THIS is How You Will Understand Native English Speakers

Well hey there I’m Emma from mmmEnglish!

I think that working on your listening skills is

one of the hardest parts

of becoming fluent in a new language.

It’s like

all of the rules that you learnt in a classroom,

they just disappear when you start

talking to native speakers

because they start using slang words,

they push words together so fast when they speak,

that you can’t even recognise them.

And there’s nothing that makes you feel more frustrated

and more deflated

when you’re talking to someone and you’re

unable to understand them,

when you want so much to be

a part of the conversation but you get stuck.

It’s the worst feeling.

I actually, I can feel that feeling now in my gut.

It’s awful but today we’re going to talk about

why it’s so difficult to understand native speakers

and what you can do to become a better English listener

So why, why is listening to native English speakers

so hard?

Firstly, there are so many versions of English

and this is true for most languages.

There’s regional dialects and accents that make it

hard to listen and understand.

But to put it in context, there are some English accents

that I have trouble understanding.

All English speakers, all of us,

we’re all trying to understand and communicate

with each other, even if it is our own native language.

Sometimes we use different words or different

grammar rules to each other

and that makes things really tough for you.

Now there are also significant differences between

formal and informal spoken English.

Informal English includes slang

and common expressions that are

unique to a particular region or even

a particular group of people within a community.

You come into the cricket and you bowl

and

conditions are alright there’s probably bit of movement

that was a bit off the pitch and the batter’s got no idea.

I mean, I have no idea what my brother said just then

and we speak the same language.

We learnt it from the same people!

Another reason why listening is hard is because

you’re used to the English that you hear

from your English teachers

and that can be a little different to real-life English.

Now think about the way that you speak

or you chat with your friends

in your own native language

and then think about how you would present

in front of your colleagues at work.

The words you use would be slightly different,

you would maybe speak a little more clearly,

maybe more formally.

And this is exactly the same difference

that I’m talking about.

Your English teachers are trying to express themselves

clearly so that you can understand them.

Right, that’s all so interesting

but what can you do to improve your listening skills?

Right now, I’m going to go through a few things

that will help you to take action

and start improving your English listening skills.

What and how are you practising?

This is a really important question for you.

So there’s listening as a verb,

you’re doing that right now.

But practising listening

is a completely different exercise

and when you’re practising listening,

you must pay attention to what you’re listening to

and how you’re listening to it.

So if you’re listening to this video right now

and you’re understanding about half of what I’m saying,

it’s a little difficult to keep going, right?

Your first reaction might be to put the subtitles on

which is great for helping you to understand

but not really a great way

to practise your listening skills.

So when you’re practising your listening skills,

instead of turning on the subtitles,

slow down the speed of the video, alright?

This gives you a little more time and space

to help hear the sounds that I’m making

and then connect them to the words that you recognise.

And you can use this trick on any YouTube video.

This one or a more challenging one.

So you can click that button just down there

and slow down the speed.

Okay then you’ll

hear the things that I’m saying more clearly.

Now slowing down the speed is not cheating,

it’s a really great way to start hearing the sounds

and recognising words as they’re spoken

and listening to common patterns in English.

Then at any time you can

speed it back up to natural pace and hear it

as a native speaker would say it.

Now there are a few of you who complain that

I speak too slowly in my lessons.

But you can actually use this same tool to increase

the speed of the video too

and this is a really great feature to start

getting into the habit of using, right?

You can do it with audio books, you can do it with

other video platforms as well,

get into the habit of it.

Now if you’re watching this video and you can

understand most of what I’m saying

without the subtitles on, awesome!

But now I want you to try and challenge yourself a little.

So challenge yourself by listening to some videos

by native English speakers

who aren’t teachers, right?

So use the same technique

that I mentioned just before,

slow down the speed when it’s difficult to hear

before you turn on the subtitles.

So to summarise, listening to complicated movies

in English with the subtitles on,

is not the best way to practise your listening skills.

In fact, subtitles don’t really help you

with your listening skills much at all.

Start with material that you can understand

and from there, increase your difficulty.

And just to be clear, when I say difficulty

I’m talking about different accents.

I’m talking about the context so lots of

background noise makes it challenging to listen.

I’m talking about more informal conversations,

you know, that often use slang or different expressions

that might be new.

All of these things increase the difficulty of listening

to someone in English.

So these are the things

that you should challenge yourself with.

Okay, so

listening to speech is different than reading text.

I mean, people speak kind of differently than they write.

Well, like

yeah

all of these words are exactly what I’m talking about.

Every language has their own fillers that people use.

Now fillers are little words that don’t mean much.

People usually add them to their speech without even

thinking about it.

They’re words like

They’re all examples of filler words and

all they’re really there for is to give the speaker

a little more time to think

about what they’re going to say next.

Now it’s really natural for native speakers to use them.

They don’t even think about it.

But it can be really tough for you

while you’re listening to a native speaker

and their speech is full of these extra words

that don’t really mean very much.

Learning them, becoming familiar with the ones

that are commonly used

will help your brain to sort of skip over them

while you’re listening

so you’ll train yourself to ignore them

and listen for the more important things

that they’re saying in the sentence.

So these are really commonly used by native speakers

in lots of different English-speaking countries

but there might be some more specific ones in

certain areas.

So if you’re watching this as a native English speaker

and you’ve got a couple of fillers that you want to

add to this list that are commonly used

where you’re from, then please do.

I’d love to have you help my students

here on the mmmEnglish Channel.

But I always find it really interesting to hear

the different fillers in other languages too

because they can be quite different

and they sound quite strange if you try and use

a filler from another language in English.

No one will recognise it as a filler.

Right so you need to study connected speech.

Just as grammar is the path to better writing

and confidence is a big step towards better speaking,

understanding connected speech is the key

to better listening skills in English.

Connected speech is the way that sounds

and words link together, they blend together

or maybe the sounds even change completely

as we speak a word out loud.

Native speakers don’t pronounce every word separately.

Instead, we push words together,

some of these sounds disappear or they change

and it all happens as we speak out loud.

So knowing what connected speech is

is the first step but you need to practise it as well.

Now this is a great place to start.

There is a whole playlist of mine on connected speech

right there. How to use it in naturally spoken English.

So I go over a lot of detail there step-by-step.

There’s lots of examples

and there’s lots of opportunities to practise as well.

Now I’m going to link that at the end of this lesson

so don’t go anywhere just yet alright?

Because I’m not quite finished yet.

Listening’s great because you can do it

while you’re multitasking. You can listen to music

while you’re driving a car.

You can listen to a podcast while you’re walking,

you can watch TV while you’re cycling at the gym.

Awesome!

But if you want to improve your listening skills,

you need to do more than just listen.

You need to be actively listening, right?

To do that, the best thing you can do is have a goal.

Set a specific goal or a challenge

that you need to accomplish

through the listening practice.

So you could challenge yourself to recognise

ten new words from a podcast and write them down

as you’re listening to them.

Maybe even try and guess the meaning from the context

of the discussion.

You can look them up after to check if you’re right.

Another idea is to use a video with a transcript.

A TED talk is perfect for this.

So listen and after you listen, try and explain

the author’s or the speaker’s opinion

about a particular issue.

And then use the transcript to go back

and see how much of it you got right

or how much of it you understood.

If you’re lucky enough to have a language exchange

partner, someone who’s

learning your native language and who’s helping you

to practise your English skills,

then practise telling each other a story,

maybe about your childhood.

Then try to summarise it back to them so that they can

tell you how accurate you were with your listening.

Another awesome technique is to combine

different English skills

so combine listening with speaking or combine it with

reading or writing.

Like I said earlier, if you hear an expression

that you don’t know, try and guess the meaning

from the context and just make a note of it

so you can check it later.

While you’re listening, read the transcript

but don’t just read it in your head, read it out loud,

practise your pronunciation, you can imitate or shadow

the person who’s speaking.

So you’re copying their tone and their stress patterns.

It’s a brilliant way to develop your pronunciation skills

and your listening skills.

All of these things are going to help you to improve

your listening skills but they require extra work.

It’s not just listening to English but it’s practising

listening to English.

And they’re two really different things.

Don’t just hear.

Instead, make sure you’re listening.

You’re thinking, you’re comprehending.

you’re listening again to check.

You’re writing it down, then you’re listening again.

Right? You get the idea.

Alight a little pop quiz.

I want to see if you’ve been really listening

to what I’ve been talking about,

how much of this video did you understand?

Were you actively listening or were you just

staring out the window of the bus

thinking about something else?

To check if you are listening,

I want you to answer this question in the comments

below this video.

What can you do

to increase the difficulty of the audio you’re listening to?

Can you remember what I said?

Were you actually listening?

Another question, what is connected speech?

And how can it help you to listen to native speakers?

It’s an important one.

If you can’t remember,

maybe you need to go back and watch this video again.

Listen actively this time, alright?

Or you can check the answers to these questions

on the mmmEnglish blog because there’s a

full transcript of this lesson

and every lesson that I make

on the mmmEnglish blog.

The link is in the description and up there.

If you haven’t subscribed to the channel yet

then please do that right here.

And if you’re ready for a listening challenge with

native English speakers

then let’s go check out this video right here.

嗯,嘿,我是来自 mmmEnglish 的 Emma!

我认为提高听力技巧是

流利掌握一门新语言最难的部分之一。

就像

您在课堂上学到的所有规则一样,

当您开始与母语人士交谈时,它们就会消失,

因为他们开始使用俚语,

它们说话时将单词拼凑在一起的速度如此之快,

以至于您甚至无法识别它们。

当您与某人交谈并且您

无法理解他们时,

当您非常想

成为对话的一部分但您陷入困境时,没有什么能让您感到更加沮丧和沮丧。

这是最糟糕的感觉。

实际上,我现在可以在我的直觉中感受到这种感觉。

太糟糕了,但是今天我们要讨论

为什么要理解母语为母语的人如此困难,

以及您可以做些什么来成为一个更好的英语听众

那么为什么,为什么听以英语为母语的人

这么难呢?

首先,英语有很多版本,

大多数语言都是如此。

有些地方方言和口音让人

很难听懂。

但是在上下文中,有

一些我很难理解的英语口音。

所有说英语的人,我们所有人,

我们都在努力相互理解和交流

,即使这是我们自己的母语。

有时我们彼此使用不同的单词或不同的

语法规则

,这让你很难过。

现在,

正式和非正式的英语口语也存在显着差异。

非正式英语包括

特定地区甚至

社区内特定人群独有的俚语和常用表达方式。

你进入蟋蟀,你的碗

条件都很好,可能有一些

运动有点偏离球场,击球手不知道。

我的意思是,我不知道我哥哥刚才

说了什么,我们说的是同一种语言。

我们是从同一个人那里学到的!

听力很难的另一个原因是因为

你已经习惯了

从英语老师那里听到的英语

,这可能与现实生活中的英语有些不同。

现在想想你说话的方式,

或者你

用自己的母语

与朋友聊天的方式,然后想想你将如何

在工作中的同事面前表现出来。

你用的词会略有不同,

你可能会说得更清楚一些,

可能会更正式一些。

这与

我正在谈论的差异完全相同。

您的英语老师正试图清楚地表达自己,

以便您能够理解他们。

对,这一切都很有趣,

但是你能做些什么来提高你的听力技巧呢?

现在,我将通过一些

事情来帮助您采取行动

并开始提高您的英语听力技能。

你在练习什么以及如何练习?

这对你来说是一个非常重要的问题。

所以听力是动词,

你现在正在这样做。

但是练习听力

是完全不同的练习

,当你练习听力时,

你必须注意你在听什么以及你是

如何听的。

所以如果你现在正在听这个视频

并且你理解了我所说的一半,那么

继续下去有点困难,对吧?

你的第一反应可能是把字幕放在上面

,这对帮助你理解很有帮助,

但不是

练习听力技巧的好方法。

所以在练习听力的时候,

不要打开字幕,

放慢视频的速度,好吗?

这给了你更多的时间和空间

来帮助听到我正在发出的声音

,然后将它们与你识别的单词联系起来。

您可以在任何 YouTube 视频上使用此技巧。

这一项或更具挑战性的一项。

因此,您可以单击那里的那个按钮

并减慢速度。

好的,那么您会

更清楚地听到我所说的内容。

现在放慢速度并不是作弊,

这是一种非常好的方法,可以开始听到声音

并在说话时识别单词

并聆听英语中的常见模式。

然后,您可以随时将其

速度恢复到自然节奏,并

像母语人士所说的那样听到它。

现在有几个人抱怨

我上课讲得太慢了。

但是您实际上也可以使用相同的工具来

提高视频的速度

,这是

开始养成使用习惯的一个非常棒的功能,对吧?

你可以用有声读物做,也可以用

其他视频平台做

,养成它的习惯。

现在,如果您正在观看此视频,并且您可以

在没有字幕的情况下理解我所说的大部分内容

,太棒了!

但现在我希望你尝试挑战一下自己。

因此,通过听一些非教师

以英语为母语的视频来挑战自己

,对吧?

因此,使用

我刚才提到的相同技术,在打开字幕之前

在难以听到的情况下降低速度

总而言之,用英文听复杂的

带字幕

的电影并不是练习听力技巧的最佳方式。

事实上,字幕并不能真正帮助

您提高听力技巧。

从你能理解的材料开始,

然后从那里增加你的难度。

需要明确的是,当我说难度时,

我指的是不同的口音。

我说的是上下文,所以很多

背景噪音让人很难听。

我说的是更非正式的对话,

你知道,经常使用俚语或

可能是新的不同表达方式。

所有这些都增加了

听别人说英语的难度。

所以这些

是你应该挑战自己的事情。

好的,所以

听语音不同于阅读文本。

我的意思是,人们说的和写的有点不同。

好吧,就像

是的,

所有这些词正是我所说的。

每种语言都有自己的填充词供人们使用。

现在填充词是没有多大意义的小词。

人们通常甚至不假思索地将它们添加到他们的演讲中

它们就是这样的词,

它们都是填充词的例子

,它们真正的目的是让说话者

有更多的时间

思考他们接下来要说什么。

现在,母语人士使用它们真的很自然。

他们甚至不去想它。

但是

当你在听一个以母语为母语的人时

,这对你来说真的很困难,而且他们的演讲中充满了这些额外的词,这些词

真的没有多大意义。

学习它们,熟悉

常用的

将帮助你的大脑在你听的时候跳过它们

这样你就会训练自己忽略它们

并倾听

他们在演讲中所说的更重要的事情。 句子。

因此,在许多不同的英语国家,母语人士确实普遍使用这些

语言,

但在某些地区可能会有一些更具体的语言

因此,如果您以英语为母语的人观看此内容,

并且您有一些想要添加到此列表中的填充物,这些填充物

在您来自哪里时常用,那么请这样做。

我很乐意让您

在 mmmEnglish 频道帮助我的学生。

但我总是觉得听到

其他语言的不同填充词也很有趣,

因为它们可能完全不同

,如果你尝试

使用其他语言的英语填充词,它们听起来很奇怪。

没有人会认为它是一种填充物。

对,所以你需要研究连接的语音。

正如语法是提高写作水平的途径

,自信是提高口语水平的一大步,

理解相互关联的语音是

提高英语听力技能的关键。

连接语音是声音

和单词连接在一起的方式,它们混合在一起,

或者

当我们大声说出一个单词时,声音甚至可能完全改变。

母语人士不会单独发音每个单词。

相反,我们将单词放在一起,

其中一些声音消失或改变

,这一切都发生在我们大声说话的时候。

因此,了解什么是连接语音

是第一步,但您也需要练习。

现在这是一个很好的起点。

那里有一整套关于连接语音的播放列表

。 如何在自然的英语中使用它。

因此,我一步一步地介绍了很多细节。

有很多例子

,也有很多练习的机会。

现在我将在本课结束时链接它,

所以不要去任何地方好吗?

因为我还没有完成。

聆听很棒,因为您可以在

同时处理多项任务时做到这一点。 您可以

一边开车一边听音乐。

您可以在走路时收听播客

,在健身房骑自行车时可以看电视。

惊人的!

但是如果你想提高你的听力技巧,

你需要做的不仅仅是听。

你需要积极倾听,对吧?

要做到这一点,你能做的最好的事情就是有一个目标。

设定一个特定的目标或挑战

,你需要

通过听力练习来完成。

因此,您可以挑战自己

从播客中识别十个新单词,并

在收听时将它们写下来。

甚至可以尝试从讨论的上下文中猜测其含义

您可以查看它们以检查您是否正确。

另一个想法是使用带有成绩单的视频。

TED 演讲非常适合这一点。

所以听,听完之后,试着

解释作者或演讲者

对特定问题的看法。

然后使用成绩单回过头

来看看你做对

了多少,或者你理解了多少。

如果你有幸拥有一个语言交换

伙伴,一个正在

学习你的母语并帮助

你练习英语技能的人,

那么练习给彼此讲一个故事,

也许是关于你的童年。

然后试着把它总结给他们,这样他们就可以

告诉你你的听力有多准确。

另一个很棒的技巧是结合

不同的英语

技能,将听力与口语结合起来,或者将其与

阅读或写作结合起来。

就像我之前说的,如果你听到一个

你不知道的表达,试着从上下文中猜测它的意思

,然后记下它,

以便以后检查。

当你在听的时候,阅读成绩单,

但不要只是在脑海中阅读,大声朗读,

练习你的发音,你可以模仿或模仿

说话的人。

所以你在模仿他们的语气和压力模式。

这是发展您的发音技巧

和听力技巧的绝妙方法。

所有这些都将帮助您提高

听力技巧,但它们需要额外的工作。

这不仅仅是听英语,而是练习

听英语。

他们是两个完全不同的东西。

不要只听。

相反,请确保您在听。

你在思考,你在理解。

你又在听检查。

你把它写下来,然后你又在听。

对? 你明白了。

点燃一个小测验。

我想看看你是否真的

听过我一直在谈论的内容,

这个视频你听懂了多少?

你是在积极倾听,还是只是

盯着车窗外

想着别的事情?

为了检查您是否在听,

我希望您在此视频下方的评论中回答这个问题

你能做些什么

来增加你正在听的音频的难度?

你还记得我说的话吗?

你真的在听吗?

另一个问题,什么是连接语音?

它如何帮助您聆听母语人士的声音?

这是一个重要的。

如果你不记得了,

也许你需要回去再看一遍这个视频。

这次好好听听好吗?

或者,您可以在 mmmEnglish 博客上查看这些问题的答案,

因为在 mmmEnglish 博客上有

本课

和每节课的完整成绩单

链接在描述和那里。

如果您尚未订阅该频道,

请在此处订阅。

如果您准备好接受以英语为母语的听力挑战,

那么让我们在此处观看此视频。