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Speak English in 30 Minutes: Advanced English Lesson

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Speak English in 30 Minutes: Advanced English Lesson

Speak English With Vanessa
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0:00Get ready to speak clearly and  confidently in English. Hi,  
0:05I'm Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com  and in today's lesson over the next 30 minutes,  
0:12you are going to immerse yourself in clear English  so that you can speak clearly and confidently in  
0:18your English conversations. And like always, I  have created a free PDF worksheet with all of  
0:24today's important English tips, vocabulary, sample  sentences, and at the bottom of the worksheet,  
0:31you can answer Vanessa's challenge question  so that you never forget what you've learned.  
0:36You can click on the link in the description  to download that free PDF worksheet today.
0:41All right, let's get started speaking clear,  confident English by learning which five important  
0:47mistakes in English you should avoid. Let's go. Oh  man, you look so boring. Oh, no. Please do not say  
0:56this in English. This is extremely rude. The first  common speaking mistake is the one you just heard,  
1:03boring versus bored. It's understandable that  these words are a common mistake because they  
1:10both have a similar meaning. They talk about  something or someone that's not interesting,  
1:16but the difference comes in how we use  them grammatically. The word boring is for  
1:22something or someone that's not interesting.  That movie was boring. I went on a date with  
1:29him and he was so boring. He just talked about  sports the whole time. It's not a compliment.
1:37But the word bored refers to the feeling you  have when you watch that boring movie. Or when  
1:44you go on that boring date, you feel bored. So  at the beginning of this lesson when I said,  
1:51oh man, you look so boring, oh no, that's not  nice. It means you're not interesting. Instead,  
1:58I should have said, oh man, you  look so bored. It means you're not  
2:03doing anything fun. You feel like you need  some more fun in your life. I feel bored.
2:10Let's look at a couple sample sentences. This  documentary about sand is boring. I feel so  
2:18bored. Can we please watch something else?  I was so bored during that lecture. To me,  
2:25physics is just boring. Sorry people who like  physics. So now I have a little quiz for you.  
2:32I want you to choose is the word boring or bored  the best fit for this sentence? Vanessa's lessons  
2:40are not... I never feel... What's the correct  answer here? I'll give you three seconds. 3,  
2:492, 1. Vanessa's lessons are not boring. I  never feel bored. Oh, I hope that's true.
2:58Common speaking mistake number two is one that  native English speakers make too. It is well  
3:05versus good. Have you ever heard someone say,  "Ugh, I don't feel good." You know what? That's  
3:12a mistake. Instead, it should be I don't  feel well. What's the difference? Let me  
3:19tell you. The word well is an adverb. That means  it adds something to the verb. So when you say,  
3:26I don't feel well, well is talking about how  you feel. I don't feel well. I have a headache,  
3:33I have a stomachache. I need to go lie  down. If you said I don't feel good,  
3:39this means that my sense of touch is not  good. Maybe you burned your fingers. Yeah,  
3:44I just don't feel good anymore. It's a  very unusual thing to say. So instead,  
3:49when you're talking about your health, you can  use this correctly and say, I don't feel well.
3:54What about the word good? Well, the word good is  an adjective, so it needs to describe a noun. You  
4:01might say, wow, Vanessa, this is a really good  lesson. Good is describing lesson. Or you could  
4:08say, I really need a good grade in this class  or I'm going to fail. I do want to tell you  
4:14of an exception in spoken English. I mentioned  that sometimes native English speakers use this  
4:21incorrectly, but there is one case when we use  it incorrectly and I actually recommend using  
4:27it like that so you don't seem too snobby. Let  me tell you about it. If someone asks you the  
4:33common greeting question, how are you doing and  you want to answer with grammatical correctness,  
4:40you would need to say, "I'm doing well, and  you?" But you know what? If you said this,  
4:46someone might think, oh did you  come from the 16th century? Are you  
4:51an English professor? Maybe you are. But  in this case it's grammatically correct,  
4:57but it is not commonly used and it feels a  little bit weird in just daily conversation.
5:03So what should you say instead? Well, here you  have it. Your English teacher telling you to make  
5:09a mistake on purpose, and that is if someone says,  how are you doing? You could say, pretty good, and  
5:17you? Good is actually the most common response,  even though it's not technically grammatically  
5:24correct. Who knew you should make mistakes? So now  it's time for a little test. Can you choose which  
5:31word fits in which blank? Good or well? I need to  do on that test because I need a grade. I'll give  
5:43you three seconds. 3, 2, 1. I need to do well on  that test because I need a good grade. Great work.
5:55Common speaking mistake number three is another  pair of similar words, and that is job versus  
6:02work. These both mean your career, something that  you do generally to make money, but they function  
6:09differently grammatically in a sentence. The  word work can be both a verb, I work, or it can  
6:17be a noun. My work is as a teacher and the word  job can only be a noun. So let's take a look at  
6:26a couple sentences. My job is to manage my team.  This is a noun and it's talking about your career.  
6:34My job is to manage my team. Or you could say I  work on the marketing team. This is as a verb.
6:43What if we put these together in a sentence? You  could say I work with a lot of interesting people  
6:50at my new job. I do want to teach you two things  to be careful of with these two phrases. One is  
6:58the fixed phrase that you will use often and that  is at work. This is talking about the place where  
7:06you work. Where were you at 6:00 o'clock tonight?  We were waiting for you at dinner. You might say,  
7:12sorry, I was at work. I had to do something  extra before I left. Or you could say I was  
7:17so busy at work today. Yes, it's talking about  the place, but this is a fixed phrase that you  
7:23can use to talk about where you were. I  was at work. I was busy at work today.
7:30Earlier I mentioned that the word work can be used  as a verb or a noun, and the word job can be used  
7:36as a noun. So can they be used interchangeably  at all? Take a look at this. You could say I  
7:43love my job or you could say I love my work, but  be careful. There is a nuanced difference between  
7:51these two. If you say, I love my job, cool.  It just means what you said. I like what I do  
7:57to make money. But when you say I love my work,  this feels like there's a deeper significance to  
8:04what you do at your job. For example, maybe  you help homeless people to find a home,  
8:10or you're helping people who are in a domestic  violence situation get a better life. You  
8:16are really changing people's lives kind of  with a deeper significance. So if you say,  
8:21I love my work, this has the underlying idea that  you are changing the world or at least changing  
8:29someone's world. It's a very deep feeling.  All right, now it's time for a little test.  
8:34Can you choose which blank needs the word job and  which blank needs the word work? For my I need to  
8:44late hours. I'll give you three seconds. Two, one.  For my job I need to work late hours. Great work.
8:54The next common speaking mistake are  two similar words again, in and at. Oh,  
9:01my. I receive many questions from English students  asking, "Vanessa, how can I remember when to use  
9:07in and when to use at?" Well, let me give you  some ideas. This is tricky because we use both  
9:14at and in when we're talking about time, but we  use the word at specifically for specific times.  
9:23For example, at midnight, at 5:00 o'clock,  at noon. This is at specifically that time,  
9:32but the word in is used more generally. Take a  look at this. In the morning, in the evening,  
9:40in five minutes, in six hours. You  didn't say at 3:30. You said no,  
9:47we'll have a meeting in the morning, in  the evening, in five minutes, in six days.
9:55Let's take a look at some sentences. Can you meet  me at noon? I know that that's only in 30 minutes,  
10:04but can you make it? So I'm asking you,  hey, I know this is last minute notice,  
10:10but can you make it? Can you meet me at noon,  this specific time in the duration of time in 30  
10:18minutes? Let's take a look at another one. You're  invited to my birthday party. The party is in 10  
10:25days and it starts at 7:00 o'clock. Wonderful.  Are you ready for a little test? I want you to  
10:32decide which blank needs the word in and which  blank needs the word at. Take a look. Three days  
10:41when my vacation starts, I won't need to wake  up 6:00 A.M. anymore. I can sleep in. All right,  
10:52I'll give you three seconds to decide.  In three days when my vacation starts,  
10:59I won't need to wake up at 6:00 A.M. anymore.  It's so nice on vacation to sleep in.
11:07If you would like to dive deeper into this  topic, I made another video comparing in,  
11:14on and at and over half a million  people have found clarity with this  
11:18video. You can click on the link up  here to watch that in more detail.
11:22Our fifth and final common speaking mistake is  to talk with someone or to talk to someone. I  
11:31want to show you two sentences and I want you to  guess which one is the best. I'm talking with my  
11:37friend or I'm talking to my friend. Which one do  you think is better? I'll give you three seconds.  
11:45Let's do our quiz now. 3, 2, 1. Well, you know  what? This is a trick question because both of  
11:52these are equally acceptable in spoken English  conversations. I have heard that some people  
11:59say when you use talk to someone, it has the sense  that there's an authority. I'm talking to someone  
12:07who has less authority than me. I talked to my  employees, I talked to my child. But really in  
12:15daily spoken English in the US we use both of  these phrases interchangeably. You could say,  
12:22I talked to my boss about the important  meeting next week. I talked to my child,  
12:27I talked to my friend. Or you could say, I  talked with my friend, I talked with my boss.  
12:33You could use these interchangeably in spoken  English and it's not a problem. So if you are  
12:39one of those English learners that has ever  wondered, should I say talk to or talk with,  
12:43you know what? You could just take that concern  and throw it out of your brain. It doesn't matter.
12:48Now that you can avoid those five mistakes  in English, I want to help you learn five  
12:54secrets of American English pronunciation  that will help you to speak English like  
13:00a native speaker because sometimes we speak  clearly and sometimes we link words together,  
13:06and native speakers feel like it's such a  normal thing to do. But English learners  
13:11often struggle understanding this and  using it themselves. So let's practice.
13:16All right, are you ready to get started with the  first secret of American English pronunciation?  
13:22Let's start. Have you heard this phrase before,  the early bird catches the worm? This means that  
13:28if you wake up early or you get started now,  well, you will succeed. Only the birds that  
13:36wake up early in the morning get the best  worms. If you wait, if you procrastinate,  
13:42well too bad for you, you won't be able to  succeed. But this wonderful phrase uses an  
13:49important American English pronunciation  point. There are three words, early bird  
13:55and worm that use a colored R. So in American  English, this R is a strong hard sound. Early,  
14:06bird, worm. Do you see how that's almost  like an angry dog? Worm, bird, early. Make  
14:17sure that when you're using American English  pronunciation, this colored R sound is hard.
14:23Phrase number two that uses key American English  pronunciation is this one. Have you ever heard  
14:28someone say, your guess is as good as mine? Your  guess is as good as mine. This means that the  
14:34other person has no clue. Maybe you could say,  I don't know how to get to the beach. Your guess  
14:43is as good as mine. But there is something  important happening with the pronunciation  
14:47of this phrase. At the end of the word guess and  at the end of the word is, there is an S. But in  
14:55American English pronunciation, we often link the  S with the vowel next to make a Z sound. So listen  
15:03carefully when I say this phrase. Your guess is as  good as mine. It sounds a lot like zzz and that's  
15:12what's happening here. We are linking together  the S plus a vowel from the next word. Try to  
15:19say it with me. Your guess is as good as mine.  I have no clue. Your guess is as good as mine.
15:27Key phrase number three that uses American  English pronunciation is this fun one.  
15:32Don't bite the hand that feeds you. Have  you ever been trying to help someone and  
15:38then they complain about how you're helping  them? You can use this phrase and say, hey,  
15:43don't bite the hand that feeds you. I'm just  trying to help you. Well, it's the same idea.  
15:48If you argue with your boss, if you yell at your  boss, he's the one that gives you your paycheck.  
15:56So don't bite the hand that feeds you. But there  is important American English pronunciation here  
16:02that happens three times. Don't bite, and then  a little later in the sentence is the word that.
16:10What is similar between all three of these  words? It's the letter T. Listen when I say this  
16:16contraction, don't, don't. Do you hear don't with  that puff of air coming out? Nope. In American  
16:25English, oftentimes a T at the end of words will  be cut off. We call this a stopped T because your  
16:31mouth is making that shape, don't. My tongue is at  the top of my mouth trying to make that T shape,  
16:38but there's no puff of air that comes out.  Listen carefully as I say this and I want you  
16:43to hear that stopped T. Don't bite the hand  that feeds you. You think you can say that  
16:52with me? You can do it. Let's say this phrase  together. Don't bite the hand that feeds you.
17:01All right, let's go to our next phrase. Has this  ever happened to you before? You invite a lot of  
17:06people over to your house and you think it's going  to be a fun party, it's great, and then it just  
17:11becomes so many people in your house, so much  chaos and you have to say this. Oh no, I think  
17:18it's going to get out of hand. This doesn't  mean that anything is really in your hand and  
17:24it's getting out of your hand. Instead, this means  it's getting out of control. But this phrase, get  
17:31out of hand, uses an important American English  pronunciation tip, which is that the T at the end  
17:38of words, another T tip, that has a vowel next  often changes to a D sound. So listen when I say  
17:47this, the party will get out of hand. The word get  is surrounded by vowels. There's a vowel on either  
17:58side, G-E-T, and then the next word starts with  an O. So that T is surrounded by vowels and that  
18:06means that it's going to change to a D sound. Get  out and then it's going to happen with out and of.  
18:14Out of. In fact, the word of changes to just a.  Get out hand of hand. Can you say it with me? The  
18:23party will get out hand. The party will get out of  hand if you invite 50 people over to your house.
18:32All right, let's go to our last American English  pronunciation tip. Has it ever happened to you  
18:37that you travel abroad and then you realize that  you're just meeting people from your own home  
18:43country? It's like you're magnetic towards  each other. Well, we could use this phrase,  
18:49birds of a feather flock together, and this means  that common things are attracted to each other,  
18:57for better or for worse. So there is a key  American English pronunciation point we can talk  
19:02about with this phrase. We already talked about  the word bird and how it uses that colored R,  
19:08that hard R sound. Bird. And there is another  R tip in this phrase as well. Look at the end  
19:14of the word feather and together. Here is an E-R,  and it's going to be a strong R sound. Feather,  
19:25together. Again, pretend that you are an angry  dog and try to make that hard R sound. Feather,  
19:33together. Can you say this wonderful idiom with  me? Birds of a feather flock together. Wonderful.
19:43Now that you've avoided five mistakes, learned  five pronunciation tips, now it's time to improve  
19:50your English vocabulary. You're going to learn 30  important phrasal verbs with a fun lesson about a  
19:58picture frame. All of these phrasal verbs are  going to be used to talk about a picture frame  
20:04so that you can use them in your daily life as  well and speak clearly and confidently. Let's go.
20:10Are you ready to start learning 30 phrasal  verbs with just this little picture frame?  
20:15Let's do it. This is a lot of picture frames.  I need to sort through my picture frames to  
20:22decide which one would be best for this  project. Oh, I'm going to use this one.  
20:28I'm going to look through my pictures to  decide which one would be best with this  
20:33frame. I'm going to use this one. Before  I put the picture in, I need to brush off  
20:39the frame. It's been collecting dust in  my closet. Then I need to clean off the  
20:46fingerprints. Does this happen to you? There's  always fingerprints on my picture frames.
20:52Next, I'm going to open up the back of  the frame. Oops, the little tab just  
20:58broke off. I guess it was kind of a cheap picture  frame. I take off the back of the picture frame  
21:06and I will now put in my lovely picture and make  sure that I put it facing the right way. Ta-da.  
21:15I'll put the back back on the picture frame and  I'll close up the little tabs. Unfortunately,  
21:22there's only one tab left. All of the others  broke off. Such a cheap picture frame, but  
21:28it'll do. I could set this picture frame down on  the table or maybe just place it on the counter,  
21:35but I think that I want to hang it up. I was  just about to hang this up on the wall when  
21:41the back kept coming out, so I decided that I  needed to tape the back on. Such a cheap picture  
21:49frame. But you know what? That's how it goes  sometimes and you'll never see it from the front.
21:55To put this picture frame up on the wall,  I'm going to need to hammer in a nail. Okay,  
22:01so here's one extra thing in the video.  Don't blame me, don't yell at me. Yes,  
22:07it's more than just one picture frame. I'm  going to hammer in the nail. I could put it  
22:15on the wall high up and try to keep  it away from my children's fingers,  
22:21but I'm not too worried about it. I'm going to  hammer it in a little bit low down, around here.  
22:32Looks good. Now I just need to carefully  set my picture frame on the nail. Looks  
22:42pretty straight. I'm sure that when my kids come  home from school, they're going to point out,  
22:47hey, look mom, there's a new picture on  the wall and I'll be sure to tell them,  
22:51don't lift it up. Don't even pick it  up. It's pretty fragile. And someday,  
22:56if I don't want this picture here, I'll just take  it off the wall. And you know what? Unfortunately,  
23:04this is not a picture frame that I'm going to  be passing down through the generations. It's  
23:11pretty cheap. And you know what? I probably  wouldn't even give it away. I don't think  
23:17many people want a picture frame that has to  have tape on the back to keep the picture in.
23:25Oops. Now I have to sweep up the pieces.  I'm going to have to dump it out in the  
23:32trash and tell my kids to watch out for  little pieces of glass that might have  
23:37gone across the room. All I can do now  is throw it away and I guess I'll have  
23:42to look through my pictures again and pick one  out that's good for the next frame. Maybe one  
23:51of these frames will be a little bit more  durable and not fall apart like this one.
23:57Great work immersing yourself in English over  the past 30 minutes. You're awesome. Don't  
24:03forget to download the free PDF worksheet  that goes along with today's lesson. This  
24:08PDF worksheet includes all five mistakes  you should avoid, five pronunciation tips,  
24:13sample sentences and ideas and all 30  phrasal verbs that you can use when  
24:19you're having conversations in English.  Plus, you can answer Vanessa's challenge  
24:24question at the bottom of the worksheet so  that you never forget what you've learned.  
24:28You can click on the link in the description to  download this free PDF, my gift to you today.
24:34Well, thanks so much for learning English  with me and I'll see you again next Friday  
24:38for a new lesson here on my YouTube channel.  Bye. But wait, do you want more? I recommend  
24:44watching this video next, where in 30  minutes you will learn about American  
24:48English pronunciation. This video has over four  and a half million views, so don't miss out.  
24:55Make sure that you learn American English  pronunciation here and I'll see you there.