How to Understand Fast Speech in English Improve English Comprehension

Hi, I’m Oli.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you can learn how to understand
fast speech.

You’ll see how to understand fast English
speakers more easily.

You’ll also get a simple, step-by-step plan
to improve your ability to understand fast

speech in English.

Before we start, you should take a look at
our website: Oxford Online English dot com.

You can use our free English lessons to practise,
including many listening lessons.

You can also take online classes to improve
your English with our professional teachers.

But now, let’s see one of the most useful
things you can do if you want to understand

fast speech better in English.

Imagine a situation: you’re going to the
airport to meet someone who’s arriving.

You’ve never met this person before, but
you have a photo.

The photo does not look anything like the
person you’re supposed to meet.

What do you think?

Will you be able to recognise this person?

Obviously not.

There’s a similar connection between understanding
spoken language and pronunciation.

If you don’t know how to pronounce words
and sentences correctly, then you won’t

recognise them when you hear them.

More specifically, if you don’t know about
the features of native English pronunciation,

then you’ll find it difficult to understand
any natural speech.

So, what are these ‘features’ of native
English pronunciation?

What should you work on?

Let’s look at an example: ‘That house
looks smaller from the outside.’

‘That house looks smaller from the outside.’

Even in this short sentence, a lot is happening.

First, the ‘t’ at the end of ‘that’
is generally not fully pronounced.

In British English, it would be reduced to
a glottal ‘t’, which means that you start

pronouncing a /t/ sound, but you never fully
release it.

In American English, the /t/ might also be
softened to a /d/ sound.

Next, the words are all joined together.

‘House looks’ sounds like ‘how slooks’.

In fact, all of the words are linked, so that
the whole sentence is pronounced as one sound.

‘From’ is pronounced weakly, so you say
/frəm/ and not /frɒm/.

The last two words—‘the outside’—are
linked by adding a /j/ sound in the middle:

‘the_/j/_outside’.

There are many pronunciation points to be
aware of here.

We won’t go into more detail, because we’ve
covered many of these points in other videos.

However, here’s the main point: if you don’t
know about these pronunciation features, you’ll

struggle to understand any English speech.

You might feel like all speech is “too fast”.

Actually, the speed might not be the problem.

Connected, fluent speech can sound much faster
if you’re not aware of these pronunciation

features.

You don’t need to be able to use these pronunciation
features perfectly, but you should know about

them and be able to use them at least sometimes.

Then, you’ll find it much easier to understand
native English at any speed.

So, what should you focus on?

The most important points are weak forms,
linking, stress, and schwa sounds.

There are others, but if you have a good understanding
of these four pronunciation topics, your listening

ability will improve.

Check out our pronunciation videos for more
details on these points.

If you want to go into more depth, we can
recommend the Pronunciation in Use series

of books.

You can find links in the video description.

Working on your pronunciation is the most
useful way to improve your ability to understand

fast English speech, but what else should
you think about?

There’s a proverb in English: you have to
learn to walk before you can learn to run.

In the same way, many English learners who
say they can’t understand fast speech also

have problems understanding slower speech.

We hope it’s obvious that if you can’t
understand slower speech well, then you’ll

struggle with faster speakers.

This might sound too obvious.

However, many English learners realise that
they have difficulties understanding fast

speech, but don’t realise that they also
have problems with slower speech.

First, you need to test your ability to understand
slower speech.

To do this, you’ll need four things.

One: you need a video or audio file which
is not too easy and not too difficult.

English textbooks often have listening exercises
which are carefully designed for a specific

level.

If you don’t know where to find good listening
materials, then use English textbooks as a

starting point.

We also have many listening lessons on our
website: Oxford Online English dot com.

Two: you need a way to control the playback
speed.

You can use a YouTube video, where you can
use the speed controls to set the playback

speed to point seven-five or point five.

Or, you can use VLC media player, which has
speed controls, so you can play something

at 90 per cent speed, 80 per cent, and so
on.

VLC is probably better, because you can control
the playback speed more precisely.

By the way, if you have other suggestions
for tools to listen at variable speeds, let

us know in the comments!

Three: you need an accurate transcript of
the audio or video.

For example, you could use a YouTube video
which has subtitles, or a song where you have

the lyrics.

Be careful with YouTube subtitles, as many
of them are automatically generated, and these

are not generally accurate.

Four: you need a pen and paper.

Your goal is to test how well you understand
slow speech.

So, take your video or audio.

Adjust the playback speed until it feels easy
to you.

Listen to a few sentences to get warmed up.

Next, pause the playback at the end of a sentence.

Listen to the next sentence, pause the playback,
then write the sentence down.

Check against the written transcript.

If you’re using a song, then work in lines
instead of sentences.

At this stage, you need to be really strict
with yourself.

Double check what you’ve written against
the transcript.

Count your mistakes: every missing word is
one mistake, every wrong word is one mistake,

and every extra word is one mistake.

If you want, try it right now!

It’s a good experiment.

How many mistakes did you make?

If you made more than one mistake, then adjust
the playback speed down, so that the audio

is slower.

Listen to the next sentence and do the same.

Repeat until you find a speed where you can
write down the sentence you heard without

making more than one mistake.

This is an important step, because you need
to build a base for your listening skills.

That means you need to be able to hear every
word, and you need to be able to hold a sentence

in your head after you’ve heard it.

Again, it’s essential to be strict with
yourself and pay attention to small details.

Actually, even making one or two mistakes
is a problem.

Your aim is to write down the sentences without
making any mistakes.

If you can’t do this even at slow playback
speeds, then you need to find something easier

to listen to.

Find something which you can understand at
70 per cent or 80 per cent of full speed.

Remember that ‘understand’ means that
you hear every word.

It’s not enough for this to understand the
general meaning.

You need to hear every single word perfectly.

Take your time on this practice, and get it
right.

Once you’re comfortable with this, you’re
ready for the next step.

Actually, if you’ve done the exercise from
part two, then you’ve already done the most

important work.

To understand faster speech, you do the same
things, but increase the playback speed gradually.

Listen to one sentence, write it down, and
check it carefully against the written transcript.

If you can get three sentences in a row 100
per cent right, then adjust the playback speed

up and continue.

On the other hand, if you make more than one
mistake in a sentence, then adjust the playback

speed down.

You have the same goal: you need to hear every
single word.

Try to get to a playback speed of 120% or
130%.

If you can hear every word even at these speeds,
then find something more challenging to practise

with and start again.

For this, you need to be patient.

If you do this regularly, you will make
good progress, but your progress will not

be a straight line.

There will be days and weeks where you don’t
feel like you’re getting anywhere.

Don’t give up!

With any work like this, it’s better to
do it little and often.

Start by doing ten to fifteen minutes of practice
every day.

Do this for a week or so.

If you’re feeling motivated, go up to half
an hour a day.

Don’t try to do too much; doing it regularly
is the most important thing.

As with all listening practice, you should
try to use a variety of listening sources.

Listen to different sources, on different
topics, and with different speakers and accents.

This is the core of your training.

If you do this regularly, your ability to
understand fast speech will improve quickly.

However, you have to be consistent, and you
have to be strict with yourself regarding

mistakes.

Otherwise, you won’t get such good results.

There’s one more point you should think
about to understand fast speech better.

There’s a feeling you get sometimes when
you’re listening to a foreign language.

It’s that feeling when everything is coming
too fast, there are too many words you don’t

know, and you’re fighting to keep up.

But, at some point things break down, and
what you’re hearing turns into soup.

You know the feeling?

It’s common.

It’s what happens when there is too much
for your brain to process.

There are no quick fixes; there aren’t any
magic solutions, and you’ve already seen

the most important points you can use to deal
with this.

But, there’s one more thing you can do.

Vocabulary is a big part of understanding.

In particular, when you hear a word you don’t
know, it often takes your attention.

You start wondering what it was and what it
means.

While you’re paying attention to that unfamiliar
word, you can’t pay attention to what you’re

hearing, so you miss more things.

This makes it more difficult to tune back
in.

At some point, you get the ‘soup effect’,
and you can’t understand most of what you’re

hearing.

This isn’t just about vocabulary.

It also depends on pronunciation and speed,
which we’ve already talked about.

It sometimes depends on grammar, too.

So, your listening practice should be supported
by language work, especially vocabulary work,

but also grammar work if your grammar is weak.

If you hear a word which you don’t know
or don’t understand, that will always be

a problem.

You can find many other videos on our channel
to help you learn vocabulary, as well as grammar

if you need it.

Let’s finish with a challenge.

Can you use the training techniques you saw
in this lesson every day for one month?

Try to do at least ten minutes a day, every
day for one month.

If you make it, tell us in the comments, and
let us know if you feel a difference or not.

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是奥利。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您可以学习如何理解
快速语音。

您将了解如何更轻松地理解说英语的
人。

您还将获得一个简单的分步计划,
以提高您理解快速

英语演讲的能力。

在我们开始之前,您应该看看
我们的网站:Oxford Online English dot com。

您可以使用我们的免费英语课程进行练习,
包括许多听力课程。

您还可以
与我们的专业老师一起参加在线课程以提高您的英语水平。

但是现在,让我们看看
如果您想

更好地理解快速的英语语音,您可以做的最有用的事情之一。

想象一种情况:你要去
机场迎接即将到来的人。

你以前从未见过这个人,但
你有一张照片。

这张照片看起来任何都不像
你应该遇到的人。

你怎么认为?

你能认出这个人吗?

明显不是。

理解口语和发音之间也有类似的联系

如果您不知道如何正确发音单词
和句子,那么

您在听到它们时将无法识别它们。

更具体地说,如果您不了解
英语母语发音的特点,

那么您会发现很难理解
任何自然语音。

那么,英语母语发音的这些“特征”是
什么?

你应该做什么?

让我们看一个例子:“那房子
从外面看起来更小。”

“那房子从外面看起来更小。”

即使在这短短的一句话中,也发生了很多事情。

首先,“that”末尾的“t”
通常不完全发音。

在英式英语中,它会被简化
为声门“t”,这意味着你开始

发 /t/ 音,但你永远不会完全
释放它。

在美式英语中,/t/ 也可能
软化为 /d/ 音。

接下来,所有单词都连接在一起。

“房子看起来”听起来像“看起来很糟糕”。

事实上,所有的单词都是连在一起的,
所以整个句子都是一个音。

‘From’的发音很弱,所以你说
/frəm/而不是/frɒm/。

最后两个词——“the outside”——
通过在中间添加 /j/ 音来连接:

“the_/j/_outside”。

这里有很多发音点需要
注意。

我们不会详细介绍,因为我们已经
在其他视频中介绍了许多这些要点。

但是,重点是:如果您
不了解这些发音特征,您将

难以理解任何英语语音。

你可能会觉得所有的语言都“太快了”。

实际上,速度可能不是问题。 如果您不了解这些发音功能

,连贯、流利的语音听起来会更快

您不需要能够完美地使用这些发音
功能,但您应该了解

它们并且至少有时能够使用它们。

然后,您会发现
以任何速度理解母语英语都变得容易得多。

那么,你应该关注什么?

最重要的点是弱形式、
连接、压力和 schwa 声音。

还有其他的,但是如果你
对这四个发音主题有很好的理解,你的听力

就会提高。

查看我们的发音视频,
了解有关这些要点的更多详细信息。

如果您想更深入地了解,我们可以
推荐 Pronunciation in Use

系列书籍。

您可以在视频说明中找到链接。

练习你的发音是
提高你理解快速英语演讲能力的最有用的方法

,但你还
应该考虑什么?

英语中有句谚语:你必须先
学会走路,然后才能学会跑步。

同理,很多
说听不懂快语的英语学习者也

有理解慢语的问题。

我们希望很明显,如果您不能很好地
理解较慢的讲话,那么您将

与较快的讲话者作斗争。

这听起来可能太明显了。

然而,许多英语学习者意识到
他们在理解快速

讲话时有困难,但没有意识到他们也
存在讲话较慢的问题。

首先,您需要测试您理解
较慢语音的能力。

为此,您需要做四件事。

一:您需要一个不太容易也不太难的视频或音频文件

英语教科书通常有
针对特定水平精心设计的听力练习

如果你不知道在哪里可以找到好的听力
材料,那就从英语课本

开始吧。

我们的网站上也有很多听力课程
:Oxford Online English dot com。

二:你需要一种控制播放
速度的方法。

您可以使用 YouTube 视频,您可以
使用速度控件将播放

速度设置为点 7-5 或点 5。

或者,您可以使用具有
速度控制功能的 VLC 媒体播放器,因此您可以

以 90% 的速度、80% 的速度等
播放内容。

VLC 可能更好,因为您可以
更精确地控制播放速度。

顺便说一句,如果您对
变速收听工具有其他建议,请

在评论中告诉我们!

三:您需要准确
的音频或视频记录。

例如,您可以使用
带有字幕的 YouTube 视频或带有

歌词的歌曲。

小心 YouTube 字幕,因为其中许多
是自动生成的,而且这些

通常并不准确。

四:你需要笔和纸。

你的目标是测试你对
慢语的理解程度。

所以,把你的视频或音频。

调整播放速度,直到您感觉轻松为止

听几句热身。

接下来,在句子末尾暂停播放。

听下一个句子,暂停播放,
然后写下句子。

检查书面成绩单。

如果您使用的是歌曲,请按行
而不是句子来工作。

在这个阶段,你需要对自己非常严格

根据成绩单仔细检查你写
的内容。

数一数你的错误:每漏一个字就是
一个错,每一个错字就是一个错

,每多出一个字就是一个错。

如果你愿意,现在就试试吧!

这是一个很好的实验。

你犯了多少错误?

如果您犯了不止一个错误,则将
播放速度调低,使

音频变慢。

听下一句话,然后做同样的事情。

重复,直到你找到一种速度,你可以
写下你听到的句子而不会

犯一个以上的错误。

这是重要的一步,因为您需要
为您的听力技巧打下基础。

这意味着您需要能够听到每个
单词,并且您需要能够在

听到一句话后将其牢牢记住。

同样,对自己严格要求
并注意小细节是很重要的。

实际上,即使犯一两个错误
也是一个问题。

你的目标是写下句子而不
犯任何错误。

如果即使播放速度较慢也无法做到这一点
,那么您需要找到更

容易听的东西。

找到你能以
70% 或 80% 全速理解的东西。

请记住,“了解”意味着
您听到了每一个字。

仅仅理解
一般含义是不够的。

你需要完美地听到每一个单词。

花点时间在这个练习上,把
它做好。

一旦您对此感到满意,您就
可以进行下一步了。

实际上,如果您已经完成了第二
部分的练习,那么您已经完成了最

重要的工作。

要理解更快的语音,您可以执行相同的
操作,但逐渐提高播放速度。

听一个句子,写下来,并
对照书面记录仔细核对。

如果你可以连续 100
% 正确地获得三个句子,然后调整播放

速度并继续。

另一方面,如果您
在一个句子中犯了多个错误,则将播放

速度调低。

你有相同的目标:你需要听到每
一个字。

尝试达到 120% 或 130% 的播放速度

如果即使以这样的速度你也能听到每一个单词,
那就找一些更有挑战性的东西来练习

,然后重新开始。

为此,您需要耐心等待。

如果你经常这样做,你取得
良好的进步,但你的进步不会

是一条直线。

会有几天和几周的时间,您会
觉得自己一无所获。

不要放弃!

对于这样的工作,
最好少做多做。

从每天做十到十五分钟的练习
开始。

这样做一周左右。

如果您感到有动力,请每天最
多半小时。

不要试图做太多; 定期做
是最重要的。

与所有听力练习一样,您应该
尝试使用各种听力来源。

聆听不同的来源、不同的
主题、不同的演讲者和口音。

这是你训练的核心。

如果你经常这样做,你
理解快速讲话的能力会很快提高。

但是,您必须始终如一,并且
必须对错误严格要求自己

否则,你不会得到这么好的结果。

为了更好地理解快速语音,您还应该考虑另外一点。

有时在听外语时会有一种感觉

当一切都
来得太快,有太多你不

知道的词,你正在努力跟上时,就是那种感觉。

但是,在某些时候事情会崩溃,
你所听到的就会变成汤。

你知道那种感觉吗?

这很常见。

当你的大脑处理太多事情时,就会发生这种情况

没有快速修复; 没有任何
神奇的解决方案,您已经看到

了可以用来解决这个问题的最重要的
一点。

但是,您还可以做一件事。

词汇是理解的重要组成部分。

特别是当你听到一个你不认识的词时
,它通常会引起你的注意。

你开始想知道它是什么以及它
意味着什么。

当你在注意那个陌生的
词时,你不能注意你

听到的东西,所以你会错过更多的东西。

这使重新调音变得更加困难

在某些时候,您会得到“汤效应”,
并且您无法理解所

听到的大部分内容。

这不仅仅是词汇。

它还取决于
我们已经讨论过的发音和速度。

它有时也取决于语法。

所以,你的听力练习应该
得到语言工作的支持,尤其是词汇工作,

如果你的语法很弱,还需要语法工作。

如果你听到一个你不知道
或不理解的词,那将永远是

一个问题。

您可以在我们的频道上找到许多其他视频,
以帮助您学习词汇和语法(

如果需要)。

让我们以挑战结束。

你能每天使用你在本课中看到的训练技巧
一个月吗?

尝试每天至少做十分钟,每天坚持
一个月。

如果你做到了,请在评论中告诉我们,
让我们知道你是否感觉到不同。

感谢收看!

下次见!