Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Today I’m going to talk about the phraseswant toandgoing to’.

  • Wanna and gonna are acceptable, although casual, pronunciations of these phrases.

  • For example, in a job interview,

  • you might not want to use this more casual pronunciation.

  • You might say a phrase like, ‘I want to contributeblah blah blah.’ Want.

  • Where you actually make that T sound.

  • But if youre in more casual conversation, for example with a friend,

  • you might say something like ‘I want to be there by 6.’

  • Wanna, wanna, here it would be appropriate to use that word.

  • In the words wanna and gonna, it is the first syllable that is accented.

  • Wanna, gonna.

  • And the vowel sound in the first syllable is most likely going to be theuh

  • as inbuttersound, though you may at times

  • hear it a little closer to theahas infathersound.

  • I think I myself pronounce it closer to theuhas inbuttersound.

  • Wanna, gonna.

  • In both of these words, the final syllable

  • is a simple schwa sound, short and unaccented.

  • Wanna, gonna.

  • Another note aboutwanna’, wanna is short for the wordswant to’.

  • Not ever for the wordswants to’.

  • So, for example, in the phrase ‘ I want to be there by 6’,

  • I’m replacingwant towithwanna’.

  • But if we change the subject to he, he wants to be there by 6,

  • now the word is wants, with the S, and not want

  • (because of the different conjugation).

  • Therefore, we cannot shorten it intowanna’.

  • He wanna be there by 6.

  • Can’t say that becausewants todoes not shorten into wanna.

  • Onlywant to’.

  • Going to, or gonna, is used with a subject and the conjugated verbto be’.

  • I am going to be there at 6.

  • If were going to shortengoing tointo gonna,

  • were also going to want to shorten ‘I aminto I’m, a contraction.

  • I’m gonna be there by 6.

  • You are going to becomes youre gonna.

  • He or she is going to becomes he’s gonna, she’s gonna.

  • We are going to becomes were gonna.

  • They are going to becomes theyre gonna.

  • Theyre gonna.

  • If youre going to be shortening these words, theyre, the contraction, gonna,

  • the more casual pronunciation, you don’t want to pause between them.

  • Theyre gonna, theyre gonna.

  • The whole point in shortening them is to say it faster.

  • So, if you pause in between, it will make the sentence sound a little strange.

  • Theyre gonna.

  • Were gonna.

  • I’m gonna.

  • It all melts together, almost as if it’s one longer word.

  • Repeat the following sample sentences.

  • I want to see the movie on Friday.

  • They wan to be here.

  • We want to get there early.

  • I’m going to see her tomorrow.

  • Are you going to be there? Theyre going to pay for it.

  • Were going to stop by later.

Today I’m going to talk about the phraseswant toandgoing to’.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it