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  • (peaceful music)

  • - Hello everyone, and welcome back to English with Lucy.

  • Today I have a spoken English class for you.

  • I have got eight tips that will help you

  • to master spoken English.

  • If you apply these tips to your everyday life,

  • you will really notice a difference,

  • and you will become more confident

  • and more comfortable speaking English.

  • My first tip is to get to know the parts

  • of your body that you use while speaking English.

  • This might sound a little odd, but trust me on this one.

  • If you don't understand which parts of

  • your face, tongue, and throat are used

  • when speaking English, then how will you ever

  • be able to correct your pronunciation mistakes?

  • Watch yourself in the mirror while speaking English

  • is a common tip that many teachers give.

  • However, I think you should go one step further than this.

  • You absolutely need to analyse what your

  • lips, tongue, throat, face in general is doing

  • when you speak English.

  • You need to find a close-up video, a zoomed in video

  • of a native speaker or a speaker that you admire

  • speaking in English.

  • You then need to record yourself up close,

  • preferably at the same distance speaking the same sentence.

  • Analyse the way your lips move in comparison to their lips.

  • Analyse how far they stick their tongue out

  • or maybe they push it right back in their mouth.

  • What are you doing with your tongue?

  • This started a big learning curve for me

  • when I was learning Spanish.

  • I started to really analyse Spanish speakers tongues,

  • they might have found this quite weird

  • when I was watching them speak,

  • looking at their tongue instead of their eyes,

  • but I realised that when, in English,

  • we say "duh" with the tongue inside of our mouths.

  • "Duh, duh" is quite a delicate sound.

  • The Spanish speakers in the area I was living in

  • would stick their tongue out a little bit more.

  • "Deh, deh" like that.

  • By listening alone, I would never have realised that.

  • But by watching and analysing, I managed to transform

  • my pronunciation, and you can do the same with English.

  • You should also analyse the voice quality,

  • how much voice do we allow to escape through our throats?

  • Compare it to yours as well.

  • If you are serious about improving your pronunciation

  • and your spoken English, then you do need

  • to be very critical about what you are speaking at present

  • and work towards correcting it.

  • Tip number two is to combine reading and listening,

  • thus improving your pronunciation.

  • Perhaps you will know by now that

  • a way a word is written in English

  • normally gives very little indication

  • as to how that word is pronounced in English.

  • In many languages across the world,

  • the way a word is written tells you and shows you

  • exactly how that word should be spoken.

  • This is not the case in English,

  • and it's part of the reason why

  • English pronunciation and English speaking

  • is so difficult for learners.

  • I have found a really good method that has

  • helped so many of my students.

  • Take a book that you have already read in English

  • or a book that you would like to read in English,

  • I have got a fair few recommendations

  • in the description box down below.

  • And read that book again, but here's the important part:

  • whilst listening to the audio book version on Audible.

  • If you listen to a word as you read it,

  • your brain will start making connections.

  • And the next time you hear that word,

  • you will know how it's spelled,

  • and the next time you read that word,

  • you'll know how it's pronounced.

  • It's such an effective method,

  • and the best part is you can get a free

  • audio book that's a 30 day free trial on Audible.

  • All you've got to do is click on the link

  • in the description box and sign up.

  • Then you can download one of my recommendations.

  • Give it a try, it really works.

  • Tip number three is another reading one,

  • but it's practise speed reading.

  • This isn't such a common technique,

  • but I think it should be.

  • It's a really good way of improving your

  • fluency, so how fluently you speak English,

  • your velocity, so that's how quickly you speak English,

  • and also it will help with your connected speech;

  • how you join one word to another,

  • or one sound to another in English.

  • You need to find a text that you'd like to read.

  • This text can accommodate your level.

  • Honestly I recommend using reputable news sources

  • and news websites.

  • If you want to practise your informal speech,

  • then you could find a blogger you like

  • who writes as if they're chatting to a friend.

  • Read the text aloud, and time yourself as you're reading it.

  • Then read that text aloud again,

  • and try to beat your previous time.

  • You can repeat this as many times as you want,

  • but I find after four times, four, after four times,

  • I'm getting pretty bored of the text.

  • This will help you to familiarise yourself

  • with the common sounds in English.

  • A step further would be to record yourself

  • and to send it to your language instructor,

  • or to use it as a topic in your next language lesson.

  • Tip number four is a tip that has been massively

  • important for me as a native speaker,

  • so I can only imagine how important it could be for you.

  • It is to prepare your monologues and stories

  • that you are likely to repeat in advance.

  • I'm talking funny stories you want to tell

  • at a dinner party, I'm talking about your elevator pitch,

  • I'm talking about your answer to

  • what do you do for a living, or where do you come from?

  • These common questions that you get asked

  • again and again and again.

  • Prepare your answer, have them up your sleeve.

  • That's the way we say to have something prepared,

  • to have it up your sleeve.

  • If you're an advanced speaker and you're more worried

  • about keeping people interested or making people laugh,

  • then prepare your funny and interesting stories.

  • I first thought about this when I was dating.

  • This was a long time ago,

  • and I remember that I would get stuck,

  • and I wouldn't know what to talk about,

  • so I always felt good and confident

  • if I went into a dating situation with my best stories,

  • and my most interesting things to say up my sleeve.

  • It was funny because when I met my husband-to-be,

  • I had all these stories and interesting things to say

  • up my sleeve, and it all went out the window.

  • Conversation just flowed without any effort,

  • but I understand that speaking English,

  • speaking a second language can be very nerve-wracking,

  • it's just like dating in my opinion.

  • And you do want to have these things prepared.

  • Tip number five is focus on pronunciation over grammar.

  • Now there will be some teachers out there watching this

  • and thinking, oh my god, what?

  • This is honestly my opinion.

  • I think that bad grammar habits

  • are much easier to correct than bad pronunciation habits.

  • I would say that it's much easier to understand

  • somebody speaking with great pronunciation, but bad grammar,

  • than hearing someone speak with perfect grammar

  • but terrible pronunciation.

  • I've met so many students that know

  • every single grammar rule;

  • they even sometimes can correct me,

  • but their pronunciation, they just,

  • they got to a certain level and then

  • they found it very, very difficult to improve.

  • They are able to improve with specific help,

  • professional help, but it could've been so much easier.

  • But from a very, very young age,

  • they were taught bad pronunciation,

  • or they weren't corrected on their pronunciation.

  • The focus was only on grammar,

  • and that focus needs to switch.

  • I'm not talking about having a perfect accent.

  • You don't need a perfect accent.

  • You just need to be clear and understandable when you speak.

  • It will make you feel more confident.

  • When people move to an English speaking country,

  • they are most likely embarrassed of their

  • pronunciation than they are their grammar.

  • Bad grammar can make it not so easy to understand

  • someone, but bad pronunciation can make it impossible

  • to understand someone.

  • So big tip: focus on pronunciation.

  • Tip number six is to try and think in English.

  • I have made an entire video about this topic,

  • but it's such a big topic.

  • Some people find it very easy to think in English,

  • and some people find it near impossible to think in English.

  • If you want to be able to speak English fluently

  • without even thinking, then you need to

  • train yourself to think in English.

  • A good way to start doing this is to have

  • a little English narrator in your head.

  • Choose someone's voice that you like.

  • I know a lot of people use Emma Watson's voice;

  • they have her speaking in her head.

  • This is normally females.

  • But for a couple of hours a day,

  • or even couple of minutes a day,

  • have your little chosen person, Emma Watson

  • or whoever it is, narrate in your head

  • everything you're doing.

  • I am washing the dishes, I am picking up the spoon,

  • I am putting it on the table,

  • oh no, I don't like that, what have I done?

  • Just chat to yourself as you would in your own language,

  • but in English.

  • Something weird might happen after a while.

  • You might automatically start thinking in English,

  • and you might even start dreaming in English.

  • They say that you are really, really becoming fluent

  • if you start dreaming in a second language.

  • And a very weird thing can happen.

  • You can start dreaming about your friends and family

  • that don't speak your second language

  • speaking in your second language.

  • I've had my parents telling me to do stuff in Spanish,

  • and I've just woken up very, very confused.

  • (chuckles)

  • Another point, still related to the topic

  • of thinking in English is to be

  • constantly on the search for new words,

  • new phrases, a new vocabulary.

  • Keep a note app on your phone or a physical vocab book,

  • and when you are idle, or not doing something,

  • for example commuting to work, or at work,

  • look around, think what don't I know in English?

  • And if you see something, for example,

  • lamp post, curtain, then note it down,

  • and make a point that at the end of the day,

  • finding out what that word is in English.

  • Number seven, this tip is very helpful

  • because I know a lot of you just want to learn

  • one specific accent.

  • Well this tip is speak with a variety

  • of native speakers who all have different accents.

  • It's so tempting to just focus on one accent,

  • but you will be doing yourself a disservice.

  • The wider the variety of people that you speak with,

  • the more flexible your brain will be

  • when it comes to understanding speech.

  • A great example is my poor mother.

  • She struggles so badly when it comes

  • to understanding different accents.

  • It's funny and it can also be insulting

  • to the speaker sometimes.

  • But I'm talking Scottish accents, Irish accents,

  • Spanish people speaking English.

  • She is surrounded by mainly English people,

  • she speaks with people who all speak

  • the same accent, and she really, really struggles.

  • I, however, have been to many different countries,

  • and I've had students from all over the world,

  • I've lived in different locations,

  • and I find it very easy to understand different accents.

  • We've got the same genetics,

  • we've had the same upbringing to a certain point,

  • but because I listen to speakers

  • with lots of different accents,

  • I am able to understand, and she isn't.

  • Thank you Mom for letting me use you as an example.

  • She does find it funny.

  • She really struggles.

  • But it might happen to you as well.

  • If you just focus on a clear, (mumbles) accent,

  • then you will struggle to understand a Glaswegian accent,

  • or an Australian accent, or an accent from

  • the deep south of America.

  • Many of you will be thinking,

  • great, I would love to speak to loads of native people,

  • but I don't know how to speak to them.

  • Well, I have a couple of suggestions.

  • Number one is of course attend English classes,

  • group English classes.

  • Number two is attend expat meet-ups.

  • Expats are people who have left their home country

  • to live in another country.

  • A lot of them will have meet-ups because they want

  • to speak with other people that speak their language,

  • and have a taste of their own culture, their home culture.

  • Well, you can also try going to those

  • and seeing if you can mix with them

  • and speak their own language with them.

  • You will find a wide variety of accents

  • 'cause they normally come from all over the world.

  • You can also use Italki's language partner feature.

  • I've spoken about this quite a lot.

  • This is a free feature where you can find

  • a language partner to practise with.

  • If you speak a language that the partner wants to learn,

  • and the partner speaks a language that you want to learn,

  • you can do a tandem, I think it's called in some countries,

  • a language exchange.

  • I've left a link to that in the description box.

  • Some people find it quite hard to find native speakers

  • that want to speak their language,

  • especially if you come from a country where

  • everyone wants to learn English,

  • but it isn't as popular for English speakers

  • to learn your language.

  • You could perhaps consider paying for

  • a private language tutor.

  • Italki's prices are really, really good per hour.

  • Yeah, they're very, very affordable.

  • I would recommend; I've used them myself.

  • And number eight, if you cannot find native speakers

  • with whom to practise, then just find like-minded people.

  • A really great resource is Facebook.

  • I never thought I'd be recommending Facebook,

  • but honestly Facebook groups are fantastic

  • for finding like-minded people,

  • and for helping each other out.

  • If you have a question about English,

  • if you want someone to analyse the way you speak,

  • there will probably be someone on a Facebook group

  • that will be willing to help you.

  • I'm on lots of Facebook groups for many different reasons;

  • Facebook groups for wedding planning,

  • Facebook groups for being a farmer's wife,

  • lots of them, and there are so many helpful people.

  • I'm a member of some English groups as well.

  • I'm not gonna tell you which.

  • But I will often respond to people's questions anonymously.

  • There are also some good forums on websites like Reddit

  • and places like that.

  • Right, that is the end of my lesson.

  • Those are the eight tips for spoken English.

  • Don't forget to check out Audible;

  • the link is in the description box

  • so you can click that and claim your free audiobook.

  • And don't forget to connect with me

  • on all of my social media.

  • I've got my Facebook, my Instagram, and my Twitter.

  • And I shall see you soon for another lesson.

  • (kissing sound)

  • I'm only one minute from finishing, I'll see you in a sec.

  • Oh, could you just hang out the duvet?

  • The duvet's in the wash, would you mind just hanging it up?

  • Thanks, hon.

  • (peaceful music)

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英語口語課1|如何說一口流利的英語--初級到高級的口語練習。 (Spoken English Class 1 | How to Speak Fluent English - Beginner to Advanced Speaking Practice)

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    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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