My Morning Routine ENGLISH LESSONLearn English with Me Speaking English LessonPronunciation

It’s 6:37 in the morning.

That’s about how well my eyes focus when I get up.

What time do you get up?

I was recently at a YouTube conference where someone did a presentation on My Morning Routine.

Different people across the world just taking their camera through their morning,

showing people what their life is like and I thought: This is fascinating!

I loved seeing other cultures, seeing what people did, how they lived just a normal day.

So I decided today, I’m going to do the same. I’m going to show you my morning routine.

What is my morning like? And of course, we’ll turn it into an English lesson along the way.

I have a baby. What do you think the first thing I do every morning is?

The first thing is always nurse Sawyer.

He’s a little too distracted by the camera to nurse right now.

Nurse – this word has several different meanings.

You can nurse a baby, you can nurse a sick person, you can nurse a cold, and you can even nurse a beer.

We’ll go over these meanings.

First, I want to say the verb ‘breastfeed’ can be used interchangeably with this term,

and it doesn’t mean anything else, so that can be another option.

The first thing I do every morning is breastfeed my baby.

Notice that I’m not saying the T here – that’s common.

When the T comes between two consonants, we often drop it.

Breastfeed.

Straight from the S sound in to the F sound.

Breastfeed.

Now, let’s talk about all those different meanings.

If we use this word as a noun, it’s somebody who’s been trained as a nurse, to care for the sick, it’s an occupation.

My aunt is a surgical nurse.

As a verb, like I used it, it can mean to breastfeed, to feed a baby.

It can also be used to describe caring for someone who is sick: she nursed him back to health.

It can be used to describe taking care of an ailment: I’ve been nursing a cold for two weeks.

That means I’m taking throat lozenges for it, drinking lots of tea, trying to get better.

We also use it to talk about a drink, usually an alcoholic one, that we’re drinking very slowly.

Just taking a sip every once in a while.

Rachel, can I get you a drink?

No thanks, I’m still nursing this beer.

This is something new. This is different from our routine.

Looking at a camera.

One of the first things I try to do everyday is make the bed which I used to never do.

But it’s one tiny thing that I can do to create a little bit

of organization in a life that is otherwise very chaotic right now.

Chaotic, chaos.

Here the CH makes a hard K sound.

Kk– It’s also common to make a CH sound, like in ‘chest’, ch– or an SH sound, like in Chicago, sh–.

CH makes a K in choir, echo, Chemistry, anchor, stomach, orchestra, and many others.

You can’t tell how a CH should be pronounced just by looking at it, you have to know word by word.

This is why spelling and pronunciation is so tricky in English.

Then I head downstairs to have breakfast with Stoney and David.

I don’t feel like cereal so I’m going to make an egg. Does anybody want an egg?

I don’t.

No?
Okay.

I used the phrase ‘feel like’.

You can use this interchangeably with ‘want’, except the form of the verb will change.

I feel like going to bed, I want to go to bed.

So with ‘feel like’ we follow it with the ING form of a verb, feel like going.

With ‘want’, the next verb is in the infinitive, want to go, wanna go.

But the meaning of the two sentences is the same.

This applies to the negative as well.
I don’t feel like having cereal, I don’t want to have cereal.

But when I said it, I followed it by a noun.
I don’t feel like cereal so I’m going to make an egg.

I don’t feel like cereal.

So nothing else changes

I don’t feel like cereal, I don’t want cereal.

Hey Stoney, your mouth is totally full.

So we can’t understand you. So take your time, chew, swallow, and then say what you were trying to say.

Good, daddy. It’s good.

It’s good? The toast?

Yes.

Looks like it’s really good.

The most common breakfast in the US is probably cereal with milk. That’s what David and Stoney had.

What do you usually have for breakfast?

Post it to Instagram, tag me, @RachelsEnglish, I love to see this kind of thing,

what people eat in different cultures.

Let’s have breakfast together.

Mommy, I want some milk.

Okay. Well, how would you ask me to get you some milk?

Milk, please?

Sure.

What time are you guys getting together?

Here, David’s talking about getting together with a friend and his kids.

This is a phrasal verb that means to meet, to spend time together.

You could also use it as a noun: we’re having a get-together at our house this weekend.

Why don’t you come?

If you use it with ‘it’, the meaning is different.

‘Get it together’ means to get organized or get stabilized after chaos.

For example, if Stoney is having a tantrum, we could say, ‘get it together, Stoney’.

Or, at a busy time in my life lately, I missed a meeting because I totally forgot.

I apologized and said, “I’m so sorry I forgot.

I just can’t get it together these days.”

Get together is to meet.

Get it together is to recover from a period of chaos.

Mommy, where is the flashing part?

Oh, I put it over there.

There?

The flashing part – here, Stoney is talking about a camera that had a blinking light.

Did you notice that Stoney can’t say ‘there’ yet?

There.

He can’t make a TH.

I’ve worked with him on it several times and he just can’t coordinate putting the tongue tip through the teeth.

I know this is a huge challenge for my non-native students, so I just wanted you to know it takes time!

Stoney has been speaking English for over two years now, and he still doesn’t have that sound.

There.

I’m interested to see when he picks it up.

And breakfast just continues with random loud noises.

The rest of the morning continues with cleaning up the kids.

Okay, let’s get you cleaned up.

How was ‘get you’ pronounced?

Have you noticed that it’s really common to hear a CH in this phrase?

Let’s get you cleaned up.

When a word that ends in T is followed by ‘you’ or ‘your’, that T often turns into a CH.

Chuu. Chuu. Ge-chuu.

There’s no rule about doing this or not.

It’s just a habit the happens and many Americans do it a lot of the time.

If you don’t do it, you can do a stop T.

Get you, get you.

Let’s get you cleaned up.

Stoney, you want these waffle pretzels for your snack, right?

Do you want one right now?

Yes.

Special treat.

Snack.

We all need a good snack every once in a while.

This is not a full meal, but a little bit of food that we eat between meals.

Snack.

At our house, we get up anywhere between 6 and 6:45.

Stoney doesn’t leave for school until after 9, so we have a lot of time to fill up.

Sometimes we go out for a walk, but often we just play at home.

I’ve already got it all ready for you.

Did you hear the ‘you’ reduction?

Yuh, yuh.

I’ve already got it all ready for you.

Hey, hey. We’re not skipping teeth. Stand up. Stoney.

We’re not skipping teeth.

I’m sure many parents can relate to this.

When you skip something, you don’t do something that is part of a regular sequence.

In this case, brushing teeth in the morning is definitely part of our morning routine.

Stand up.

Mercy.

Mercy.

This is an exclamation of exasperation, surprise, anger, or frustration.

I was feeling all of those things!

Luckily, he did decide to brush his teeth.

And now, we brush teeth. It’s just part of getting ready for school.

My camera died, after that, we got Stoney dressed and David took him to school,

then he came home and took Sawyer while I went to work. And that is our morning routine.

I hope you liked this video. I hope you learned a little something.

Please subscribe. I make new videos every Tuesday.

Did you see anything that surprised you or learned anything new?

Put it in the comments below, I love to hear what you’re learning with the videos.

That’s it and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

现在是早上 6 点 37 分。

这就是我起床时眼睛聚焦的程度。

你什么时候起床?

我最近参加了一个 YouTube 会议,有人在我的早晨例程中做了一个演示。

世界各地不同的人只是带着他们的相机度过他们的早晨,

向人们展示他们的生活是什么样的,我想:这太迷人了!

我喜欢看到其他文化,看到人们做了什么,他们如何过着平凡的一天。

所以我今天决定,我也要这样做。 我要告诉你我早上的例行公事。

我的早晨是什么样的? 当然,我们会把它变成一堂英语课。

我有一个孩子。 你觉得我每天早上做的第一件事是什么?

第一件事总是护士 Sawyer。

他现在有点被相机分心了,无法护理。

护士——这个词有几个不同的含义。

你可以喂婴儿,可以喂病人,可以喂感冒,甚至可以喂啤酒。

我们将讨论这些含义。

首先,我想说动词“母乳喂养”可以与该术语互换使用,

并且没有其他任何含义,因此可以是另一种选择。

我每天早上做的第一件事就是给宝宝喂奶。

请注意,我不是在这里说 T——这很常见。

当 T 出现在两个辅音之间时,我们经常把它去掉。

母乳喂养。

直接从 S 音进入 F 音。

母乳喂养。

现在,让我们谈谈所有这些不同的含义。

如果我们把这个词用作名词,那是受过护士培训的人,照顾病人,这是一种职业。

我的姑姑是一名外科护士。

作为动词,就像我使用的那样,它可以表示母乳喂养,喂养婴儿。

它也可以用来描述照顾生病的人:她让他恢复健康。

它可以用来形容照顾小病:我已经感冒了两个星期了。

这意味着我正在服用润喉糖,喝大量的茶,努力变得更好。

我们也用它来谈论我们喝得很慢的饮料,通常是酒精饮料。

只是偶尔喝一口。

瑞秋,我可以请你喝一杯吗?

不,谢谢,我还在喝这种啤酒。

这是新事物。 这和我们的日常不同。

看着相机。

我每天尝试做的第一件事就是整理我以前从不做的床。

但这是我可以做的一件小事,

在现在非常混乱的生活中创造一点组织。

混乱,混乱。

在这里,CH 发出硬 K 声音。

Kk– 发出 CH 音也很常见,例如在“chest”中,ch– 或 SH 音,例如在 Chicago,sh–。

CH 在合唱团、回声、化学、主播、胃部、管弦乐队和许多其他方面创造了一个 K。

你不能仅仅通过看它来判断一个 CH 应该如何发音,你必须一个字一个字地知道。

这就是为什么拼写和发音在英语中如此棘手的原因。

然后我下楼与斯托尼和大卫共进早餐。

我不喜欢麦片,所以我要做一个鸡蛋。 有人要鸡蛋吗?

我不。

没有?
好的。

我用了“感觉像”这个词。

您可以将其与“想要”互换使用,但动词的形式会改变。

我想睡觉,我想睡觉。

所以对于“feel like”,我们用动词的 ING 形式跟随它,feel like going。

用“want”,下一个动词是不定式,want to go,want go。

但是两句话的意思是一样的。

这也适用于负面。
我不想吃麦片,我不想吃麦片。

但是当我说它时,我跟着一个名词。
我不喜欢麦片,所以我要做一个鸡蛋。

我觉得不像麦片。

所以没有其他改变

我不喜欢麦片,我不想要麦片。

嘿,斯托尼,你的嘴已经满了。

所以我们无法理解你。 所以慢慢来,咀嚼,吞咽,然后说出你想说的话。

很好,爸爸。 很好。

很好? 吐司?

是的。

看起来真的很好。

美国最常见的早餐可能是麦片加牛奶。 这就是大卫和斯托尼所拥有的。

你早餐一般吃什么?

将它发布到 Instagram,标记我,@RachelsEnglish,我喜欢看到这种东西,

人们在不同文化中吃什么。

我们一起吃早餐吧。

妈妈,我要喝牛奶。

好的。 好吧,你要我怎么给你弄点牛奶?

牛奶,好吗?

当然。

你们什么时候聚在一起?

在这里,大卫谈到与朋友和他的孩子们聚在一起。

这是一个短语动词,意思是见面,共度时光。

你也可以把它用作名词:这个周末我们要在家里聚会。

你为什么不来?

如果将它与“它”一起使用,则含义不同。

‘Get it together’ 意味着在混乱之后变得有条理或稳定下来。

例如,如果 Stoney 发脾气,我们可以说,“让我们一起来吧,Stoney”。

或者,在我最近生活中的忙碌时刻,我错过了一次会议,因为我完全忘记了。

我道歉并说:“我很抱歉我忘记了。

这些天我就是不能把它放在一起。”

相聚就是相见。

把它放在一起就是从一段混乱中恢复过来。

妈咪,闪光的部分在哪里?

哦,我把它放在那里了。

那里?

闪烁的部分——在这里,斯通尼正在谈论一个有闪烁灯的相机。

你注意到斯通尼还不能说“那里”吗?

那里。

他不能做一个 TH。

我已经和他一起工作了好几次,他只是无法协调将舌尖穿过牙齿。

我知道这对我的非母语学生来说是一个巨大的挑战,所以我只是想让你知道这需要时间!

斯通尼说英语已经两年多了,但他仍然没有那种声音。

那里。

我有兴趣看看他什么时候拿起它。

早餐继续伴随着随机的巨响。

早上剩下的时间继续清理孩子们。

好吧,让我们帮你清理一下。

“get you”是如何发音的?

你有没有注意到在这个短语中听到 CH 真的很常见?

让你清理干净。

当以 T 结尾的单词后面跟着“you”或“your”时,T 通常会变成 CH。

楚。 楚。 葛楚。

做与不做这件事没有规定。

这只是一种习惯,许多美国人经常这样做。

如果你不这样做,你可以做一个停止T。

得到你,得到你。

让你清理干净。

斯托尼,你想要这些华夫饼干作为你的零食,对吧?

你现在想要一个吗?

是的。

特殊对待。

小吃。

我们都需要每隔一段时间吃一顿好零食。

这不是一顿丰盛的饭菜,而是我们在两餐之间吃的一点点食物。

小吃。

在我们家,我们在 6 点到 6 点 45 分之间起床。

斯托尼 9 点以后才去上学,所以我们有很多时间来补课。

有时我们出去散步,但通常我们只是在家玩。

我已经为你准备好了一切。

你听到“你”的减少了吗?

嗯嗯。

我已经为你准备好了一切。

嘿,嘿。 我们没有跳过牙齿。 站起来。 斯托尼。

我们没有跳过牙齿。

我相信很多家长都可以理解这一点。

当您跳过某些内容时,您不会做一些常规序列的一部分。

在这种情况下,早上刷牙绝对是我们早上例行公事的一部分。

站起来。

怜悯。

怜悯。

这是对恼怒、惊讶、愤怒或沮丧的感叹。

我感受到了所有这些事情!

幸运的是,他确实决定刷牙。

而现在,我们刷牙。 这只是为上学做准备的一部分。

我的相机坏了,在那之后,我们给 Stoney 穿好衣服,David 带他去学校,

然后他回家带 Sawyer,而我去上班。 这就是我们早上的例行公事。

我希望你喜欢这个视频。 我希望你能学到一些东西。

请订阅。 我每周二制作新视频。

你有没有看到什么让你感到惊讶或学到什么新东西?

把它放在下面的评论中,我很想听听你从视频中学到了什么。

就是这样,非常感谢您使用 Rachel 的英语。