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  • In the US, summer is for sun, sand, and blockbuster movies.

  • And this summer, we're going to use those movies to learn English and study how to sound American.

  • Every video this summer is going to be a study English with movies video.

  • We'll pull scenes from the summer's hottest movies as well as favorite movies from years past.

  • It's amazing what we can discover by studying even a small bit of English dialogue.

  • We'll study how to understand movies, what makes Americans sound American, and of course,

  • any interesting vocabulary, phrasal verbs, or idioms that come up in the scenes we study.

  • I call this kind of exercise a Ben Franklin exercise. First, we'll watch the scene.

  • Then, we'll do an in-depth analysis of what we hear together.

  • This is going to be so much fun.

  • Be sure to tell your friends and spread the word that all summer long, every Tuesday,

  • we're studying English with movies here at Rachel's English.

  • If you're new to my channel, click subscribe and don't forget the notification button.

  • Let's get started. First, the scene.

  • What are you talking about?

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Now does this mean that whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • So what if he's alone. We're all alone.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it,

  • right, you just said it, you called it a thing. It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • Now, the analysis.

  • What are you talking about?

  • What are you talking about?

  • So he's really stressing the word 'talking' here. And when we stress a word, we're really only talking about the

  • stressed syllable in that word, and that's the first syllable. Talking. So the unstressed syllable is

  • still unstressed even though this word is stressed.

  • What are you talking about?

  • What are you talking about?

  • What are you talking about?

  • What about the first three words of this phrase?

  • What are you,

  • We have a little bit of stress on 'what'. What are you, what are you, what are you.

  • That's said pretty quickly, isn't it? The word 'are' is being reduced. It's just schwa R, rrrr,

  • and because the letter T comes between two vowels, it is a flap T. What are, what are, what are, what are, what are.

  • Said really quickly, linked together. The word 'are' links really quickly into 'you' which is said quickly, and it's flat.

  • What are you, what are you, what are you, what are you.

  • What are you,

  • What are you talking about?

  • As I listen to this on a loop, I think you could maybe get away with a dropping the R sound

  • and just making a schwa, but only if you say it extremely quickly, if you match the speed of this speaker.

  • What are you, what are you, what are you.

  • Then I think you can do it. If you do it any slower than, that then you definitely do need the R sound.

  • What are you talking about?

  • What are you talking about?

  • What are you talking about?

  • Talking about? So he stresses this word and he lets a little bit of extra air escape on his true T,

  • ttt talking about, and that makes it...stressing the first sound of a stressed syllable

  • makes it even more stressed.

  • Talking about, talking about, talking about.

  • Talking about. About, about. So this second word, it just falls down in pitch, coming off of the stressed syllable of

  • 'talking'. Talking about. The pitch falls down because the peak of pitch for this phrase

  • was the stressed syllable of 'talking'. And he does do a stop T at the end, that sound is not released, about.

  • Talking about,

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • So then he says: . Absolutely not. And as he says this, he's laughing. Now, I want you to also imitate the

  • laughing as you work with the audio that goes with this video. We want to practice imitation skills,

  • so when you're working with this audio, practice exactly what you hear with the laugh in your voice.

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • No. No. And, so part of what he does is he puts an H sound in it.

  • No-ho and no-ho. It has a up-down shape for a stressed syllable. No-ho.

  • No.

  • No.

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not. AB, a little bit of stress there. Absolutely not.

  • And 'not' has the most stress out of that two-word phrase.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely. So you'll see the letter O here, just make that a schwa, really simple, absolutely.

  • Now there's another stop T here, that's because the next sound is a consonant, it's the L consonant.

  • Yes, the next letter is a letter E and that's a vowel letter, but it's not a sound. The next sound is the L consonant.

  • So it's a stop T. Absolutely, absolutely. It's not released. Absolutely. That is not what we're hearing.

  • We're hearing: absolutely. Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • And he does do a very light release of a True T here at the end. Absolutely not.

  • He's really stressing 'not'. He doesn't want to drop that final release.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Absolutely not.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • What's the most stress word there? What's the peak of stress for that thought group?

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • I think it's 'law'. Because it's breaking the law. Law has the most up-down shape.

  • Breaking definitely has some. Breaking, but law is the most stressed, it is the peak.

  • Breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Whoa! Different day, different outfit, important announcement. Did you know that with this video,

  • I made a free audio lesson that you can download? In fact, I'm doing this for each one of the youtube videos

  • I'm making this summer. All 11 of the Learn English with Movies videos!

  • So follow this link or find the link in the video description to get your free downloadable audio lesson.

  • It's where you're going to train all of the things that you've learned about pronunciation in this video.

  • Back to the lesson.

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • That's, also has a little bit. Breaking the law, that's why. But everything that really smoothly links together with no

  • breaks, no skip in pitch.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • Because it's-- because it's-- Listen to just these first two words.

  • Because it's--

  • Because it's, Because it's. Do you hear how flat that is? We don't have that up-down shape. Those words are unstressed.

  • And then we compare that to the next word 'break' and the first syllable there does have more length

  • and has that up-down shape.

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Breaking the law-- So we have two other unstressed syllables here. The ING ending of 'breaking' and the

  • word 'the' before our next big scoop up, but let's just take 'breaking the law' those three words,

  • and let's just listen to those on a loop and listen to the music of that. We have a lot more up and down pitch.

  • We have a lot more pitch variation because this fragment has two stressed syllables.

  • So that's pretty different than the flatness we got on: because it's, because it's, because it's.

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law--

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why.

  • And with the last two words, think about: that's why, that's why. Think about them being one word and

  • that Y is just an unstressed part that falls down with the pitch. And you know I drew that without a line

  • connecting them, but everything is connected here. There's no break there. So when you practice: that's why,

  • that's why, that's why, practice that with no break. Think of it as a single word if that helps you connect them,

  • and think of the pitch of the word 'why' just falling off of the little peak in pitch that we had on 'that's'.

  • 'That's' has a little bit of stress and then the of the energy of the voice just continues down

  • with the next word 'why'.

  • That's why.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Okay, now in this thought group, what do you hear as the peak of pitch? What is the most stressed syllable here?

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking-- A little bit of stress there. Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • 'Talking' to me has the most stress there. Okay, let's look at what else is happening in this sentence?

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • The first word, probably, he does a really common reduction where he drops the middle syllable,

  • so it's just: probably. Probably, probably, probably, probably.

  • Probably--

  • Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Probably breaking the law just talking-- the law just talking--

  • Okay so we have this peak of pitch in, and I really feel we have a little bit of length on 'law' and then

  • the pitch for 'just' goes up as it's going towards the peak of pitch. Just talking about it.

  • And then the words 'about' and 'it' fall away from that peak. We have a word that ends in a T and

  • then the next word begins with a T, we're gonna connect those with a single T, just talking, just talking.

  • You do not need to try to make the T twice. We're gonna use that to link the words. Just talking about it.

  • Just talking about it.

  • Just talking about it.

  • Just talking about it.

  • About it. About it. A little bit of a release of a T here, an escape of air. This T, about it, about it, about it,

  • is a flap linking the two words together that comes between two vowel or diphthong sounds.

  • But everything in this thought group super smooth, no breaks, no skips, no jumps,

  • pitch moves up towards the peak, and then back down.

  • Talking about it.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh. Okay, so now he's being sarcastic.

  • Obviously, this man doesn't care if this creature is alone. And part of how he shows that he's being sarcastic

  • is that he puts a lot of pitch change in his voice, which is what you might do if you were concerned.

  • He's alone. It's like "Oh my goodness! This is terrible!" so he does it too. Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh. But of course he doesn't, he's not really concerned. Sarcasm.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Oh, he's alone. Okay so we have 'Oh' twice. It's the OH diphthong.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh. And then we also have the OH diphthong on our stressed syllable here.

  • He drops the H and 'he's' do you hear that?Oh, he's, Oh, he's, Oh, he's, Oh, he's.

  • Oh, he's--

  • And the apostrophe S here is the Z sound, and it links the EE vowel and the schwa of 'alone'.

  • He's a-- he's a-- he's a-- he's a-- he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone.

  • So there's a little bit of a break here. Oh, he's alone. Oh. But let's just focus on these first three words,

  • they just, they glide together so smoothly, don't they? Part of that is because he drops the H in 'he's'

  • so he goes right from the OH diphthong into the EE vowel. Oh, he-- Oh, he-- Oh, he's alone.

  • And then by linking that ending consonant Z onto the beginning vowel, the schwa of 'alone', it also just helps

  • all of the sounds go together, blend together smoothly. Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Oh. Big up-down shape of a stressed syllable on 'alone' and 'oh'. Oh.

  • Oh--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Okay so now we have a little thought group, it's the beginning of his sentence, of his thought

  • but he puts a little break, so we can group 'now does this mean that--' together, as a thought group.

  • Super unclear. Listen to how he says it.

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that-- Now, does this-- Now, does this mean that--

  • I would say the peak is the word 'this' though interestingly, even though I would say that's the peak

  • and the most stressed, I don't really hear the TH. Does this, does this, does this. Ending Z sound of 'does'

  • linking into the beginning vowel. The IH vowel. Does this, does this, does this. This is definitely something that I

  • hear when these two words go together. Does this work? Does this mean that you won't be there?

  • So 'does this' can definitely link without that TH sound.

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • The word 'now', not said very quickly. Now, Now, Now, Now. I'm doing that without moving anything

  • in my mouth except my tongue. My lips are totally relaxed, my jaw isn't moving, it's not dropped very much.

  • Now, Now, Now, Now. It doesn't sound very much like the word 'now' but in the context of the whole sentence,

  • I definitely know what that word is. So in English, we have a lot of this contrast, of this unstressed stuff,

  • less clear, way simplified mouth movements with this more stressed stuff, these longer syllables with the

  • up-down shape, the pitch variation.

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that-- mean that-- The word 'that' also reduced, we do have a quick voiced

  • TH here, I believe schwa and a stop T.

  • That, that, that, that. Not too clear, mean that, mean that, mean that. Now, does this mean that--

  • Mean that--

  • Now, does this mean that whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • And now we have a much longer thought group. Many words, but no break. So all one thought group.

  • Let's try to think about our peaks of pitch here.

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Whenever we go-- A little bit on 'when'. Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant,

  • you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Pitch goes up, yes/no question, even though he's still being sarcastic, he's mocking her.

  • He knows she's not going to actually want to save fish in the tank at a Chinese restaurant,

  • but he asks her to make her feel ridiculous for talking about this other creature in the water.

  • Have you seen this movie? I haven't. But I'm looking forward to seeing it some time soon.

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • So let's just look at the first few words. Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant-- whenever--

  • I put the wrong stress there, didn't I? It's not whenever, but it's: whenever, whenever.

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant--

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant--

  • Whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant--

  • Whenever we go to a-- go to a-- Did you hear how he made the T a flap T in the word 'to'?

  • Now we don't usually do that with a T at the beginning of a word, but i've noticed we do do it sometimes with

  • the word 'to', the word 'today', the word 'tomorrow', the word 'together', those T's can get turned into a flap,

  • especially with the word 'to'.

  • Whenever we go to a--

  • Whenever we go to a--

  • Whenever we go to a--

  • Whenever we go to a-- Whenever we go to a-- go to a-- go to a--

  • All right, we often reduce the vowel in the word 'to' but he doesn't do that here, he keeps it a OO vowel.

  • We usually reduce it to the schwa. The reason why he didn't do that is because it's followed by a schwa.

  • I mean he didn't think about that, but this is, this is how the habit has developed.

  • We wouldn't reduce the vowel in 'to' to a schwa when it's followed by a schwa because then

  • we wouldn't lose definition. So by keeping the OO vowel, we hear it as its own word.

  • Go to a-- go to a-- go to a-- go to a-- go to a-- go to a-- Try that.

  • Go to a-- go to a-- whenever we go to a--

  • So it's still really smoothly connected, isn't it?

  • Go to a-- go to a-- whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant.

  • So we have two two-syllable words here. Chinese restaurant. Res-taurant. So again, with the word

  • 'restaurant', just like the word 'probably', res-tau-rant, you might hear this as three syllables, but most

  • native speakers will make it two. Rest-rant. Restaurant. Restaurant. Try that.

  • Restaurant.

  • And he does a stop at the end. It's a little bit of a nasally stop

  • because the sound before was a nasal consonant N.

  • Restaurant. Try that. Restaurant. First syllable stress.

  • Restaurant--

  • You want to save every fish in the tank?

  • And now let's look at the rest of this thought group. It has this great give-and-take with the rhythm.

  • You want to save every fish in the tank? Da da da da da da da.

  • I love that. I love hearing the rhythm of the language. So he takes the word 'want to', the words 'want to',

  • and reduces them into 'wanna'. So with you, it sounds like this: you wanna, you wanna, you wanna, you wanna, you wanna.

  • You want to save. You want to save.

  • You want to save--

  • every fish in the tank?

  • Save every, then the next word, both syllables flatter, lower in pitch, then we have fish,

  • up down shape, stressed, and then two more words that are unstressed, flatter in pitch.

  • In the, in the, in the. In the tank? Really great music to this melody, to these words.

  • Save every fish in the tank?

  • Save every fish in the tank?

  • Save every fish in the tank?

  • So what if he's alone.

  • His voice gets a little strange towards the end, alone, it sort of

  • got this quality like he's lifting something heavy in it. But let's look at this little five-word thought group.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone. So what. 'What' is the most stressed there, 'so' goes up to it. So what if he's alone.

  • A little bit of stress on the stressed syllable of 'alone' as well.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's-- what if-- what if-- what if-- what if-- What's happening there with the T?

  • It's a flap, isn't it? He's linking the two words at the flap T, it comes between two vowels.

  • So what if, so what if, so what if.

  • So what if, so what if, So what if he's alone.

  • What if he's-- what if he's-- what if he's-- Again, he drops the H in 'he's', so it's just the EE vowel

  • and the Z consonant. He's-- what if he's, what if he's, so what if he's, so what if he's alone.

  • And the Z links right into the beginning sound of the next word, the schwa, alone, alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone.

  • So what if he's alone. We're all alone.

  • Okay then a very mumbled three-word thought group. We're all alone. Low in vocal energy, so it has that

  • popcorn quality to the voice, where the vocal cords aren't fully engaged. And that sound creeps in.

  • We're all alone.

  • We're all alone.

  • We're all alone.

  • We're all alone. And stress on the word 'all' but the whole thing is really low in pitch, low in energy.

  • We're all alone.

  • We're all alone.

  • We're all alone.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • Now here, he starts speaking a lot faster. The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • And he links this first thought right into the second thought without a break.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? A little bit of stress on 'ev',

  • you've ever seen, a little bit of length on 'seen' but he doesn't even really finish it. He's just begins the N

  • before he starts right into the W. Well, you just said it-- well, you just said it--

  • 'Just said', stress on 'just', stress on 'said', and then a stop T ending that thought group.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? I'm actually gonna take back the stress I put there. I don't really hear it.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen?

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen?

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen?

  • The loneliest thing you've ever-- The loneliest thing you've ever-- It really should be on 'thing'.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen?

  • Now, it's all really smoothly linked together, let's talk about how he does that. The T in 'loneliest' is dropped.

  • It's not uncommon to drop the T between two other consonants. Here, it comes between S, it comes

  • between the unvoiced TH in 'thing' and he drops the T. That helps him link those two words.

  • The loneliest thing. The loneliest thing.

  • The loneliest thing-- The loneliest thing-- The loneliest thing you've ever seen?

  • Thing you've ever seen-- Thing you've ever seen-- NG linking right in to the next word, you've, but I

  • don't really hear the VE, I know it's there grammatically to make it work, but I'm not really hearing that sound.

  • You ever seen, you ever seen, you ever seen, you've ever seen.

  • So I think because it's low in pitch, it's unstressed, it's said quickly,

  • I think you could get by with saying these two words together like that with those unstressed qualities

  • without putting a V sound in there. You ever seen, you ever seen, you ever, you ever, you ever, you ever, you ever.

  • Pretty unclear, isn't it?

  • You've ever seen--

  • You've ever seen--

  • You've ever seen--

  • So instead of: seen, seen, it's more like: see, see, see. S, EE vowel, the beginning of a nasal sound,

  • but he stops himself to go right into the next word, well.

  • You've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • You've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • You've ever seen? Well, you just said it--

  • Seen? Well, you just said it-- So the energy is going up up up up up to the pitch on 'said'.

  • Just said. The word 'well', not very clear.

  • Well, you just said it--

  • Well, you just said it--

  • Well, you just said it--

  • I would write it with the schwa. Well, well, well, well, well. A little quick W, and then dark L sound, well, well, well.

  • Well, you-- well, you-- well, you-- well, you-- Well, you just-- well, you just-- well, you just said it--

  • well, you just said it-- What happens to this T? It comes between two consonants, do you hear it?

  • Well, you just said it--

  • Well, you just said it--

  • Well, you just said it--

  • Nope, it's dropped. Just said, just said. These two words linking together as single S sound, there's no

  • stop and restart of that sound, it just links them together.

  • You just said it--

  • You just said it--

  • You just said it--

  • Said it-- said it-- said it-- And here, the D comes between two vowel sounds, that also

  • sounds like a flap D between vowels. Sounds just like the T between vowels, a flap of the tongue.

  • Said it-- said it-- said it--

  • Said it--

  • Right, you just said it.

  • Listen to the word 'right'.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • It's kind of whispered, isn't it? Not very clear. If someone came up to me and said just that word,

  • I wouldn't understand it. But in the context of the give-and-take, the stressed and unstressed qualities

  • of a full sentence, I do get it. But it's flat, low in energy, stop T at the end.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • Right, you just said it.

  • You just said it. You just said it. You just said it. A little bit of a laughter quality at the beginning,

  • and we have another 'just said' again, T is dropped, two words linked together with a single S sound.

  • You just said it.

  • You just said it.

  • You just said it.

  • You just said it. You just said it. You just said it. Just, a little bit longer, 'said' a little bit longer,

  • probably the peak of the stress, and again, we have a flap here,

  • linking the two words together and another stop.

  • You just said it.

  • You just said it.

  • You just said it. You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • Called it a thing. He gestures with his hand, matching that stress. A little bit of stress on 'called'.

  • Called it a thing. And the most stress on the word 'thing'. The other two words, sorry, the other three words,

  • flatter in pitch, no reductions, no sounds are dropped or changed in an unusual way.

  • T is a flap T. It a, it a, it a.

  • Linking together the IH vowel and the schwa of the article 'a'.

  • You called it a-- you called it a-- you called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • ED ending in the word 'called' is a single D sound because the sound before was voiced, the L sound.

  • Called it a-- called it a-- called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing.

  • You called it a thing. It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak. What is our stress here?

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. Stress on thing. It's a thing. It's a freak. Even a little bit more stress on 'freak'.

  • It's a-- both times, flat in pitch, leading up into the stress. It's a, it's a, it's a thing. It's a freak. It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • Really smoothly linked together. So make sure you're not pronouncing the article as 'a' or as 'ah'

  • because it's uh, uh, uh. It's faster than 'ah', isn't it?

  • Uh. Uh. It's a, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's a. It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • Let's listen to the whole conversation one more time.

  • What are you talking about?

  • No. Absolutely not.

  • Because it's breaking the law, that's why. Probably breaking the law just talking about it.

  • Oh, he's alone. Oh.

  • Now does this mean that whenever we go to a Chinese restaurant, you want to save every fish in the tank?

  • So what if he's alone. We're all alone.

  • The loneliest thing you've ever seen? Well, you just said it, right, you just said it, you called it a thing.

  • It's a thing. It's a freak.

  • We're going to be doing a lot more of this kind of analysis together.

  • What movie scenes would you like to see analyzed like this?

  • Let me know in the comments! And if you want to see all my Ben Franklin videos, click here.

  • You'll also find the link in the video description.

  • That's it and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.

In the US, summer is for sun, sand, and blockbuster movies.

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通過電影學習英語 - The Shape of Water|提高你的英語會話能力! (Learn English with Movies – The Shape of Water | Improve Your English Conversation Skills!)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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