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  • Today were going to analyze everything we hear in conversation in a Ben Franklin Exercise

  • everyone’s favorite way to improve listening comprehension

  • and understand how Americans talk.

  • This is an excerpt from a lesson in my online school, Rachel’s English Academy.

  • It is incredible to see how much there is to learn from a few short lines of American English.

  • First, here's this snippet of conversation.

  • We need to schedule a time to meet to plan the client presentation.

  • Yeah. I'm ready.

  • Now, let’s analyze.

  • At the end of the video, there will be information on where to find more of these valuable

  • Ben Franklin exercise videos.

  • We need to schedule a time to meet to plan the client presentation.

  • Yeah. I'm ready.

  • We need to schedule a time--

  • Need.

  • The most stressed there, the longest, the clearest.

  • Also 'time'. We need to schedule a time-

  • We need to schedule a time-- We need to schedule a time--

  • The intonation was a little different there. She's going to continue on for the rest of the sentence.

  • 'Schedule', a content word but not quite as stressed as the words 'need' and 'time'.

  • Schedule-- Schedule-- Schedule--

  • So, not every content word has the exact same stress within a sentence.

  • Within a sentence, the speaker is always choosing subconsciously the words to bring out.

  • So she brings out the word 'need'.

  • The verb, what has to happen, we need to do this.

  • And she brings out time

  • which is on their calendar, the time they're going to block off for this meeting that they're going to have.

  • Let’s look at the wordto’, here, the first occurrence of it.

  • We need to-- we need to-- we need to schedule a time

  • Now we know that the wordtoreduces to have the schwa, and the T can either be a true T or a flap T.

  • Let's listen to what happens here:

  • We need to-- we need to-- we need to--

  • So it's not really a flap and it's not really a true T.

  • Really she's just dropped the T altogether because it sound before is a D.

  • So the D between vowels is pronounced like a flap

  • and the T between vowels is pronounced like a flap, the same sound.

  • So here the D comes between two vowels. I don't think she does quite a flap,

  • I feel like I hear ddd--- some of that D sound

  • which is when the tongue is in position for the D but the air is stopped and we get that sound in the throat.

  • Needddddwe need to--

  • We need to-- we need to-- we need to schedule a time

  • Needa-- so to me, it's more of a D than a flap. But I don't hear a T at all. Needa--

  • So when the word 'need' is followed by the word 'to',

  • you can just drop the T and attach a schwa to the end : needa--.

  • We needaWe needa

  • We need to-- we need to-- we need to schedule a time

  • We need to schedule-- We need to schedule--

  • The schwa is said so quickly there.

  • We need to schedule--

  • We need to schedule-- We need to schedule--

  • Schedule. Schedule.

  • Notice the D makes the J sound: --dule, and we have a dark L here: --dule, --dule, --dule, --dule.

  • Schedule. Schedule. Schedule.

  • Make that syllable as quickly as you can:

  • Schedule. Schedule. Schedule a-- Schedule a--

  • Then link the L into the schwa through the word ‘a’.

  • Schedule a-- Schedule a—

  • We need to schedule a—

  • We need to schedule a— We need to schedule a— We need to schedule a time.

  • So these things, this linking ending consonant to beginning vowel,

  • dropping a T and linking it in these little things all help to make the line smooth, smooth, smooth.

  • We need to schedule a— Ahhhhhh--

  • There’s no break in the sound, there's no abrupt pitch change.

  • The pitch is gliding up or gliding down.

  • We need to schedule a— We need to schedule a—

  • We need to schedule a— We need to schedule a— We need to schedule a time--

  • We need to schedule a timetime--, True T there.

  • The T is always a true T when it starts a stressed syllable.

  • Time-- time-- time to meet to plan the client presentation

  • to meet to plan-- to meet to plan--

  • Okay, two more wordto’, and this time they're both made with the true T and the schwa.

  • Meet to-- and time to--, time to meet to-- time to meet to--

  • time to meet to-- time to meet to-- time to meet to--

  • So the T will always be a true T when it follows the T.

  • And actually again you can think of it as being dropped because there's really just one T sound.

  • Meet to-- Meet to-- Meet to--

  • So just put a schwa sound at the end of the word 'meet'. Meet to--

  • Time to-- Now, this could've been a Flap T. Time to-- Time to--

  • But she made a True T: Time to-- Time to--

  • As long as the vowel is reduced and the word is said quickly, it sounds right.

  • Both of flap T and a true T sound good and sound right.

  • Time to meet to-- time to meet to-- time to meet to plan the client presentation

  • To plan the client presentation--

  • Okay, so cli-- client presentaaaa- tion.

  • The stressed syllable is a little clearer a little longer.

  • The pitch is gliding up and gliding down. no abrupt change in pitch.

  • To plan the client presentation-- To plan the client presentation--

  • To plan the client presentation--

  • So 'plan', again a content word, but it's not quite as long as 'client' and 'taaayy--'

  • Those two syllable to me are a little bit clearer a little bit more stressed.

  • Plan-- plan-- plan the client presentation

  • Plan-- plan--. This is one of the tough cases where we have the AH vowel followed by a nasal consonant.

  • Plaaaaan

  • So you want to go through an AH vowel.

  • You relax the back of the tongue before making the N and that gives us this UH vowel

  • or you could think of it as a schwa before the end.

  • Plaaan. Plan. We don't want plan.

  • Plan. That's too bright. It's too much in the face.

  • Plan. Allows the placement to be a little lower.

  • Meet to plan-- meet to plan the-- plan the--plan the-- plan the--

  • client presentation.

  • plan the-- plan the-- plan the client presentation

  • -tion ending, pronounced 'shun' here.

  • Make it fast. Don't try to put an actual vowel sound in there.

  • Remember the N takes over the schwa, it's a syllabic consonant.

  • That means there doesn't have to be a vowel sound in that syllable.

  • -tion -tion -tion. Presentation.

  • Presentation.

  • Presentation. Presentation. Presentation.

  • zun-- zun-- zun-- There's another case here.

  • Z, schwa, N. Presen-- zun-- zun-- zun--

  • Where you don't need to try to make a vowel sound in that syllable. Zun-- zun--

  • Straight from Z to N, presentation, presentation.

  • Presentation, presentation, presentation.

  • And remember it's all smooth: uuuhhhh.

  • No breaks between syllables and no abrupt pitch changes.

  • Pitch either slides up or slides down, it doesn't jump.

  • Presentation. We need to schedule a time to meet to plan the client presentation.

  • Yeah. I'm ready.

  • Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

  • Quick but also a clear up-down shape of stress: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

  • Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I'm ready.

  • I'm ready. I'm ready.

  • M connecting right into the R, there's no break: mmrrr-- mmrr--

  • I'm ready. Uuhhhh uuhhh--

  • So even though it's a sentence with two different words, it's still very smooth, there's no abrupt pitch changes.

  • And all the sounds glide into each other, connected speech.

  • I'm ready. Yeah. I'm ready.

  • 'Ready' has a flap T sound. Flap rr-- rr-- rr--

  • Ready-- Ready-- It's not read-- dd-- dd-- with that real D sound in the throat

  • It's ready. rr-- rr-- rr--

  • Because the D comes between two vowels, flap the tongue.

  • Ready. Ready. I'm ready.

  • Let's listen to the whole dialogue one more time.

  • We need to schedule a time to meet to plan the client presentation.

  • Yeah. I'm ready.

  • So much analysis for so little conversation.

  • But when we pick it apart like that, we discover all of the habits of American pronunciation.

  • How wonderful.

  • This is part of a larger lesson in my online school.

  • Each month there are three Ben Franklin analysis videos added,

  • anywhere from 20 minutes to 35 minutes long.

  • They come with lessons that will point out the phrasal verbs, idioms, and interesting vocabulary

  • that comes up in conversation.

  • This is in addition to all the other lessons in the school.

  • My students love it, they love all the conversation analysis.

  • If youre interested, please join there.

  • Visit RachelsEnglishAcademy.com for more information.

  • To see all of my Ben Franklin videos here on YouTube, click here or in the description below.

  • That’s it and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English!

Today were going to analyze everything we hear in conversation in a Ben Franklin Exercise

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