English Conversation Training Pronunciation Workout 1

Well hey there this is Emma from mmmEnglish!

How are you?

Over the past few months,

many of you have written to me in the comments

below my videos asking for help

with your English speaking skills.

You want to sound more natural, more casual,

more like a native English speaker, right?

Some of you also like my not so

Australian, Australian accent and you want to practise

speaking like me.

Well today you’re in luck because in this lesson,

we’re gonna have some fun doing exactly that!

Okay! Welcome to your first

English Conversation Workout!

This is an intensive ‘repeat after me’ style lesson

that’s going to work those conversation muscles.

It’s gonna help you to strengthen those speaking skills

and your listening skills at the same time.

We’re gonna do a lot of speaking practice together

in a short space of time so you need to be ready

to participate. You’ve got to join in

and by the end of the workout today,

you’re gonna feel more confident

and you’re gonna sound more natural like a native

English speaker when you use

these common conversation expressions.

Today’s workout will focus on greetings

and introductions. We’re going to practise

some really common questions that you can ask

or that you might be asked

in a very casual and very common English conversation.

Before we get started, I want to make sure

that you’re in a place where you feel comfortable talking

at your normal speaking volume.

And if you’re able to avoid using your headphones,

then do that too. That’s so that you can hear me

but also you can hear yourself clearly too.

Now this workout is really simple you don’t need to think

much, you just need to listen and repeat after me.

We’re gonna practise four sets of really simple English

phrases. Now these are gonna be phrases that you

already know and you’ve probably read them

or you’ve heard them during a casual conversation

with native speakers. But we’re going to focus on your

pronunciation and your expression today, okay?

So you’ll practise listening and then

saying these questions just like native speakers do

with contractions, with linking and you know,

we’ll play around a little with word stress as well.

So get ready to practise out loud guys. It’s workout time!

So when we meet with someone,

whether it’s someone we already know

or someone we’re just meeting for the first time,

we almost always ask how they are, right?

So for our first set, we’re gonna practise some simple

phrases that all mean the same thing,

“How are you?”

So here we go.

Hi Tom, how are you?

Good! So notice how it’s like just one big word there.

Do it again.

Hi Tom, how are you?

Last one.

Hi Tom, how are you?

Okay, now let’s change the emphasis a little here.

Hi Brooke! How are you?

So really stretch out that ‘and’ sound.

Doing this helps to sound really interested in the answer

so if you know the person well but you haven’t really

seen them for a while then using this intonation is great

okay because it shows that you really care.

Hi Brooke! How are you?

Hi Brooke! How are you?

Alright let’s try this one now.

Hey Steve, how you doing?

So notice that we’ve

dropped the verb ‘be’ here and this is something that’s

really common in spoken English.

Especially with really common phrases,

frequently used phrases like these ones.

Hey Steve, how you doing?

Hey Steve, how you doing?

All right, so now let’s switch out ‘doing’ with ‘going’

but you’ll notice there’s a couple of other changes

when we do that.

Hey Angelina, how’s it going?

So you’ll hear native English speakers say ‘goin’, ‘going’..

Whatever. So just use which one is

the most comfortable for you.

Hey Angelina, how’s it going?

Hey Angelina, how’s it going?

And for the last one, something super, super casual.

Hey mate, what’s happening?

In spoken English, it’s really really common to hear

‘happening’ reduced down to just two syllables

but it is especially common in this expression, okay?

Now it’s still correct to say ‘happening’,

“What’s happening?” but it just

sounds more relaxed and more friendly

when you reduce it down to happenin'.

And of course, ‘mate’ is used to refer to a friend

in Australia and it’s also really common in England.

So you could replace it with ‘dude’ or

‘man’ or ‘guys’ or whatever

but it’s the same, same kind of expression.

Hey mate, what’s happening?

Hey mate, what’s happening?

Awesome work!

Now there are a lot of different combinations

for greetings in English

and from what we just practised now,

you would have noticed that there’s a lot of flexibility

in spoken English, okay?

So try not to worry too much about perfection.

Native speakers really don’t worry about perfection

when it comes to introductions, okay?

You don’t have to be perfect, grammatically speaking.

Okay, let’s keep going, we’re just warming up.

What are you doing?

When we’re speaking with friends

or even colleagues at work, we can use

this expression to find out what’s happening right now,

but we often use it to find out what plans

are in the future, what someone’s plans are.

So it’s a little question that can start a conversation

or a really useful one to help you

keep a conversation going.

Now in the next few phrases that we practise,

we’re going to begin each question with ‘so’

because it helps to give the listener a clue

that you’re going to say something

or you’re going to ask something so it introduces you.

And I also want you to listen out for the stressed words

and the way that we change the focus of the question

by stressing certain words.

Listen out for ‘what’re you’ instead of ‘what are you’.

So this is the contracted form ‘what are you’.

So, what are you doing later on?

What are you doing later on?

Now can you hear that flap ‘T’ there? It sounds

more like a ‘D’. ‘Whatta’, ‘Whatta’ , ‘Whatta’

and then again ‘later’ , ‘later’.

This is really really common in Australian and

American English accents. And a quick note about

‘later on’, okay?

You can assume that it means later on in that same day

if there’s no extra information but you’ll also hear people

using it with longer time references as well.

Later on in the week, later on in the year. Okay, so it’s

not a specific point in time but it’s just

in the future at some point.

So what are you doing later on?

So what are you doing later on?

Great stuff!

Let’s practise some more now.

So what are you doing tomorrow?

What are you doing tomorrow?

Now push the stress, transfer the stress onto ‘you’ okay?

We want to emphasise

who we’re talking to in a group.

So what are you doing tomorrow?

So what are you doing on the weekend?

And now let’s shift our emphasis back to the weekend,

away from you.

So what are you doing on the weekend?

Fantastic! Nice work with the stress.

Alright, last set now.

So what are you guys doing over summer?

And again let’s move the stress back to the subject:

You guys.

So what are you guys doing over the summer?

Top stuff! Let’s keep going.

What are you up to?

Okay so this phrase is really similar to

“What are you doing?”

but it’s even more natural and common

for native speakers to ask a question this way.

So see if you can get “What are you up to?” down to just

“What are you up to?”

Are you ready to give it a go?

What are you up to?

Brilliant! Alright, let’s give this question a little bit

more focus.

So, what are you up to today?

And now shift that focus

to the person that you’re talking to.

So what are you up to today?

Great! Now let’s add another prompting question.

So we could say,

“What are you up to tonight? Busy?”

So we’ve dropped the structure of the question there

in the second question and we’re using only

intonation to signal that it’s a question.

And that’s quite common in informal spoken English.

What are you up to tonight? Busy?

Now if we want to shift the focus on to the person

who we’re talking to we can say:

What are you up to tonight? Busy?

So what are you up to for the weekend?

Got any plans?

So what are you up to for the weekend?

Got any plans?

Excellent! And last time.

So what are you up to for the weekend?

Got any plans?

This one is definitely one of the most

common small talk questions that you just

hear all the time. In fact, I was just talking

to my mum earlier today on the phone and we almost

always start our conversation by chatting about

the weather because we live in different cities

and the weather often shapes our mood and it can

affect our day so asking a question about the weather,

it helps to show interest in someone

especially if you’re far away from each other.

Now there are different ways to ask about the weather,

lots of them but we’re gonna focus on some of the most

common and the most natural sounding ways

of asking about the weather in English.

And one of the best ways to do that is to add an

-ING verb to talk about the weather as if it was

feeling or doing something.

It adds a little bit of personality

and that’s what we’re gonna practise right now.

So are you ready?

What’s the weather doing?

Notice that I’m contracting and linking

‘what’s the’, ‘what is the’ into ‘what’s the’.

What’s the weather doing?

Perfect! So now it’s time to add some time markers.

What’s the weather doing tomorrow?

And let’s add some additional words as well

to make our sentence more interesting.

Seen what the weather’s doing tomorrow?

Notice again that we’ve dropped the standard question

structure here and

it’s common in English, in informal conversations

just to drop

the structure of a question and just use intonation

to signal it.

Know what the weather’s doing tomorrow?

Heard what the weather’s doing tomorrow?

Our intonation is going up to signal the question.

So when you write or you use formal language,

you definitely should use the full structure.

Have you seen what the weather is doing tomorrow?

But in informal spoken English, it’s really, really common

to just drop it completely.

Wonderful work guys so let’s change it up a little now.

We want to mix this sentence up.

What’s the weather looking like over the weekend?

What’s the weather like over the weekend?

What’s the weather like over the weekend? Any good?

So this question is “Is it any good?”

or “Does it look any good?”

What’s the weather like on the weekend? Any good?

What’s the weather doing on the weekend? Any good?

What a workout guys! Well done for making it

all the way through to the very, very end.

Let’s just get something clear here, I did not

make this lesson for you to watch it once and then

walk away and forget about it.

This is your training okay? You need to come back

and practise with me often, alright?

As much as you can so save it to a playlist along with

some of my imitation lessons for your full mouth

daily workout okay?

If you want to sound like a native English speaker,

you’ve got to get comfortable using these

contractions and reductions just like we’ve practised

all the way through this lesson.

Now I’m curious to hear what you thought about

our first English Conversation Workout

here at mmmEnglish.

Was it helpful for you to practise this way?

Do you want me to make more lessons like this

about anything in particular?

Let me know by liking the video

and leaving a comment below.

You can definitely, definitely, definitely keep practising

with me right now, right here in either of these

two lessons and I’ll see you in there.

Bye for now!

好吧,这是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

你好吗?

在过去的几个月里,

你们中的许多人在我的视频下方的评论中写信给我,

寻求

英语口语方面的帮助。

您想要听起来更自然、更随意、

更像母语为英语的人,对吧?

你们中的一些人也喜欢我不那么

澳大利亚的澳大利亚口音,你们

想像我一样练习口语。

好吧,今天你很幸运,因为在本课中,我们将在这方面

获得一些乐趣!

好的! 欢迎参加您的第一次

英语会话练习!

这是一个密集的“跟我重复”风格的课程

,它将锻炼那些谈话肌肉。

它会帮助你同时加强口语

和听力技巧。

我们将

在很短的时间内一起进行大量的口语练习,所以你需要

做好参与的准备。 你必须加入,

在今天的训练结束时,当你使用这些常见的对话表达方式时,

你会感觉更自信

,听起来更自然,就像一个以英语为母语的

今天的训练将集中在问候

和介绍上。 我们将练习

一些非常常见的问题,您可以提出这些问题,

或者

在非常随意且非常常见的英语对话中可能会问到这些问题。

在我们开始之前,我想

确保您处于一个可以以正常音量说话的舒适环境中

如果您能够避免使用耳机,

那么也可以这样做。 这样你就可以听到我的声音

,也可以清楚地听到自己的声音。

现在这个练习真的很简单,你不需要想

太多,你只需要听我重复。

我们要练习四组非常简单的英语

短语。 现在,这些将是您

已经知道的短语,并且您可能已经阅读过它们,

或者您在与母语人士的随意交谈中听到过它们

。 但是我们今天要关注你的

发音和表情,好吗?

因此,您将练习听力,然后

说出这些问题,就像母语人士对缩略语所做

的那样,通过链接,您知道,

我们也会玩一些单词重音。

所以准备好大声练习吧。 锻炼时间到了!

因此,当我们与某人见面时,

无论是我们已经认识

的人还是我们第一次见面的人,

我们几乎总是会问他们怎么样,对吧?

所以对于我们的第一组,我们将练习一些简单的

短语,它们的意思都是一样的,

“你好吗?”

所以我们开始吧。

嗨,汤姆,你好吗?

好的! 因此,请注意那里只是一个大词。

再来一遍。

嗨,汤姆,你好吗?

最后一个。

嗨,汤姆,你好吗?

好的,现在让我们在这里稍微改变一下重点。

嗨布鲁克! 你好吗?

所以真的伸出那个“和”的声音。

这样做有助于听起来对答案很感兴趣,

所以如果你很了解这个人,但你有

一段时间没有真正见过他们,那么使用这种语调

很好,因为它表明你真的很关心。

嗨布鲁克! 你好吗?

嗨布鲁克! 你好吗?

好吧,让我们现在试试这个。

嘿史蒂夫,你好吗?

所以请注意,我们在这里

删除了动词“be”,这

在英语口语中很常见。

特别是对于真正常见的短语,

像这些经常使用的短语。

嘿史蒂夫,你好吗?

嘿史蒂夫,你好吗?

好的,现在让我们将 ‘doing’ 替换为 ‘going’,

但是当我们这样做时你会注意到还有一些其他的变化

嘿,安吉丽娜,最近怎么样?

所以你会听到以英语为母语的人说“goin”、“going”……

随便。 因此,只需使用

最适合您的那个。

嘿,安吉丽娜,最近怎么样?

嘿,安吉丽娜,最近怎么样?

对于最后一个,超级、超级随意的东西。

嘿,伙计,发生了什么事?

在英语口语中,听到

“正在发生”减少到只有两个音节真的很常见,

但在这种表达中尤其常见,好吗?

现在说“正在发生”仍然是正确的,

“发生了什么?” 但是,

当您将其简化为发生时,它听起来会更轻松,更友好。

当然,“mate”用来指

澳大利亚的朋友,在英国也很常见。

所以你可以用“dude”或

“man”或“guys”或其他任何东西来代替它,

但它是相同的,相同的表达方式。

嘿,伙计,发生了什么事?

嘿,伙计,发生了什么事?

很棒的工作!

现在英语问候语有很多不同的组合

,从我们刚才练习的内容来看,

你会注意到英语口语有很大的

灵活性,好吗?

所以尽量不要太担心完美。 在介绍方面,

母语人士真的不担心完美

,好吗?

从语法上讲,你不必完美。

好吧,让我们继续前进,我们只是在热身。

你在做什么?

当我们

在工作中与朋友甚至同事交谈时,我们可以用

这个表达来了解现在正在发生的事情,

但我们经常用它来了解

未来的计划,某人的计划是什么。

所以这是一个可以开始对话的小问题,

或者是一个非常有用的问题,可以帮助你

保持对话的进行。

在接下来我们练习的几个短语中,

我们将以“so”开始每个问题,

因为它有助于给听众一个线索

,即你要说什么

或者你要问什么,所以它介绍了 你。

我还希望您注意重读的单词

以及我们通过强调某些单词来改变问题焦点的方式

听“你是什么”而不是“你是什么”。

这就是“你是什么”的缩略形式。

那么,你以后在做什么?

你以后在做什么?

现在你能听到那个襟翼“T”吗? 听起来

更像是“D”。 ‘Whatta’,‘Whatta’,‘Whatta’

,然后是’稍后',‘稍后’。

这在澳大利亚和

美国的英语口音中真的很常见。 还有一个

关于“稍后”的简短说明,好吗? 如果没有额外信息

,您可以假设这意味着在同一天晚些时候,

但您也会听到人们

使用它的时间更长的参考。

本周晚些时候,今年晚些时候。 好的,所以这

不是一个特定的时间点,但它只是

在未来的某个时间点。

那你以后怎么办?

那你以后怎么办?

好东西!

现在让我们多练习一些。

那你明天做什么?

明天你要做什么?

现在推动压力,将压力转移到“你”身上好吗?

我们想强调

我们在小组中与谁交谈。

那你明天做什么?

那么周末你在做什么呢?

现在让我们把重点转移到周末,

远离你。

那么周末你在做什么呢?

极好的! 压力大的好工作。

好的,现在最后一组。

那么大家暑假都在做什么呢?

让我们再次将压力转移回主题:

你们。

那么大家暑假都在做什么呢?

顶级的东西! 我们继续吧。

你要做什么?

好的,所以这句话真的很类似于

“你在做什么?”

母语人士以这种方式提问更为自然和普遍。

所以看看你能不能得到“你在做什么?” 只是

“你在做什么?”

你准备好试一试了吗?

你要做什么?

杰出的! 好吧,让我们更加关注这个问题

那你今天想要干什么?

现在将注意力转移

到与您交谈的人身上。

那你今天想要干什么?

伟大的! 现在让我们添加另一个提示性问题。

所以我们可以说,

“你今晚有什么事吗?忙吗?”

所以我们

在第二个问题中放弃了问题的结构,我们只使用

语调来表示这是一个问题。

这在非正式的英语口语中很常见。

你今晚有什么事吗? 忙?

现在,如果我们想将注意力转移到

我们正在与之交谈的人身上,我们可以说:

你今晚要做什么? 忙?

那么周末你准备做什么呢?

有什么计划吗?

那么周末你准备做什么呢?

有什么计划吗?

优秀的! 而最后一次。

那么周末你准备做什么呢?

有什么计划吗?

这绝对

是您一直听到的最常见的闲聊问题

之一。 事实上,我今天早些时候刚刚和

妈妈通了电话,我们几乎

总是从谈论天气开始谈话,

因为我们住在不同的城市

,天气经常影响我们的心情,它会

影响我们的一天,所以问一个问题 关于天气,

它有助于表现出对某人的兴趣,

尤其是当你们彼此远离时。

现在有不同的方式来询问天气,其中

很多,但我们将专注于一些最

常见和最自然

的用英语询问天气的方式。

最好的方法之一是添加一个

-ING 动词来谈论天气,就好像它正在

感受或做某事一样。

它增加了一点个性

,这就是我们现在要练习的。

那么你准备好了吗?

天气在干什么?

请注意,我正在收缩并将

“what’s the”、“what is the”链接到“what’s the”。

天气在干什么?

完美的! 所以现在是时候添加一些时间标记了。

明天天气怎么样?

让我们添加一些额外的词

来使我们的句子更有趣。

看看明天的天气怎么样?

再次注意,我们在这里放弃了标准问题

结构,

这在英语中很常见,在非正式对话中

只是为了放弃

问题的结构并使用语调

来表示它。

知道明天天气如何吗?

听说明天天气怎么样?

我们的语调正在上升以表明问题。

因此,当您编写或使用正式语言时,

您绝对应该使用完整的结构。

你看到明天的天气怎么样了吗?

但是在非正式的英语口语中,

完全放弃它真的非常普遍。

很棒的工作,所以让我们现在稍微改变一下。

我们想把这句话混在一起。

周末天气怎么样?

周末天气怎么样?

周末天气怎么样? 有什么好处吗?

所以这个问题是“有什么好处吗?”

或“看起来有什么好处吗?”

周末天气怎么样? 有什么好处吗?

周末天气怎么样? 有什么好处吗?

伙计们多锻炼啊! 做得

很好,一直到最后。

让我们在这里弄清楚一些事情,我没有

让你看这节课然后

走开然后忘记它。

这是你的训练好吗? 你需要经常回来

和我一起练习,好吗?

尽可能多地将它与我的一些模仿课程一起保存到播放列表中,以

供您进行全口

日常锻炼,好吗?

如果你想听起来像一个以英语为母语的人,

你必须习惯使用这些

收缩和减少,就像我们

在本课中一直练习的那样。

现在我很想听听您对

我们在 mmmEnglish 的第一次英语对话

练习的看法。

这样练习对你有帮助吗?

你想让我

对任何特别的事情上更多这样的课程吗?

通过喜欢视频

并在下面发表评论让我知道。

你现在绝对可以,绝对,绝对可以继续

和我一起练习,就在

这两节课的任何一节课中,我会在那里见到你。

暂时再见!