8 Simple Pronunciation RULES to Speak English Clearly 🇬🇧 Powerful! 🇬🇧 (Part 2)

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • ⚠️ Beware! Rule #8 is going to blow your mind!! ...In this video you are going to learn 8 really simple pronunciation rules that you NEVER learnt at school! These will help you speak English more clearly and become more easily understood by native speakers.
    👓 Watch with subtitles 👓
    🎁 [MY COURSE: PRONUNCIATION QUICK FIX] 🎁
    Learn all the sounds, pronunciation techniques, stress and linking that will help you to speak English clearly and accurately, and understand fast-speaking natives easily.
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    :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
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    ► Download here » onlinelanguageacademy.lpages....
    (BONUS: When you download this, you'll also get access to my free book, "English Quick Fix", and also ALL past + future worksheets that I publish!!!)
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    * * *
    ⭐️ [WATCH NEXT]
    🔵 PART 1: 8 Simple Pronunciation RULES To Speak English Clearly 🇬🇧 (Powerful!)
    • 8 Simple Pronunciation...
    🔵 8 Silent Letter RULES… with (almost) NO EXCEPTIONS!
    • 😜 Crazy, Confusing Eng...
    🔵 How do people from Yorkshire speak English?
    • How do people from YOR...
    * * *
    ► CHAPTERS:
    00:00 Pronunciation Rule 1: Words that are nouns and verbs
    01:41 Pronunciation Rule 2: Words ending -TION and -SION
    2:40 Pronunciation Rule 3: The -ABLE suffix
    3:55 Pronunciation Rule 4: The -ISE suffix
    5:08 Pronunciation Rule 5: Compound Adjectives
    6:36 Pronunciation Rule 6: How to pronounce the word THE
    7:59 Pronunciation Rule 7: Abbreviations
    9:28 Pronunciation Rule 8: How to pronounce 13 and 30
    11:15 Pronunciation Quiz
    * * *
    ► TRANSCRIPTION
    Look at this word. How do you pronounce this word? Well, actually, there are two different ways that we can pronounce this, and it all depends on whether we are using it as a noun or a verb. So look at these two examples here. The increase in unemployment was shocking. They increased the prices by 10%. Okay, in the first example, we're using increase as a noun, so we stress the first syllable increase. In the second example, we're using it as a verb. So we stress the second syllable increase. They increased the prices. Now, this rule is true for other words that can be both a noun and verb. So, for example, you can see an attendance record on the school app. I record my videos inside my office. Record when it's a noun, record when it's a verb. We stress the first syllable for a noun and the second syllable for a verb. Thanks for the birthday present. Present. As a noun, we stress the first syllable. And let me present you with eight simple pronunciation rules that you never learnt at school.
    Yes, this is part two, because I've already done a lesson on eight simple pronunciation rules to speak English clearly and also a video on eight silent letter rules. So make sure you watch those videos after this one. You can find the links in the description. Okay, we've looked at rule number one. For rule number two, I want you to tell me which is the stressed syllable in these words. Collaboration, cooperation, demonstration, fiction, modernisation, organisation, presumption, television, vision. Now, I often hear students having problems pronouncing these words because they try to put the stress on the first or second syllable of these words. But with words that end shin or jun, we put the stress on the penultimate syllable. So not the last syllable, but the one before that. Listen again. Competition, demonstration, fiction, nation, television, vision. Okay, it doesn't matter how long the word is. The stressed syllable is the penultimate one in these words.
    OK, look at this little sentence here. Are you able to put the vegetables on the table?
    Are you able to put the vegetables on the table? Now, in other words, able and table, the able is not a suffix. A suffix is just a little bit that we add to the end of words like -tion or -sion and -able. Now, when it's a suffix, we pronounce it /ə/ with the schwa sound. You need to practise the schwa sound for this, the schwa sound.
    [... Due to character limit, the rest of this transcription is unavailable]
    * * *
    ► Thanks, as always, for your LIKES, COMMENTS and SHARES!! 🙏
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    Your British English Teacher,
    ~ Greg 😀
    #EnglishWithGreg #LearnEnglish #SpeakEnglish #EnglishPronunciation #PronunciationRules #BritishPronunciation #B2 #C1 #ESL

Komentáře • 150

  • @EnglishWithGreg
    @EnglishWithGreg  Před rokem +11

    📎 Download this lesson's FREE Worksheet + Test (pdf) here: onlinelanguageacademy.lpages.co/free/
    Did you already know Rule #8? Let me know below ⤵ ~ Enjoy the lesson! 😀

  • @JaimeGonzalez-vh6qt
    @JaimeGonzalez-vh6qt Před rokem +30

    I've been studying English all my life and this is the first time ever I know about this numbers rule. Great lesson sir, you make English much easier to learn and understand. Thanks and greetings from Mexico City 🇲🇽🇬🇧🇲🇽🇬🇧🇲🇽

  • @phamnguyenductin
    @phamnguyenductin Před rokem +5

    I've always heard "television" being stressed on the first syllable, never the third. Although the 3rd syllable stressed is listed in the dictionary as another pronunciation, certainly it's not the most popular.

    • @davidh7779
      @davidh7779 Před rokem +2

      Yeah this one stuck out to me as a native speaker.

  • @ariedewantara
    @ariedewantara Před rokem +8

    Clear and Understandable lesson Mr.Greg, you're a super

  • @daisypapadakis6503
    @daisypapadakis6503 Před rokem +7

    Thank you Greg!! After so many years of using English I’ve now found a simple rule on the pronunciation of numbers!!!👏👏

  • @belenhernandezbenavente3420

    Thank you, Greg ! You are nor a teacher but THE teacher 💯

  • @TrueIgor
    @TrueIgor Před rokem +4

    I really never learned the numbers pronunciation nuances, just used those accents intuitively. Thank you so much for such a simply explanation! Greetings from Kyiv!)

  • @paultv4364
    @paultv4364 Před rokem

    Thank you. It's pretty useful video.

  • @user-cj6ub5el1h
    @user-cj6ub5el1h Před rokem

    Thank you, Greg, it was very helpful

  • @berenice-6003
    @berenice-6003 Před rokem

    Hi Greg, You are the best! Thank you for everything.

  • @nikovald
    @nikovald Před rokem +2

    I never heard about the numbers rule (#8), thanks for your teachings.

  • @slowlearner4341
    @slowlearner4341 Před rokem +2

    Simple, short, comprehensible, emotional, even attractive - those and some others epithets represent your style of teaching, Greg. Excellent video for watching; requires, however, some time end efforts for "digesting". And it's absolutely normal, I do believe. Thank you, Greg.

  • @kookolei2468
    @kookolei2468 Před rokem +1

    Very helpful video. Thanks a lot.

  • @australiannature2705
    @australiannature2705 Před rokem

    Thank you Greg for this info👍.

  • @LinoVern
    @LinoVern Před rokem

    Thanks Greg!

  • @audiolivroscomdoen6883
    @audiolivroscomdoen6883 Před 6 měsíci

    Very good . Thanks a Lot.

  • @monicamastronunzio518

    Hi Greg! I' m from Argentina and I met you in you tube by chance, your explanations are so clear and the best thing... I understand every single Word you say! I love your british accent Wonderful!

  • @olgacornejo3030
    @olgacornejo3030 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you.

  • @ilmasaavedra3954
    @ilmasaavedra3954 Před rokem

    Great rules 👏

  • @staysafe576
    @staysafe576 Před 3 měsíci

    Nice pronunciation tips, thanks.

  • @longgo1234
    @longgo1234 Před rokem

    i love your lessons. Thank you

  • @adamclotfelter9875
    @adamclotfelter9875 Před rokem +2

    In American English, you usually stress the “adjective within the compound adjective”; ie, the first word, or emphasize them both equally (or at least the first syllable of each). In some American dialects (eg. more Southern), the second word of the compound adjective is sometimes barely pronounced (if it’s not the end of the sentence).

  • @florakhamraeva9034
    @florakhamraeva9034 Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @wagnerjunior6524
    @wagnerjunior6524 Před rokem

    The teen numbers stress change is new to me. Awesome! Thx a bunch!

  • @eman0706
    @eman0706 Před rokem

    amazing lesson!!!

  • @jorgedangelo3331
    @jorgedangelo3331 Před rokem +2

    Hola! excelent! excelente profesor! lo mejor desde Argentina!

  • @roserpuig3394
    @roserpuig3394 Před rokem +1

    Thanks, you are the best teacher!!!!!!!

  • @HerculanoBando
    @HerculanoBando Před rokem

    All this time I thought I knew how to pronounce the numbers from 13 to 19 but just today I realised that I have to fix my English pronunciation.
    The best English teaching channel on CZcams. Thanks for take some time to teach us.
    Greetings directly from Africa - Mozambique
    P.S.: I'll check the T&Cs of courses you offer and ASAP I'll subscribe to one of your courses. English opens doors here.

  • @zaphodbeeblebrox8184
    @zaphodbeeblebrox8184 Před rokem

    pure awesomeness :) Thank you for the great video mate :)

  • @anaramos2802
    @anaramos2802 Před rokem

    We do have a ROUGH time following all those rules. But you are undoubtedly THE master!

  • @silviarosellini1
    @silviarosellini1 Před rokem

    As James Gonzál I never heard about the number rule, but I realize that my pronunciation in the different situations was right. Having a B1 I never heard about many other rules of that kind, but all the same I realize that in most cases I pronounce correctly. Wow so interesting about the stress, which was so neglected when I studied: it was as if we had to learn it just experiencing it. Thanks 🙏

  • @Myshanker
    @Myshanker Před rokem +2

    Superb and nice vedeo Mr. Gerg ...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .in the great India

  • @jack_3.5mm
    @jack_3.5mm Před rokem +3

    My plan for the next year is to enroll for the ESOL course... Probably I'll spend rest of my life living in the UK, so I feel like I need to speak English with no problems communicating. in the future I want to apply for the British passport too which requires ESOL certificate.
    Greg would be nice if you make a video about how to pronounce words like; run, fun gun, etc. Cheers 😗

  • @tkengels6652
    @tkengels6652 Před rokem

    The “the” part really helped I never minded it

  • @vitalyplotkin555
    @vitalyplotkin555 Před rokem

    Omg teen rule was totally new to me even though i think i have always done it the right way...thanks

  • @vitalylesindorf640
    @vitalylesindorf640 Před rokem

    Thanks a lot. This your video was very usefull for me. Greetings from Moscow.

  • @guidofaria6721
    @guidofaria6721 Před rokem

    Thanks for the nice lesson, you've got another subscriber. And with all respect: what amazing eyes.

  • @katerynahuk5148
    @katerynahuk5148 Před rokem +1

    I have dedicated very little time to learning pronunciation in my life but I know all of these intuitively. Perhaps it's because of listening to English videos and movies. I don't know exactly. But now I’m ensured that these words're pronouncing correctly and thank you for this! Great videos!

    • @yigitcanbaysal824
      @yigitcanbaysal824 Před rokem

      Hi Kateryna
      I'm looking for a speaking partner to practice and improve my English speaking skills
      I wonder if you are interested in?

  • @piyamapornaui9698
    @piyamapornaui9698 Před rokem

    Hello Greg, I have never known about the number rules, thank you. And my answer is Rough.

  • @sergeykrasnytskyi2279

    You are cool as always!

  • @panszarlotka
    @panszarlotka Před rokem

    Greg - I remember writing you a year ago my comments about editing, framing, sound effects, etc. Now it is IDEAL.
    A very worthwhile lesson and the coolies are not distracting. Greetings

    • @EnglishWithGreg
      @EnglishWithGreg  Před rokem +1

      I really appreciated (and appreciate) your comments 👏🏼 Thanks a million!

    • @panszarlotka
      @panszarlotka Před rokem

      @@EnglishWithGreg I also wrote you to make a short vide when you had about 60 thousand subs. ;)
      As you can see you now have a quarter of a million - so that probably increased the reach.
      Don't freak out too much with editing anymore. Just focus on valuable content. Success and I look forward to a million subs!!!

  • @anuradhawijesinghe6010

    Hi Greg, thanks for this informative video. Stress rules for numbers 13 to 19 was very clear. But what is the rule for numbers from 20 upwards ? Would you be able to generalise it, maybe in another video ?

  • @jorgenke4145
    @jorgenke4145 Před rokem

    There was a lot to learn for me. Thanks! About the pronunciation of "the", I find it funny that in "the unit" and "the umbrella" the word "the" is pronounced differently. But as you said, it is not the vocal, but the vocal sound that matters. And unit sounds like "junit".

  • @dianapaolamosquerahurtado9878

    Thanks Greg. Great lesson. The answer of the test is D I think.

  • @JustinJonesLi
    @JustinJonesLi Před rokem +4

    I'd be very interested to see your sources for these rules and examples.
    Number 1 should have a caveat that it only applies to words whose pronunciation changes as a noun and verb. Given a word that can serve as a noun or verb, it's not obvious if there's any change at all. For example: reveal, exit, reply, concern, vomit
    I've never known the word vegetable to contain a suffix
    Number 5 has a lot of intricacies to it. Every example you gave could've been stressed the other way or had equal stress, and it may depend on your accent. It may also depend on the actual compound adjective itself and the surrounding words. For example, Shakespeare is well-KNOWN, but he could either be a well-known author or well-KNOWN author
    Number 7 is replete with exceptions or at least options. ASAP can definitely be pronounced as two syllables. FUBAR is never pronounced as letters. LOL can be either (and yes, people do use it in speech). Remember, these rules expressed to be about speaking English clearly, not in any particular register
    Number 8 has more to it. The stress on disyllabic "teens" can be even or really anywhere. "Before the sunset of her SIX-teenth birthday, she shall prick her finger ... and die!" "Princess Aurora had an awesome Sweet Six-TEENTH." In these contexts, you may well pronounce and hear the stress on both syllables, but using the given stress patterns won't sound particularly strange

    • @cupidstunt5270
      @cupidstunt5270 Před rokem +1

      I doubt he'll have any, as a native English speaker, a lot of this utter bollocks.

    • @surimi7283
      @surimi7283 Před rokem

      Good points here. There are some rather common exceptions to the No.1 rule. 'Review' invariably stresses the second syllable, irrespective of its word category, and it's the opposite with 'preview'... fascinating. I disagree on the stress change rule concerning only words whose N/V pronunciation changes, though. It doesn't change for 'increase' for instance, only the stress placement does.

  • @Natalia_English_Teacher
    @Natalia_English_Teacher Před rokem +2

    I always teach my students to stress the last syllable in 13-19, except for years like 1919, which is NINEteen nineTEEN. This is new info for me, Gregg, thank you.

    • @frankhooper7871
      @frankhooper7871 Před rokem

      I'd say a lot of these 'rules' are more like guidelines and that not everybody follows them exactly. For my part (70 year old who was raised in the USA up until age of 22 and live in the UK since then), I'd stress the first syllable in both for year - so I'd say NINEteen NINEteen.
      Likewise, in the compound adjective 'world-famous', I'd give equal stress to the first two syllables: WORLD-FAmous, but it does depend on the word

    • @Natalia_English_Teacher
      @Natalia_English_Teacher Před rokem

      @@frankhooper7871 thanks for your comment! In fact, when you listen to a lot of English, some things come to you naturally, but still you have to exlain a lot to students, because in most cases you are the only person they hear speaking English. And unfortunately, students do not normally copy you, so you need to 'force' it into them by explaning and asking to repeat.

  • @wardrich
    @wardrich Před rokem

    As a native English speaker, these videos are really interesting - these are things we just do without even thinking about them. But at the same time, it's doing that thing where it becomes a manual process like when you remember you have to breathe lol

  • @rql7397
    @rql7397 Před rokem

    I speak English as a foreign language and there is something that I'm still having troubles with when it comes to the pronunciation of the - teen numbers. If the following word begins with a stressed syllable it sounds to me as if you only stress the first part of the - teen number, not both, as in tennis: FIF-teen-LOVE. Probably too many stressed syllables in a row otherwise.
    Great video, BTW (stress on the W) ;-)

  • @cmtwei9605
    @cmtwei9605 Před 6 měsíci

    Someone else pointed out 'vegetable' has a silent e, I think both forms are in use, perhaps the silent e is more recent or in fast speech. I went to British school decades ago and no one said anything about the silent e, the second syllable ge would sound lighter but not totally absent.😮
    I normally stress the first and third syllables in television and engineer or at least the differences aren't that much. Actually the British people commonly just say the telly.😊
    Not all abbreviations are pronounced by their letters, UNICEF as a name is normally pronounced you-nee-cef.

  • @joseorlandoolaverasaintche8503

    You're my heroe

  • @aryelka
    @aryelka Před rokem

    Thank you! You're the best teacher! =D
    I just want to ask you if these rules also apply to American English! Thanks!

    • @indigobunting5041
      @indigobunting5041 Před rokem

      As an American the only rule that seems to be different is the rule about the word The. Many Americans don't pronounce it thee in any situation. You will be understood using British rules for the word The. There are many regional differences in how words are pronounced in the USA.

  • @paulagardner3218
    @paulagardner3218 Před rokem +1

    In the US, we stress the first syllable of television.

  • @HagenvonEitzen
    @HagenvonEitzen Před rokem

    You used "The honest man" as an example for "vowel after the". I would have preferred to also find something like "the union" among the "consonant after the" examples. Just to make it even clearer that (of course?) the sounds instead of the letters detemine the pronunciation.

  • @Fenrik2
    @Fenrik2 Před rokem

    The numbers rule is really interesting, especially at the end of the sentence. I usually tend to stress the 'more detailled' part of the number (as in the counting example, THIRteen, because the 'three' implies more detail than the 'ten'); or either part if I want to mark a difference ("No, not THIRTY one pounds, only TWENTY one" or "She was twenty TWO when she published that song, not twenty ONE".) So, I guess if I heard "He was thirTEEN," I would tend to think "No-one claimed that he had been _twenty_ three." BTW: does this also apply to sentences that continue, like "He was thirteen, but he is older now"?

  • @Eunoia20234
    @Eunoia20234 Před rokem

    Dear Greg can you tell us why we can’t use “with” after discuss

  • @leechgully
    @leechgully Před rokem

    I have a personal gripe about how the verb 'Contribute' has changed in its pronunciation in popular discourse. It now seems common to put the emphasis on the first syllable 'con' rather that the latter two in 'tribute',which used to be the accepted pronunciation. This has the effect of making the word sound like 'contrabute' which disguises its Latin root. It means a kind of co-payment hence its a kind of 'tribute' and we can see this in the idea of a payment or award. Imho, the classic pronunciation highlights its derivation more clearly and is more elegant.

  • @martysears
    @martysears Před rokem +1

    I disagree about television. No one I know says ‘I’m gonna watch the teleVISion.” Native speakers stress the first syllable TELevision. Great video though!

  • @forestfrost9676
    @forestfrost9676 Před rokem

    'Ey up Greg, I just discovered you set of videos and as a native English speaker I really like your explanations of rules I never knew were rules.
    You may have covered this in a previous video but could you explain to me why people in the UK use the preterit form of the verb as an adverb(?) instead of a gerund for an action that currently happening? I'm stood here looking at the scenery vs. I'm standing here looking... Thanks.
    P.S. you spelled 'realize' wrong. 🤭

    • @indigobunting5041
      @indigobunting5041 Před rokem

      He used the British spelling of realize. The are many spelling differences between American english and British english. Most of the spelling differences are subtle. Like the S and the Z in realize/realise.

  • @rolithesecond
    @rolithesecond Před rokem

    It's pretty common to say ASAP as a word now, though :)

  • @iWhacko
    @iWhacko Před rokem

    well in your first example you can pronounce it differently if you want to differentiate. "they INcreased the prices in stead of DEcrease them". same with your numbers"shes not seventeen years old shes EIGHTeen" even though its at the end of a sentence

  • @LuisRomero-sc8rr
    @LuisRomero-sc8rr Před rokem

    Good morning Greg, My name is Everardo from Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. I want to learn english with you. Could you tell me how to use your videos course??? Which is the first one or how is the process to use the videos? Because i want to have a method continuou for learn english. Please help me

  • @TheJademan85
    @TheJademan85 Před rokem

    veselă veselă. 😁

  • @agape-dikaia
    @agape-dikaia Před rokem +2

    I had tried to sort out the pronunciation rules using cards when I started to learn English on my own when I was 13 years old. Can you imaging yourself learning Czech at age 13? Never the less I did not managed the rulse well, because I've learned a lot of things wrong. Thank you for your lesson which help me to correct it.

  • @Christopher-pp6nl
    @Christopher-pp6nl Před rokem +2

    I am a bit confused with the pronunciation of vegetable. I learned the second e is silent. But Greg used a clear pronunciation of that e. Does it depend on local dialect?

    • @arvid196
      @arvid196 Před rokem

      Right, the second ‘e’ is not pronounced.

  • @hastalazeta72
    @hastalazeta72 Před rokem

    Magic e song for children is helpful

  • @lydiafife8716
    @lydiafife8716 Před rokem

    As for THE, in Canada we say tha the (shwa) and thee
    I would say tha day, thee other, and the (shwa) thing
    The (shwa) day is okay too
    I think tha day is more to emphasize the day in particular
    Thee is for in front of a vowel OR to emphasize a noun
    Sometimes one has to just get the meaning before using the pronunciation - in time

  • @tcxtn3903
    @tcxtn3903 Před 9 měsíci

    I didn’t know -able in the word vegetable was a suffix

  • @LuisRomero-sc8rr
    @LuisRomero-sc8rr Před rokem

    Greg, I want to add a comment. I have problems with past and past participle verbs pronunciation.

  • @IWantToKnow2
    @IWantToKnow2 Před rokem

    as a native english speaker, its weird that i have never been given these rules... but i seem to know them in my speech lol

  • @armosargo1155
    @armosargo1155 Před rokem

    It is all about British English, in America you need just stressing on the first syllabus both nouns and verbs.

  • @lifeinlondon3772
    @lifeinlondon3772 Před rokem

    Quiz time- I think D is correct

  • @monarou3084
    @monarou3084 Před rokem

    Excellent lesson !
    I knew already one or two rules but I learnt several ones to be remembered.
    Rough : if you don't know the pronunciation, this adjective can be uneasy to say.
    221203 RR

  • @alexisyusti220
    @alexisyusti220 Před rokem

    Then if a word is a verb we must stressed the second syllable?

  • @DarkVoidIII
    @DarkVoidIII Před rokem

    So, which of the four do we pronounce 'gh' in? I've already watched the video you linked to, and don't remember the answer. Because of course that's how my brain works. Or not. I really wish you wouldn't cross-link questions to answers in other videos!

  • @diegofontoura3802
    @diegofontoura3802 Před rokem

    I notice I have always followed the numbers' rule unconsciously, even thou nobody has ever taught me that

  • @anthonywhelan5419
    @anthonywhelan5419 Před rokem

    The different ways of saying words because of regional dialects is called allophonic variation. Castle and chance are examples of this. The homographs you mention can either sound the same and are therefore homonyms (words that are spelled the same, sound the same but have different meanings), or homographs (words that have the same spelling but have different meanings, such as refuse). Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings and spellings. My Dublin father never said the, but duh.

  • @drfill9210
    @drfill9210 Před rokem

    Any "tion" words have equivalents in Spanish. Messes them up terribly. Ps hadn't noticed these rules.. native speaker. Fun vid

  • @isilder
    @isilder Před rokem

    Btw anericans do the stress other ways ... For example ,contribute.. they are saying contri-bute all over the media .. no its contrib-ute or contrib-bute

    • @leegifford2942
      @leegifford2942 Před rokem

      Yes, and Canadians say COMposite and Americans say comPOSite.

  • @maggiematthews3517
    @maggiematthews3517 Před rokem

    Excellent lesson Greg. I would love to see you do a lesson on superlatives. So often these days we hear people saying things such as "most easiest" or "most funniest" which, of course, is not correct ... and sounds odd too. I love your explanation about correct pronunciation of "the." It's another thing we're hearing more frequently ... and it makes people sound like children just learning to read as they painfully sound out each word and syllable. "Thuh" elephant, "thuh" apple etc..

  • @SabotsLibres
    @SabotsLibres Před rokem

    I'm often drawn to "how to speak (British) English" videos, being a native speaker but also being perfectly fluent in Dutch and Limburgs, pretty good in French and passable in German. And it always surprises me that these videos pretty well invariably get one thing wrong: the -IZE/-ISE/-YSE suffix words - and their relation with the TION ending. Unfortunately, spelling checkers on computers have completely corrupted the correct spelling over the past years and CZcamsrs are only compounding the problem. Basically ALL those words that can take a TION ending, should be spelled with the IZE suffix, not ISE. RealiZe, organiZe, demoniZe etc. these words can form TION words : realization, organization, demonization. If a TION form is not possible, then it must be -ISE (or rarely -YSE) : advertise, analyse etc.

  • @digimcgoohan
    @digimcgoohan Před rokem

    Well well. Always a good lesson, but about the "THE" sound... Alone you pronounce it like "ze/zi" but in a sentence it sounds either like "de"... After years of learning English, this is still a challenge 🙂

    • @orangie8426
      @orangie8426 Před rokem

      It's the TH sound of English..
      It may sound like DE but it's because the way the TH sound is made, sounds almost like a buzz.. like a Bee (the insect) think of that sound... zzzzzzzzzzzz
      Only you put your tongue to the back of your teeth and try to now make that buzz sound.. thhhhhh... (it's a vibration)..
      So when an English speaker says TH quickly..
      It can sound like DE...
      But its T(vibration sound) H .... THe.
      Also.. I'm going to teach you something most English teachers may not tell you..
      Ok.
      So you know that English TH sound.
      Th once had a letter all of its own... that's right..
      When people write THe THat THen...
      A long time ago..
      People didn't need th..
      Yup..
      Ok.. it's like this ..
      Look at the letter C.
      I could write these letters "see" and then drop the letter C altogether..
      That's pretty much, exactly what's happened to the proper TH (sound) letter in the English language..
      The TH letter used to be...
      þ
      Note that is NOT a "P" or a "b"..
      THAT is the letter for the TH sound of English.. and it is called, "Thorn"...
      But the letter thorn (þ) is no longer in use..
      But imagine if it still was used in English today..
      Þen english might look someþing like þis...
      I'd like to þank all of you for þe marvelous party þat took place last þursday at þe pub...
      As if English wasn't a tough language already..
      Imagine if you had to learn a foreign letter..
      A b c d e ..... w x y þ z..
      Actually there were two ways to write th...
      There was another letter as well..
      But that second letter dropped out of use way before þ did..
      Þ was still being used up untill the beginning of this century.. along with another letter called long S.
      Which was a fancy looking s...
      It was the letter s but it was a long sounding S..
      It was dropped because it confused a lot of people..
      I'm 50 but some decades back, my grandmother once told me she was taught the long s in school and then shortly after she learned it, she was told in school to forget about using it as the letter was being dropped, and no one wsd going to use it anymore...
      But she showed me on paper how to write it..
      Also the letter þ got dropped for a very different reason...
      It had a lot to do with the invention of the printing press and foreign communications..(to extensive to get into) pretty much þ was forced out of use because it was only found in the English language and the other countries didn't have þ on their typewriters.. so the English language lost one of it's letters because of that!!
      It's not the only reason, but partially...
      That would never work the other way around though would it?? Hey....
      English phones do not have ū ë ñ é or backwards e's and backwards r's ...
      Or the omega... so the countries that use any of those letters... you have to drop drop those letters because we do not have them on our English keyboards!!!
      Yet that is exactly what happened in English...
      we lost þ partially because of that exact reason...
      Yup.... just wow...
      So... i know....
      It's useless info as of current times..
      But i suppose it's good to know..

    • @digimcgoohan
      @digimcgoohan Před rokem

      @@orangie8426 Indeed... useless but very interesting. About the S, like in German with the ß with is a dobble s... Gruß = Gruss. Cheers

  • @Athlyptt
    @Athlyptt Před rokem

    You got so handsome with your beard...I've subscribed😍

  • @annaanat
    @annaanat Před rokem

    Mamma Mia! 😮 Why don’t you have one rule for all cases?

  • @xyes
    @xyes Před rokem

    I always thought year number is named xxyy in standard British English instead of xxxx format, as pronouncing 2019 in xxxx format would be lengthy in standard British English, i.e. two thousands and nineteen, but i heard the American format, two thousands nineteen instead... it's just messy... I'd stick with xxyy format, i.e. twenty nineteen, to be consistent.

  • @alexanderschastak1459

    First time I learned about this number role. Just noticed that I would do the same pronunciation differences in German. Weird.

  • @isilder
    @isilder Před rokem

    The alternative way to pronouncs ncrease = in cre ah say?

  • @Nika-my1zo
    @Nika-my1zo Před 10 měsíci

  • @forsakingfear3652
    @forsakingfear3652 Před rokem

    Or tha can saa "price on grub hez gotten aboon har mich at we can pay".

  • @orrling
    @orrling Před rokem

    Nothing will make me spell realize/organize etc with an s

  • @isabelleheloisagomespantoj9179

    6:55 They are asking this because they don't know if it's pronounced with Z or D or T

  • @sumanthkris777
    @sumanthkris777 Před rokem

    d

  • @jolantamentrak-pj8ql
    @jolantamentrak-pj8ql Před rokem

    ³

  • @Marcos.ACSantos
    @Marcos.ACSantos Před rokem

    After putting my name and my e-mail, I didn´t get the .pdf file: The system didn´t send it to me. What is going wrong?

    • @EnglishWithGreg
      @EnglishWithGreg  Před rokem

      Hi Marcos. Could you send an email so I can see your email address? I will then investigate and let you know! 👍🏼
      (Use the email address on this page: www.youtube.com/@EnglishWithGreg/about) - Thanks!

    • @Marcos.ACSantos
      @Marcos.ACSantos Před rokem

      @@EnglishWithGreg Hi, Greg! The problem was solved. Thanks for your special attention.

    • @EnglishWithGreg
      @EnglishWithGreg  Před rokem

      @@Marcos.ACSantos Ah great! What was the problem?

    • @Marcos.ACSantos
      @Marcos.ACSantos Před rokem

      @@EnglishWithGreg I believe there would be some delay in the System

  • @loquito57
    @loquito57 Před rokem

    and when he says vegEtable, you instantly know that you can ignore the entire channel.

  • @presentgaming786
    @presentgaming786 Před 6 měsíci

    🇬🇧🇮🇳🇬🇧🇮🇳🇮🇳🇬🇧🇮🇳🇬🇧🇮🇳🇬🇧🇮🇳🇬🇧☺️

  • @BariumCobaltNitrog3n
    @BariumCobaltNitrog3n Před rokem

    Rule 6- If using the word THE to differentiate between a bar, any bar and the bar you got thrown out of for barfing on a pretty girl, one might ask, "Is this THE bar where you...?"
    "Yes. Keep driving."

  • @mariebcfhs9491
    @mariebcfhs9491 Před rokem

    I also found that rule regarding "the's" pronunciation has an exception, if the word after it begins with a consonant, but that word is an Italian loan word, then it still gets the "THEE" pronunciation. Because it is more natural to say "thee" pizza and "thee" piano. I like to think that "the(e)" has a distant relationship with "die" in German since all Italian loan words in German also get the female gender and hence preceded by "die".

    • @takoma74
      @takoma74 Před rokem

      The pronunciation of “the” definitely varies a lot between accents. In my native north-eastern American accent you’d usually pronounce it with a shwa for those words. But if I am trying to imitate a thick Italian-American accent I’d pronounce it “thee”.

    • @mariebcfhs9491
      @mariebcfhs9491 Před rokem +1

      @@takoma74 yeah, it depends a lot on the accent. This is for British English only

  • @stuartofblyth
    @stuartofblyth Před rokem

    "Fourty" (11:09). Yikes!

  • @HagenvonEitzen
    @HagenvonEitzen Před rokem +1

    And here I though that the first syllable of old-fashioned is stressed: czcams.com/video/X0vo7fLzkpU/video.html

  • @Boberrosini
    @Boberrosini Před rokem

    Hmm such nuances never occurred to me or I don't remember them. I see I pronounce vegetables so bad XD
    When I was young I achieved C1 in 3\4 areas but now after years of absence I could barely keep it on B1-B2,
    It is interesting how the society brings the language level down, it is not uncommon that people speak and write incorrect grammatically - after some time you get used to it and speak the same.

    • @john_titor1
      @john_titor1 Před rokem +1

      Because it's not "incorrect". Language is funny that way. There is no "right" or "wrong" except that others understand you. Over time, what does and does not make sense changes.

    • @Boberrosini
      @Boberrosini Před rokem

      @@john_titor1 There are some grammar rules, or basic rules which you need to follow. If many (much?)people make a mistake and use a wrong 3rd verb form in the past tense, then it is likely others will follow. If people use tenses wrong (as the general population or a group you sit with) then you may copy such behavior after time. Then you indeed are understood (because others speak the same) but you don't speak the proper English anymore. Such degradation happened to me and now it is hard to back on track :D

    • @john_titor1
      @john_titor1 Před rokem +1

      @@Boberrosini But that is my point. There is no such thing as "proper" any language, as language is fluid and constantly changing. Not static and predefined. What may be considered incorrect at some point in time will likely become the standard and formally correct way in another.