How to use THOUGH in English Ask Alisha

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Today we have some building construction in the
background. Sorry.

Hi, everybody. Welcome back to Ask Alisha.

The weekly series where you ask me questions
and I answer them, maybe.

First question.

This comes from Shunichi Saito.

Hi, Sunichi.

Sunichi says, “I want to know what does
‘tho’ mean.

For example, ‘It’s very expensive tho.’

I see the word, ‘though’ at the end of
a sentence very often.”

Yeah, a lot of you have sent this question
in recently.

So, I talked in a previous episode of Ask
Alisha about using the word “though,”

T-H-O-U-G-H, at the end of a sentence.

It means “but” at the end of a sentence
and we use it kind of casually.

When you see the word, “tho,” T-H-O, it’s
like an even more casual version of “though,”

T-H-O-U-G-H, at the end of a sentence.

So, you’ll see this a lot on like social media,
you’ll see this when you’re on Facebook or

Twitter or Instagram, text messages, maybe.

“Tho,” just means “but” but at the
end of a sentence.

So, in your example sentence which was “It’s
really expensive tho,” it means it’s really

expensive but.

However, it’s like just putting that little
“but,” that little disagreement kind of

feeling at the end of the sentence.

So, it’s sort of like a soft disagreement
or a soft sort of difference of opinion.

“Tho,” T-H-O means “though, T-H-O-U-G-H
but it’s just extremely, extremely casual.

So, for a little bit more detail, you can
check this video where I talked a little bit

more about T-H-O-U-G-H at the end of a sentence
with some other examples.

I hope that that helps you.

I know many of you have asked that question
lately.

Next question!

Next question comes from William.

Will, I guess, from Rio de Janeiro.

Hi, Will.

Will says, “What is the difference between
‘tenant’ and ‘lodger.’

When we talk about a person who rents a house
or lives there without paying.

Is there a difference?”

So, a “tenant” is a person, as you say,
who rents an apartment or who rents a house.

A “lodger” does the same thing, however,
the difference is that a lodger shares the

space with the owner of the space.

So, for example, if I’m renting a room and
the person who owns the room or the person

who owns the building or who owns the house,
for example, they also live in the same space.

Maybe they live in a different room or maybe
they live in a different part of the building,

in that case, you could call me a “lodger,”
perhaps.

That person is giving me a room, in that case,
and they also shared the space with me.

A “tenant,” however, is someone who lives
in a space, they’re renting this space but

they are separate from the person who owns
it.

So, I hope that that helps you.

Next question!

Next question comes from Alejandra.

Hi, Alejandra.

Alejandra says, “What does ‘well, for
one’ mean?”

“Well, for one,” there are really two
parts to this.

First is the “well” part.

We use “well” to transition in speech
like, “Well…” and then we share an idea.

“Well” is sort of like, “I heard what
you said and now I’m going to say something

from your comment or whatever.”

So, “well,” it’s like just a very soft
and simple transition to use.

“For one,” we’re using the word, “one,”
there.

This implies that there’s some series of points
we want to make.

So, think of this, “Well, one,” as in
like point number one.

And then, after that, maybe, there’s going
to be point two and then point 3.

So, “for one,” for two,” “for three,”
for example.

So, think of this as the speaker beginning
a series of points like, “Well, for one,

it shouldn’t be this expensive.

For two, it’s not a very good deal,” or
something like that.

Oftentimes, native speakers do forget that
we’re making lists, actually.

I think this is common in any language.

But, when you hear, “Well, for one,” it
means the speaker is planning to introduce

a series of points to support his or her argument.

So, I hope that that helps you.

Next question!

Next question comes Thies, Theis?

I’m very sorry.

“Hi, Alisha.

I want to know the difference between, ‘I
have no idea’ and ‘I don’t have an idea.’”

Ah.

“When can I use ‘no’ or ‘do not?’”

Great question!

Okay, let’s start with “I have no idea,”
the expression, “I have no idea,” means

I don’t know, I totally don’t know, I don’t
know anything.

“I have no idea” is an emphasis phrase
we use for when we don’t know but we just

don’t know anything, absolutely nothing, zero
percent.

“I have no idea,” “Where’s your brother?”

“I have no idea.”

“When is the homework due?”

“I have no idea.”

“What time is this video supposed to go
up?”

“I have no idea.”

That’s not true.

“I have no idea” refers to knowing nothing,
absolutely nothing about the situation or

about the conversation point.

However, “I don’t have any ideas,” you’re
trying to think of something, trying to create

something, trying to make an idea somehow
and you cannot think of anything.

So, for example, “What do you want to do
this weekend?”

“I don’t have any ideas.”

“What do you think should be our next project?”

“Hmm, I don’t have any ideas.”

“I don’t have any ideas” or I don’t have
ideas about something means I’m not really

thinking creatively, maybe, or means I don’t
have any new thoughts about what to do next.

If someone asks you a question and you don’t
know the answer, you can say, “I have no

idea.”

If you just want to express you don’t have
like a proposal or you don’t have a plan for

something in the future, you can say, “I
don’t have any ideas.”

Next question.

Next question comes from Hafta Meriam Teca.

Hafta Meriam Teca, I’m very sorry if I pronounced
that wrong.

Hafta Meriam Teca says, “Hey, Alisha.

When can we use the word, ‘would?’”

Ha!

Actually, this is a pretty big question and
I think it’s better to answer it in a different

video.

Last week, actually, I made a whiteboard video
about some uses of the word, “would.”

So, please watch for that video very soon.

It should be up in the next couple of weeks.

So, yes, I know many people want to know about
“would,” we made a video, so please keep

your eyes open for that very soon.

Thank you for the question.

Next question!

Next question comes from Adam.

Actually, next two questions come from Adam.

First, “What does ‘I’m yanking a chain
long terms of you’ mean?”

I have no idea.

I have never seen this before and I have no
idea what it means.

We do have an expression, “I’m yanking your
chain,” so to yank means to pull.

We use this expression, “I’m yanking your
chain” to mean I’m joking.

Your second question, Adam.

“If the word ends in ‘E-D’ like ‘far-fetched.’

How do we make the ‘E-D’ sound?

Like a ‘T’ sound or a ‘D’ sound?”

Yeah, good question.

Actually, also, I just made a video a couple
weeks ago about ending “E-D” sounds, about

/ed/ and /id/ sounds.

For words that end in “E-D”, there are
some vowel and consonant rules for that.

That video, also a whiteboard video, should
be up on the channel very soon.

So, please watch for that.

I explained, I hope, everything in that video.

Please, watch that soon when it comes out.

Next question!

Next question comes from Mohammed Al Dahle.

Mohammed says, “I want to hear you speaking
Japanese, please.”

You want to hear me speak
in Japanese?

[speaks in Japanese]

When I give you guys these recommendations
when I’m talking about some of the tips that

I have for you guys, a lot of it comes from
my experience learning Japanese, too.

Those are all the questions that I want to
talk about this week.

Thank you very much for sending your awesome
questions.

So, if you have not sent a question yet, please
send the questions to me at EnglishClass101.com/ask-alisha.

Also, if you liked the video, please make
sure to give it a thumbs up, subscribe to

the English Class 101 channel and check us
out at EnglishClass101.com for some other

great study resources.

Thank you so much for watching this episode
of Ask Alisha and I will see you again soon.

Bye-bye.

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今天我们在背景中有一些建筑结构
。 对不起。

大家好你们好。 欢迎回到询问 Alisha。

你问我问题
,我回答的每周系列,也许。

第一个问题。

这来自Shunichi Saito。

你好,孙一。

Sunichi 说:“我想知道
‘tho’是什么意思。

例如,‘虽然很贵。’

我经常在句尾看到‘虽然’这个词
。”

是的,你们很多人最近都发过这个
问题。

所以,我在上一集 Ask
Alisha 中谈到了在句末使用“虽然”这个词

,T-H-O-U-G-H。

它在句末表示“但是”
,我们使用它有点随意。

当你看到“tho”T-H-O 这个词时,它
就像一个更随意的“though”版本,

T-H-O-U-G-H,在句末。

所以,你会在社交媒体上看到很多,
当你在 Facebook 或 Twitter 或 Instagram 上时,你会看到这个

,也许是短信。

“Tho”的意思是“但是”,但在
句末。

所以,在你的例句“它
真的很贵”中,这意味着它真的

很贵但是。

然而,这就像只是在句子的末尾加上那个小小的
“但是”,那种小小的不同意的

感觉。

所以,这有点像一种温和
的分歧或一种温和的意见分歧。

“Tho”,T-H-O 的意思是“虽然,T-H-O-U-G-H,
但它只是非常非常随意。

因此,有关更多详细信息,您可以
查看此视频,在该视频中,我

在句子末尾与其他示例进行了更多有关 T-H-O-U-G-H 的讨论

我希望这对你有帮助。

我知道你们中的许多人最近都问过这个问题

下一个问题!

下一个问题来自威廉。

威尔,我猜,来自里约热内卢。

嗨,威尔。

威尔说,“
‘租户’和‘房客’有什么区别。

当我们谈论一个人租房
或住在那里不付钱时。

有区别吗?”

因此,正如您所说,“租户”是
租公寓或租房子的人。

“房客”做同样的事情,但是
,不同之处在于房客与

空间的所有者共享空间。

因此,例如,如果我正在租一个房间,并且
拥有房间的人或

拥有建筑物或拥有房屋的人,
例如,他们也住在同一个空间中。

也许他们住在不同的房间,或者
他们住在大楼的不同部分,

在这种情况下,你可以称我为“房客”

那个人给了我一个房间,在那种情况下
,他们也和我分享了这个空间。

然而,“租户”是居住
在一个空间中的人,他们租用这个空间,但

与拥有它的人是分开的

所以,我希望这对你有帮助。

下一个问题!

下一个问题来自亚历杭德拉。

嗨,亚历杭德拉。

亚历杭德拉说:“‘好吧,为了
一个人’是什么意思?”

“嗯,对于一个,”这实际上有两个
部分。

首先是“好”部分。

我们用“好”来转换语音,
比如“嗯……”,然后我们分享一个想法。

“嗯”有点像,“我听到了
你说的话,现在我

要从你的评论或其他什么中说些什么。”

所以,“好吧”,它就像一个非常柔软
和简单的使用过渡。

“为了一个”,我们在这里使用了“一个”这个词

这意味着
我们要提出一系列观点。

所以,想想这个,“嗯,一个”,
就像第一点一样。

然后,在那之后,也许
会有第二点,然后是第三点。例如

,“一”、“二”、“三
”。

所以,把这想象成演讲者开始
一系列观点,“嗯,对一个人来说,

它不应该这么贵。

对于两个人来说,这不是一个很好的交易,”或
类似的东西。

通常,以母语为母语的人确实忘记了
我们实际上是在列清单。

我认为这在任何语言中都很常见。

但是,当您听到“好吧,对于一个人”时,这
意味着演讲者正计划介绍

一系列观点来支持他或她的论点。

所以,我希望这对你有帮助。

下一个问题!

下一个问题是Thies,Theis?

我很抱歉。

“嗨,艾丽莎。

我想知道‘
我不知道’和‘我不知道’之间的区别。”

啊。

“我什么时候可以使用‘不’或‘不’?”

好问题!

好的,让我们从“我不知道”开始
,“我不知道”的表达方式意味着

我不知道,我完全不知道,我什么都不
知道。

“我不知道”是
我们在不知道但我们什么都不知道时使用的强调短语

,绝对没有,零
百分比。

“我不知道,” “你哥哥呢?”

“我不知道。”

“作业什么时候交?”

“我不知道。”

“这个视频应该
几点上架?”

“我不知道。”

这不是真的。

“我不知道”是指一无所知,
对情况或

谈话点一无所知。

然而,“我没有任何想法”,你
试图想一些东西,试图创造

一些东西,试图以某种方式提出一个想法
,你什么都想不到。

例如,“你
这个周末想做什么?”

“我没有任何想法。”

“你认为我们的下一个项目应该是什么?”

“嗯,我没有任何想法。”

“我没有任何想法”或者我
对某事没有想法意味着我可能并没有真正进行

创造性思考,或者意味着我
对下一步该做什么没有任何新的想法。

如果有人问你一个问题而你不
知道答案,你可以说“我不

知道”。

如果你只是想表达你没有
喜欢的提议,或者你

对未来的某件事没有计划,你可以说,“我
没有任何想法。”

下一个问题。

下一个问题来自 Hafta Meriam Teca。

Hafta Meriam Teca,如果我说错了,我很抱歉

Hafta Meriam Teca 说:“嘿,艾丽莎。

我们什么时候可以使用“会”这个词?”

哈!

实际上,这是一个相当大的问题,
我认为最好在不同的

视频中回答。

实际上,上周我制作了一个白板视频,
介绍了“会”这个词的一些用法。

所以,请尽快观看该视频。

它应该在接下来的几周内上升。

所以,是的,我知道很多人想知道
“会”,我们制作了一个视频,所以

请尽快睁大眼睛。

感谢你的提问。

下一个问题!

下一个问题来自亚当。

实际上,接下来的两个问题来自亚当。

首先,“‘我要
长期拉你的链子’是什么意思?”

我不知道。

我以前从未见过这个,我不
知道这意味着什么。

我们确实有一种表达方式,“我正在拉动你的
链条”,所以拉动意味着拉动。

我们用这个表达,“我正在拉你的
链子”来表示我在开玩笑。

你的第二个问题,亚当。

“如果这个词以‘E-D’结尾,就像‘牵强附会’一样。

我们如何使‘E-D’发音?

像‘T’音还是‘D’音?”

是的,好问题。

实际上,几周前我刚刚制作了一个
关于结束“E-D”声音的视频,关于

/ed/ 和 /id/ 声音。

对于以“E-D”结尾的单词,有
一些元音和辅音规则。

那个视频,也是一个白板视频,应该
很快就会出现在频道上。

所以,请注意这一点。

我希望,我解释了该视频中的所有内容。

请等它出来的时候再看。

下一个问题!

下一个问题来自 Mohammed Al Dahle。

穆罕默德说:“我想听你说
日语。”

你想听我
说日语吗?

[用日语说]

当我给你们这些建议
时,当我谈到

我给你们的一些技巧时,其中很多也来自
我学习日语的经验。

这些都是我
这周想谈的问题。

非常感谢您发送您的真棒
问题。

因此,如果您还没有发送问题,请
通过 EnglishClass101.com/ask-alisha 将问题发送给我。

此外,如果您喜欢该视频,请
务必给它一个赞,

订阅英语课堂 101 频道,并
在 EnglishClass101.com 上查看我们以获取其他一些

很棒的学习资源。

非常感谢您收看这一
集 Ask Alisha,我很快就会再见到您。

再见。