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  • I can't even.

  • What's this mean?

  • In today's Summer of Slang video, we're going to learn can't even and salty.

  • Don't get salty. I'm going to get into the lesson in one second.

  • But first, I wanted to let you know in case you didn't know

  • that this summer, I started a new podcast.

  • There's so much good stuff there about learning English

  • I'm answering a lot of questions from you so I hope you'll check it out.

  • Go to the iTunes store or wherever you get you podcasts

  • search for Rachel's English.

  • Okay, back to the lesson

  • I can't even.

  • Have you ever heard someone say that?

  • It's one I've heard a lot.

  • To be honest, I'm kind of tired of it.

  • It means, I can't handle that, I can't deal with it.

  • It's too much of something.

  • For example, during the election season in the US, there was so much political information

  • being shared on Facebook, so many political ads.

  • It was overwhelming.

  • I think more than once I heard someone say “I can't even”.

  • Or, if someone shares an article of something particularly horrible on Facebook, like

  • starving children or something terrible,

  • they might say with it, “I can't even”.

  • Like, it's too bad to even think about.

  • Basically, you're cutting off the sentence.

  • It's like saying: I can't even handle it or I can't even deal with it.

  • I can't even waste my time with it.

  • But the funny thing about it is it's so bad that you don't even want to waste your words on it

  • so you just cut it off after 'I can't even'.

  • What about 'salty'?

  • This can describe someone who is agitated, annoyed, maybe bitter, upset.

  • I can't even.

  • I'm so salty right now.

  • She's really salty because he dumped her.

  • He's salty because his parents took away his car.

  • So the meaning of these two terms is similar.

  • The pronunciation of 'can't even' is tricky because of the word 'can't'.

  • Remember that Americans don't fully pronounce that T: can't. can't. can't.

  • There, it is fully pronounced.

  • We almost never say that. Can't.

  • We say can't instead, which is a lot like the word 'can', but it's more abrupt and cut off.

  • can't-- can't--

  • Now, someone could get sloppy here: I can't even. I can't even.

  • and connect it, drop the feeling of the T altogether: I can't even. I can't even.

  • Then it sounds like CAN, I can't even, it's all connected and smooth.

  • Even though it sounds like 'can', it's still this phrase: can't-- I can't even.

  • Remember the phrase is cut off here, there would be another verb in the sentence.

  • So even though we're cutting that off, the word 'can't' still functions the same way here.

  • It's a helping verb.

  • Can as a helping verb reduces to knkn

  • so that's why we know it's not 'can'

  • because it's not reduced.

  • I can't even.

  • So when you hear that full AH vowel,

  • it is the word 'can't' even if you're not hearing the T.

  • Salty, it's a 2-syllable word with stress on the first syllable.

  • Sallllty. Salty.

  • So the T here is a True T because it's part of a cluster.

  • Salt. Salty. Salty. Ttt---

  • Light True T release.

  • And we do have a Dark L here. Sallllty.

  • So you don't want to actually lift your tongue tip up, salll---- for the L, we just don't need it.

  • Just make the dark L sound with the back of the tongue: salllllllty.

  • Then the tongue goes to the roof of the mouth for the True T.

  • Salty.

  • Salty.

  • I know the pronunciation is hard, don't get salty. Just work on it.

  • When is it appropriate to use slang?

  • We went over that in summer of slang video 2.

  • So click here to check out the whole series.

I can't even.

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A2 初級

美國俚語:鹹的,甚至不能。 (AMERICAN SLANG: SALTY, CAN’T EVEN)

  • 5 1
    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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