English Vocabulary Lesson THANKSGIVING All the English Vocabulary you need to celebrate

Thanksgiving. It’s just around the corner and 
today we’re going to go over a brief history of  

thanksgiving in the United States, and we’re going 
to study some vocabulary related to this holiday,  

and also learn about some of the traditional 
thanksgiving foods. And you’ll even see some  

clips from a past family thanksgiving. And 
don’t forget, if you like this video or you  

learn something new please give it a thumbs up 
and subscribe with notifications it really helps.

Thanksgiving is the fourth Thursday of November 
every year, so the date changes from year to year.  

Typically, schools and some businesses close 
on Thursday and Friday for a four-day weekend,  

which is just glorious. Thanksgiving is 
basically a meal. History tells us that in 1621  

the Plymouth colonists and a group of native 
Americans, the Wampanoag, shared an autumn harvest  

feast that is believed to be one of the first 
thanksgiving celebrations in the colonies.  

Days of thanksgiving were celebrated throughout 
the colonies and later, the states. In 1863,  

president Abraham Lincoln 
made it a national holiday.

Okay, let’s go over a few 
words and pronunciations there.  

Lincoln. Notice the second L in his 
name is silent. The first N is not the N  

sound, nn– but it’s the ng sound ngg– made with 
the back of the tongue. Ling– can– Lincoln.

Then you release that into the k for 
a quick k schwa N ending. Lincoln.  

President Lincoln. President Lincoln officially 
made thanksgiving a national holiday in 1863.

We had a few other words there you might not know. 
Colonists and colonies. A colony is someone who  

settles in or colonizes a country where they 
weren’t born. So people came over from England,  

they weren’t planning on going back. To colonize 
America, to set up a new life and community there.  

Colonists set up and lived in colonies.

I also used the phrase autumn harvest 
feast. Autumn is just another word for fall,  

it’s one of the four seasons. The T is 
a Flap T and the N is silent. Autumn.

Harvest is when you gather a crop that you’ve 
been growing, the food is ready to be picked,  

and you harvest it. So that’s a verb, harvest, the 
act of gathering or picking your crop. And then  

it’s also a noun, the food that was harvested. 
The harvest this year is bigger than last year.

Finally, the word feast. This is a big 
meal. This can also be a verb or a noun.  

Feast is the act of eating a big meal, 
and as a noun, it’s the meal itself.  

And thanksgiving is a feast. People 
stuffing themselves and eating too much.

One of the images you’ll often see associated 
with thanksgiving is a pilgrim, or a pilgrim hat.  

A pilgrim refers to one of the group of people 
who originally colonized America. But the word  

also has a broader meaning, someone who journeys, 
often to a sacred place for religious reasons.  

This kind of a journey is called a pilgrimage. 
But in this context, pilgrims refers to the  

early colonizers who came from England, settled 
in, can you guess the area? New England. And the  

men wore hats like this with a buckle on it and 
it’s become a symbol of thanksgiving in America.

And of course, turkey, which is the main 
dish at a typical thanksgiving meal.  

Another symbol of thanksgiving is a 
horn-shaped basket called a cornucopia.  

Overflowing with autumnal foods. Oh, did you 
notice I used the word autumnal, as an adjective.  

Autumn, the noun, means fall. And autumnal 
means relating to or suggesting autumn.  

Notice the stress is on the second 
syllable and the T is now a true t.  

Autumn, it was a Flap T. Now, autumnal, with 
a true t. Also, we now say the n. In autumn,  

the N is silent. But in autumnal, we say both the 
M and the n. Isn’t it funny? Autumn. Autumnal.

Now let’s get down to foods. Turkey is the 
main dish. There are all sorts of ways it  

can be prepared. Deep fried, grilled 
whole, smoked, or roasted in the oven.  

That’s probably the most common. Several years 
ago I livestreamed some of my thanksgiving dinner,  

and the quality isn’t great, but 
I do have some footage of the food  

and the general chaotic feel of gathering 
so many family members at one table.

The turkey platter looks so nice with those 
greens. The home-grown sage, it looks amazing.

The turkey platter looks so nice with those 
greens. A platter is a big dish for serving,  

and we’ve got another Flap T there. 
Platter. Platter. Now at this point,  

the turkey has been carved. That’s the 
verb we use for cutting up the turkey,  

taking it from a whole turkey into smaller 
pieces that you can eat. It’s been carved. 

The next dish you’re going to have at almost any 
thanksgiving meal is going to be mashed potatoes.

We have mashed potatoes. Were these 
made from scratch, from real potatoes? 

I think so.
That’s amazing. 

I love mashed potatoes. I just did a video 
on ED endings and this is one of the cases  

where we would usually drop the ED ending in 
pronunciation. Here, it’s a T and we usually  

don’t say T between two other consonants. So it’s 
not mashed potatoes. Mashed potatoes. But we say:  

mashed potatoes, dropping the T sound altogether. 
If you want to know why and you want to know more  

about the ED endings, click here or see the link 
in the video description. Mashed potatoes. I asked  

if they were from scratch. This means made from 
the beginning, the most basic ingredients, in  

this case, whole potatoes. That’s different than 
making mashed potatoes from a box of dried mashed  

potato flakes. Sweet potatoes or a casserole made 
from sweet potatoes is another very common dish.

This was a sweet potato casserole. 

And it’s good.
And it’s good. Oh, it’s good!

Casserole is one of these words that can 
be pronounced as two syllables. Cass–  

roll– or three syllables: cass– 
er– ol– casserole or casserole.

Casserole can refer to the 
dish the food is prepared in.  

Something like this, deeper sides, often with 
a cover. Or it can refer to the food inside,  

a food which is mixed together and 
baked like a chicken casserole that has  

vegetables and a creamy dressing. We had a lot 
of tater tot casserole in my house growing up.

Now there are lots of other 
foods that most people will have  

at their tables. Let’s take a look at 
everything we had this particular year.

David, what are you working on over here?
Dried corn. What does dried corn mean? 

Uh, you have to ask mom.
Okay. 

It’s dehydrated and you 
reconstitute it with cream. 

Okay, interesting. Okay. And 
then we have the gravy here.

The dehydrated corn dish is something totally 
new to me. It’s a tradition in my husband’s  

family and I had never had it before. Never even 
heard of it before. This is something I love about  

thanksgiving. Each family has its own traditions 
about what dishes to include and how exactly  

to prepare them. The last thing we saw in that 
green pot was gravy. This is a sauce made from  

juices, from cooking the turkey, but also 
gravy has an idiomatic meaning. It means money,  

easily gotten, or something extra, an 
extra benefit. For example, I could say,  

for my business, I make most of 
my money from running my academy,  

and putting in that work. The money I get from 
YouTube ads, that’s gravy. It feels extra. I don’t  

count on it in my budget because it can go up or 
down so much. So anything I get from it is gravy.

So here’s the thanksgiving table.  

You can tell this was shot a long time ago 
because I don’t have very much gray hair. I was  

about eight months pregnant with my first son, and 
you can tell I’m pretty tired. Anyway, the table,  

the thanksgiving table. My sister-in-law always 
hosts thanksgiving. This means it’s at her house,  

and she does a lot of the planning and 
coordinating for it. And she really makes  

such a beautiful table each year with an 
interesting centerpiece. That’s what’s on  

the middle of the table for decoration. And it’s 
pretty common to drop the T in that word center,  

and just say center, centerpiece. Here, listen 
to how my sister-in-law invites us to the table.

We’re live.
Let’s take our seats.

She said ‘let’s take our seats’. Take a seat 
is a more polite way to say sit down. Please,  

take a seat. Before the meal, it’s common for 
everyone to say what they’re thankful for,  

or to say a prayer, depending on the religious 
beliefs of the group, or for someone to say a  

blessing or to sing a song or have a toast. We 
we’re gathered here to be thankful together,  

and I’ve asked Becca to say a blessing, 
but first, I would like to cheers Audrey.

and Leon. Cheers!

Yes. Thank you!

My husband’s family loves to 
sing, and we sing a hymn. A  

hymn is a song usually praising or 
in honor of God or maybe a nation.  

In this word, just like autumn, the N is 
silent. We sang a hymn, and here it is.

And then it’s time to dig in. I’m going to  

show you what food went around 
and what ended up on my plate.

So here we have turkey and sweet 
potatoes, also called yams.

Okay, so that’s not actually 
true. Sweet potatoes and yams are  

different things. Though they’re similar.

And the mashed potatoes are coming around. 
There’s red wine, there’s white wine. 

What is it?
Uh, this is stuffing. 

Do you know if it has meat in it?
No meat. 

No meat. I would love a scoop. 
Could you, could you scoop me  

some stuffing? How much would you like?
Not too much because there’s not that much room  

in the body for food.
That’s good, thank you.

Stuffing is another classic must-have thanksgiving 
dish. Usually it’s made up of cubed bread and  

herbs. The name ‘stuffing’ comes from the idea 
that you stuff it into the turkey to cook.  

That way, the bread absorbs a lot 
of the tasty juices from the meat.  

But it can also be baked in an oven in a dish, 
and another term you’ll hear for this is dressing.

Jeff, what’s that?
Some sort of bean, fried onion, casserole… 

Green bean casserole?
Lisa made it, it’s really good.

Green bean casserole. It’s mixed with cream of 
mushroom soup, in this case, my sister-in-law  

made the soup from scratch. She didn’t use soup 
from a can, and she fried onions to go on top.  

It was so good. Now, just before eating, I 
went over everything that was on my plate.

My phone keeps turning off 
because it’s overheating.  

So I’m just going to finish by showing you my 
plate.  

Here’s what we have. We have dinner roll, 

mashed potatoes and gravy, olives, two 
kinds of sweet potato dishes, a corn dish,  

turkey, stuff, green bean casserole, stuffing is 
hiding under there, and two kinds of cranberry.

I haven’t mentioned cranberry yet. A 
cranberry relish is a jelly of some kind,  

it’s also very traditional at thanksgiving 
and it’s one of my favorite parts of the meal.  

Looking at this makes me feel kind of sad because 
I know we’re not going to have anything like  

that this year with the coronavirus. 
We’re not getting together like this.

A traditional dessert at 
thanksgiving is a pumpkin pie.  

I love to buy a small sugar pumpkin, 
roast it and make a pie from that,  

that’s definitely making the pie from scratch, 
if you don’t use canned pumpkin. I actually made  

a video a while ago while I made a pumpkin pie and 
you can see that by clicking here. It’s pretty old  

but we went over some great words, 
pronunciations, and idioms in that one.

Okay, what food did I miss? What are the 
traditions in your family or that you’ve  

seen that you cannot believe I left out? What 
feast do you have in your culture that reminds  

you of thanksgiving? And most importantly, 
what are you thankful for this year?  

Let me know all of this in the comments below.

If you’re new to Rachel’s English, I make 
videos on the English language every Tuesday,  

primarily to help non-native speakers of American 
English feel more comfortable and confident  

speaking English. I also have a bunch of courses 
in my online school Rachel’s English academy,  

where you can train to take your English 
communication skills to the next level.  

Check it out at RachelsEnglishacademy.com

Don’t forget to like and subscribe, 
and keep your learning going right now  

by watching this new video. That’s it, and 
thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

感恩。 它就在拐角处,
今天我们将

回顾美国感恩节的简史,我们
将学习一些与这个节日相关的词汇,

并了解一些传统的
感恩节食物。 您甚至会看到

过去家庭感恩节的一些片段。
别忘了,如果你喜欢这个视频或者你

学到了一些新东西,请给它一个大拇指
并订阅它真的很有帮助的通知。

感恩节是每年 11 月的第四个星期四
,因此日期每年都会变化。

通常情况下,学校和一些企业会
在周四和周五关闭一个为期四天的周末,

这真是太棒了。 感恩节
基本上是一顿饭。 历史告诉我们,1621 年

,普利茅斯的殖民者和一群
美洲原住民 Wampanoag 共享秋收

盛宴,这被认为是殖民地最早的
感恩节庆祝活动之一。

整个殖民地和后来的各州都庆祝感恩节。 1863 年,

亚伯拉罕·林肯总统
将其定为国定假日。

好的,让我们在这里复习一些
单词和发音。

林肯。 请注意,他名字中的第二个 L
是静音的。 第一个 N 不是 N 的

声音,nn——但它是 ng 的声音 ngg——
用舌后部发出。 玲——能——林肯。

然后你将它释放到 k 中
以快速 k schwa N 结尾。 林肯。

林肯总统。 林肯总统
在 1863 年正式将感恩节定为国定假日。

我们在那儿还有几句话你可能不知道。
殖民者和殖民地。 殖民地是指

在他们未出生的国家定居或殖民的
人。 所以人们从英格兰过来,

他们不打算回去。 殖民
美国,在那里建立新的生活和社区。

殖民者在殖民地建立和生活。

我也用了秋收盛宴这个词
。 秋天只是秋天的另一个词,

它是四个季节之一。 T
是 Flap T,而 N 是无声的。 秋天。

收获是当你收集你
一直在种植的作物,食物已经准备好采摘,

然后你收获它。 所以这是一个动词,收获,
收集或采摘庄稼的行为。 然后

它也是一个名词,即收获的食物。
今年的收成比去年大。

最后是盛宴这个词。 这是
一顿大餐。 这也可以是动词或名词。

盛宴是吃一顿大餐的行为
,作为名词,它就是一顿饭。

感恩节是一场盛宴。 人们
把自己塞得满满当当,吃得太多。

您经常看到与感恩节相关的图像之一
是朝圣者或朝圣者帽子。

朝圣者是指
最初殖民美国的一群人。 但这个词

也有更广泛的含义,即
出于宗教原因经常前往圣地的人。

这样的旅程被称为朝圣。
但是在这种情况下,朝圣者指的

是从英格兰来的早期殖民者,定居
下来,你能猜出这个地区吗? 新英格兰。

男人们戴着这样的帽子,上面有扣子,
这已经成为美国感恩节的象征。

当然还有火鸡,它
是典型的感恩节大餐的主菜。

感恩节的另一个象征是一个
叫做聚宝盆的喇叭形篮子。

充满了秋天的食物。 哦,你
注意到我用了秋天这个词作为形容词。

秋天,名词,意思是秋天。 而秋天的
意思是与秋天有关或暗示秋天。

请注意,重音在第二个
音节上,而 T 现在是真正的 t。

秋天,它是一个 Flap T。现在,秋天,有
一个真正的 t。 另外,我们现在说 n。 秋天

,N 寂静无声。 但在秋季,我们同时说
M 和 n。 这不是很好笑吗? 秋天。 秋季。

现在让我们开始讨论食物。 火鸡是
主菜。 有各种各样的方法

可以准备它。 油炸、烤
整、熏制或在烤箱中烤制。

这可能是最常见的。 几年
前,我直播了我的一些感恩节晚餐

,质量不是很好,但
我确实有一些食物的镜头,

以及
在一张桌子上聚集这么多家庭成员的总体混乱感觉。

火鸡拼盘配上这些蔬菜看起来很好吃
。 土生土长的圣人,看起来很神奇。

火鸡拼盘配上这些蔬菜看起来很好吃
。 拼盘是一道大菜

,我们还有另一个 Flap T。
拼盘。 拼盘。 现在

,火鸡已经被雕刻好了。 那是
我们用来切火鸡的动词,

把它从整只火鸡切成
小块,你可以吃。 它被雕刻了。

几乎在任何
感恩节大餐中,下一道菜都是土豆泥。

我们有土豆泥。 这些是
用真正的土豆从头开始制作的吗?

我认同。
太棒了。

我喜欢土豆泥。 我刚刚做了一个
关于 ED 结尾的视频,这是

我们通常会在发音中放弃 ED 结尾的情况之一
。 在这里,它是一个 T,我们通常

不会在其他两个辅音之间说 T。 所以它
不是土豆泥。 土豆泥。 但我们说:

土豆泥,完全去掉 T 音。
如果您想知道原因并想了解更多

关于 ED 结尾的信息,请单击此处或查看
视频说明中的链接。 土豆泥。 我

问他们是否从头开始。 这意味着
从一开始就制作最基本的成分,在

这种情况下,是整个土豆。 这
与用一盒干土豆泥片制作土豆泥不同

。 红薯或红薯制成的砂锅
是另一种非常常见的菜肴。

这是一道红薯砂锅。

这很好。
这很好。 哦,很好!

砂锅是这些
可以发音为两个音节的单词之一。 Cass–

roll–或三个音节:cass–
er– ol–砂锅或砂锅。

砂锅可以指
准备食物的盘子。

像这样的东西,更深的侧面,通常
有盖子。 或者它可以指里面

的食物,一种混合在一起并
像鸡肉砂锅一样烘烤的食物,里面有

蔬菜和奶油调料。
在我的成长过程中,我们家里有很多土豆泥砂锅菜。

现在
,大多数

人的餐桌上都会有许多其他食物。 让我们来看看
我们在这一特定年份所拥有的一切。

大卫,你在这里做什么?
干玉米。 干玉米是什么意思?

嗯,你得问问妈妈。
好的。

它脱水了,你
可以用奶油重新配制它。

好吧,有趣。 好的。
然后我们这里有肉汁。

脱水玉米菜
对我来说是全新的东西。 这是我丈夫家的传统

,我以前从未有过。
以前从未听说过。 这是我喜欢

感恩节的地方。 每个家庭都有自己的
传统,包括哪些菜肴以及

如何准备它们。 我们在那个绿色锅里看到的最后一件事
是肉汁。 这是一种由果汁制成的酱汁

,来自烹饪火鸡,但
肉汁也具有惯用意义。 这意味着金钱,

容易获得,或额外的东西,
额外的好处。 例如,我可以说,

为了我的生意,我大部分的
钱来自经营我的学院

和投入这项工作。 我从
YouTube 广告中获得的钱,就是肉汁。 感觉是多余的。 我不会

在我的预算中指望它,因为它可以上升或
下降这么多。 所以我从中得到的任何东西都是肉汁。

所以这是感恩节餐桌。

你可以看出这是很久以前拍摄的,
因为我的白发不多。

我怀第一个儿子大约 8 个月,
你可以看出我很累。 无论如何,餐桌

,感恩节餐桌。 我的嫂子总是
主持感恩节。 这意味着它在她家

,她为此做了很多计划和
协调。 而且她真的

每年都会制作一张如此漂亮的桌子,并带有一个
有趣的中心装饰品。 这

就是桌子中间用来装饰的东西。
把 T 放在那个词的中心是很常见的

,只是说中心,中心。 来,
听听嫂子是怎么请我们上桌的。

我们活着。
让我们就座。

她说’让我们就座'。 坐下
是一种更礼貌的说法,即坐下。

请坐。 用餐前,
每个人通常都会根据团体的宗教信仰,说他们感谢的话,

或者说一个祈祷
,或者让某人说一个

祝福,唱一首歌或祝酒。
我们聚集在这里一起感恩

,我已经请贝卡祝福,
但首先,我想为奥黛丽欢呼。

和莱昂。 干杯!

是的。 谢谢!

我丈夫的家人喜欢
唱歌,我们唱赞美诗。

一首赞美诗通常是
赞美或纪念上帝或一个国家的歌曲。

在这个词中,就像秋天一样,N 是
沉默的。 我们唱了一首赞美诗,就在这里。

然后是深入挖掘的时候了。我

将向您展示周围的食物
以及最终在我的盘子上的食物。

所以这里我们有火鸡和
红薯,也叫山药。

好的,这实际上不是
真的。 红薯和山药是

不同的东西。 虽然它们很相似。

土豆泥来了。
有红葡萄酒,有白葡萄酒。

它是什么?
嗯,这是馅料。

不知道里面有没有肉?
没有肉。

没有肉。 我想要一勺。
你能,你能给我舀

一些馅吗? 你想要多少?
不会太多,因为身体里没有那么多

空间可以吃东西。
那很好,谢谢。

馅料是另一种经典的感恩节必备
菜。 通常它由小面包和

香草组成。 “馅”这个名字来源于
你把它塞进火鸡里做饭的想法。

这样,面包会
从肉中吸收大量美味的汁液。

但它也可以放在烤箱里的盘子里烤,
你会听到的另一个术语是调味料。

杰夫,那是什么?
某种豆类、炸洋葱、砂锅菜……

绿豆砂锅菜?
丽莎做到了,真的很好。

绿豆砂锅。 它与奶油
蘑菇汤混合,在这种情况下,我的嫂子

从头开始做汤。 她没有
用罐头汤,而是炒洋葱放在上面。

太好了。 现在,就在吃饭之前,
我把盘子里的所有东西都翻了一遍。

我的手机
因为过热而一直关机。

因此,我将通过向您展示我的盘子来结束

这就是我们所拥有的。 我们有晚餐卷、

土豆泥和肉汁、橄榄、
两种红薯菜、一个玉米菜、

火鸡、东西、绿豆砂锅,馅料
藏在下面,还有两种蔓越莓。

我还没有提到蔓越莓。
蔓越莓酱是某种果冻,

它在感恩节也很传统,
是我最喜欢的食物之一。

看到这让我感到有点难过,因为
我知道今年我们不会有类似

的冠状病毒。
我们不会像这样聚在一起。 感恩节

的传统甜点
是南瓜派。

我喜欢买一个小糖南瓜,
烤它然后用它做一个馅饼,如果你不使用罐装南瓜,

那肯定是从零开始做馅饼
。 实际上

,我不久前在制作南瓜派时制作了一个视频,
您可以点击此处查看。 它已经很老了,

但我们在其中回顾了一些很棒的单词、
发音和习语。

好吧,我错过了什么食物? 你家有哪些
传统,或者你

见过哪些让你无法相信我遗漏的传统?
在你的文化中,你有什么让

你想起感恩节的盛宴? 最重要的是,
今年你要感谢什么?

在下面的评论中让我知道所有这些。

如果您不熟悉 Rachel 的英语,我
每周二都会制作有关英语的视频,

主要是为了帮助非以美国英语为母语的人在说
英语时感到更加自在和自信

。 我的
在线学校 Rachel 的英语学院也有很多课程

,您可以在其中进行培训,将您的英语
沟通技巧提升到一个新的水平。

在 RachelsEnglishacademy.com 上查看。

不要忘记点赞和订阅,观看这个新视频
,让您的学习继续

进行。 就是这样,
非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。