why did you choose this, and why does this word...? What does this word mean?" Right?
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So, now, you're not just writing words in a book and saying: "This word means this."
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You're: "What does it mean? How do I use it? How would other people use it? How would other
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people think?" Right? Yeah. See? That's fun by yourself or with a friend.
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Okay, listen, the second way to play this game is: How many words to the answer? What?
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Well, we can pick up two random words, two, like... I have "chair"... "Tree" and "chair",
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we could have put "chair" and "moon". Now the game gets a little bit more interesting.
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Right? "Chair" and "moon". How many words does it get me to go from "chair" to "moon"?
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Now, you might say: "That's impossible. They have nothing to do with each other." I could
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say, "Listen, the chair in my living room"-"living room" is a noun-"sits"-which is a verb
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-"close to the big bay window where I can see the moon at night."
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How many words did it take me to get from "chair" to "moon"?
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So, it's playing with words, being creative. "Chair"
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and "moon" have nothing to do with each other, but I used nouns and verbs to go from this
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place to this place, and actually created a sentence as well. Now, you can, as I said,
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make it more of a challenge. Do the same thing with a friend. How many words, just random
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words, how many words does it take? And you can time each other to see who gets there
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first. And the sentence must make sense. Cool? All right? Once again, you're going to learn
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syntax and meaning; you have to put the words in the right order, you can't just throw words
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in there. And when I say "meaning", it has to have sense that it goes from here to here
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that someone would understand it and, you know, agree with it. That's one game.
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The second game I like a lot, and I'm going to embarrass myself in about four minutes,
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two minutes, whatever. I hope you like this one, too. I like this one because what you
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do is if you're studying particular vocabulary... We have in engVid, vocabulary about travel,
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the kitchen, the law, all sorts of ones you can go to. Go there, and there's usually about
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10 words. Take those 10 words. Okay? And then you're going to write a poem.
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Poem. Well, poems are literary devices. They are types of... They're forms of writing that don't
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have to follow the normal ways of writing. In Japan, they have what's called a Haiku.
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We have rhyming poetry, like... I can't thinking anything off the right... Top of my head.
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Simple Simon metapimon. No, that's not a rhyme. But rhyme, words that go together like "time",
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"rhyme", "bime", you'd have to have all these words kind of go together. Okay? So, poetry
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could be to express a... Or express a thought or an idea, but it doesn't have to be written
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as a specific paragraph. Right?
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It could be, as I said, a Haiku is in Japanese poetry, rhyming poetry, sometimes abstract
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poetry. This is a fun one because in this one you're going to write a poem, and you
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might not have done that in your current reading-... Writing assignments. You're writing paragraphs
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for essays and things, but we want to show you the connection with words. So, what I
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want you to do is write a poem using five or maybe even 10 words. Try not to do more,
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because you're learning how to write right now. Okay? Use on vocabulary... "One" vocabulary
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word, because "on" is a preposition. One vocabulary word on each line, but have the poem's lines
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be connected by the ideas in the words, which means you can't just randomly write words
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and funny sentences; they've got to be connected. This shows your mastery of the language. And
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that's why I said this is a good one. It's fun and you're showing your mastery. In this
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case, I've got: "rain", "down", "heaven", "hard", "thirst". Random words. Right? Let
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me clear my throat. You didn't know it, but it's James' Beatnik Poetry Café. I'm about
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to give you some lines.
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Rain comes down
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hard from heaven, crashing into the ground,
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making the heart go soft, quenching the thirst of the earth,
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removing the dirt, revealing the hidden beauty.
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Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you.
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Okay, so I took these words, and if you noticed, there's a very specific thing. This poem I
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did the first line one word, on the second line I put two words, on the third line I
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put three words, on the fourth and fifth... You can see these numbers. These were the
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words I used. Each of them makes sense in the poem. When you hear it, you're like:
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"Oh, yeah, that makes sense." "Heaven" is above, "rain" comes down. Right? "Heaven", above,
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yeah. "Hard", well, when water hits the ground, the ground goes soft. And if you're "thirsty",
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it means you need a drink, if the dry is ground it's thirsty, so it wants water to drink.
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Right? I'm showing you I understand the language enough to put these words together. Because
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I put one word, two words, three words, I also have to use other words I learned. So,
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you can take this from a particular lesson-right?-because "rain" would be "water" and "thirst". Probably
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a lesson on water. Right? Yeah.
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You could do that for travelling. You know? Sky drawing me up... No, drawing me up into...
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See? I'm just making it up, but you get the point. You take them, you put them together.
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And even that last sentence, I'm like: "That wasn't cool. I have to... Don't want to look
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like a fool, so I'll have to retool." Right? So, if you're smiling, having fun, saying:
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"Wow. I'm, like, playing with the language." You'll show that you understand it, you'll
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have a beautiful product that you can show another person, saying: "Look at my English."
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And they may be impressed when you explain the rules you were following, like: one words,
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two words, three words, and how you learned to express yourself and have a deep understanding.
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Right?
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So, look, I hope you've enjoyed these two lessons. You can see I did, because I did
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a little poem for you, using this exact lesson. E's smiling, because he's like:
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"Wow, this is fun." I'm sure this was fun for you. Give it a try. Get out your vocabulary words, or
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go watch another engVid lesson. Right? And then take out some vocabulary words, because
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they do go together, and use them. Make a couple poems, have some fun with it. All right?
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Anyway, where are you going to find these words? Well,
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I want you to go to www.eng as in English, vid as in video.com (www.engvid.com),
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where you can play, have fun, and experiment.
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All right? That's what it's about, and that's how you learn best. Anyway, once again, I
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just wanted to say thank you guys for watching the channel, look forward to all your comments,
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and the fact that you go do those quizzes. And before I go, I really want you to subscribe,
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so somewhere around here, or even down here, there's a subscribe button. Okay? Subscribe,
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and you'll get the newest stuff from myself and engVid. Right?
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Have a good one. See ya later.
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Remember: Rain comes down hard.