101 Pronunciation Mistakes Made by YOU

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  • Опубліковано 25 кві 2024
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    eepurl.com/izRKww 101 Common Pronunciation Mistakes made by learners of English. In this video you'll learn how to pronounce them correctly (with a British accent). I'll give you the correct pronunciation and, if the word is particularly difficult I'll give you a trick on how to say it. We have many more English pronunciation videos on this channel. Check them out.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 592

  • @someguy6076
    @someguy6076 Рік тому +7

    #39 - I confess that I was stunned to learn that "guest" is pronounced "gig". I did not know that one.

    • @milicamancic1
      @milicamancic1 Місяць тому

      #60 And I when I saw the transcription of mountain is /mɪstʃɪvəs/ mis-chee-vehs. Just joking Gideon, these videos are very helpful: I got most of them right but a couple of examples I keep getting wrong: the stressing of Arabic and I keep pronouncing almonds with an O at the beginning (olmonds or all-monds). Keep them coming, I can't wait for more chances to test my pronunciation

  • @ejlufpedersen742
    @ejlufpedersen742 Рік тому +107

    My first thought was easy-peasy, but I must admit that I learned a thing or two. Once again a brilliant video. Cheers Gideon.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +7

      Glad to hear it

    • @angelika6521
      @angelika6521 Рік тому +2

      So did I! Big thanks for creating this series :)

    • @peterlyall2848
      @peterlyall2848 Рік тому +3

      @@LetThemTalkTV at 39 the word Guest came up what I want to know is how do you get Gig out of guest??

  • @challism
    @challism Рік тому +7

    Almond can be pronounced with or without an L sound.
    Drawing - perhaps most British speakers say the second invisible R, but most Americans don't say it that way (said with only one R).

    • @david2869
      @david2869 Рік тому +2

      It's sort of like the invisible "r" in "wash" that some people in the US say.

  • @eusuntaici
    @eusuntaici Рік тому +14

    What happened to "mischievous" at minute 14:38? Great video, by the way.

    • @mteresarivi6608
      @mteresarivi6608 Рік тому

      Spotted another one b4, but I forget the word.

    • @sergiocasella
      @sergiocasella 2 місяці тому

      It was GUEST instead of GIG

    • @joaodavid2001
      @joaodavid2001 2 місяці тому

      By the way, 'mischievous', the way it's written, take us to the ancient pronunciation 'mis.CHEE.vuus' (uu = oo). Nowadays it's archaic to say 'mis.CHEE.ves' (recommended spelling for this: mischeevus), because many French loans have become stressed in the 1st syllable, the English way, and thus people say 'MIS.chi.ves' (recommended spelling: mischivus).

  • @josephcote6120
    @josephcote6120 Рік тому +21

    Comments about two of the words from an American.
    Almond. Americans are divided in how to pronounce it, mostly it's a regional thing, but either way you say it people will know what you mean. -- I lived in an area where many almonds are grown, and there was a common joke that was told. You need to know that the nuts are harvested by using a large tractor that grabs the trunk of the tree and shakes it very hard to make the nuts fall off the tree. The joke is, "You say all-monds when they're on the tree but ah-minds when they're harvested because you had to knock the L out of them."
    Route. As the name of a road, or as a description of a way to go one usually says "root." Route 66 = "root 66." "Will you take the direct or scenic route?" (root) When it's used to describe a regular path followed by, say, a delivery driver or a postman delivering the mail one usually says "rowt." "I better get moving, I have sixteen stops on my route today." (rowt)

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +2

      Very interesting. Thanks for the clarification

    • @eg8927
      @eg8927 Рік тому

      “Root” also means sex, so we may say “route” instead

    • @markjones1500
      @markjones1500 Рік тому +4

      I have heard the occasional Brit pronounce the L in almond too. Small minority though.
      Awry - I'm a native speaker, and I think I was in my 20s when I had that aha moment and realised that the "awry" on the page was the same as the "a-rye" that I heard.

  • @OceanChild75
    @OceanChild75 Рік тому +10

    Thank you so much for this lesson! I’ve been living in the UK for 7 years but mispronounced LOADS of these words 😂 I made a list and will re-watch this video frequently to ensure I improve my prononciation

  • @francomarini560
    @francomarini560 Рік тому +21

    Good job, Gideon!
    English is very tricky when it comes to spelling, but every time I see a new word I always look it up in my dictionary.
    These are the words I got wrong: AWRY, CLEANLINESS, DISCIPLE and LIQUEUR !
    Cheers, mate!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +7

      97 out of 101 is pretty good.

    • @polyanthajones8168
      @polyanthajones8168 Рік тому +1

      You can blame the CLEANLINESS on your teachers not teaching you about trisyllabic laxing.

  • @Crisguay
    @Crisguay Рік тому +14

    Thanks a bunch for this pronunciation masterclass. Hats off to you Gideon. You are BRILLIANT!! ⭐

  • @marythurlow9132
    @marythurlow9132 Рік тому +2

    I am 74 and live in Britain. I have always pronounced the l in Almond, and never put an extra r in drawing!

  • @vladimirmihajlovic2485
    @vladimirmihajlovic2485 Рік тому +5

    Love the music interludes :) Currently using this video to make a list of hard to pronounce words for my dear Polish students.

  • @marcelroberto2270
    @marcelroberto2270 Рік тому +5

    I missed you Mr Gideon. I'd like to thank you for this excellent video. I always take advantage of your lessons to report them to my professor and he , Mr Ballington, is quite grateful to share what I've been learning here for these years.

  • @Cycaszamia
    @Cycaszamia Рік тому +5

    The CEO of one of my French client companies (I'm a conference interpreter) recently declared in a presentation: "I love Diver City". I thought at first (but not really) it could be a Disneyland-like holiday resort in the Maledives he was talking about ...

  • @raychat2816
    @raychat2816 Рік тому +3

    21 degrees where I am right now, quite nice … dear Gideon, you have just corrected 4 words I used to pronounce erroneously, thank you for that 😊😊

  • @romainbouillon4931
    @romainbouillon4931 Рік тому +1

    Thank you so much for pour videos...it helps a lot!

  • @laurajamil8943
    @laurajamil8943 Рік тому +4

    Very useful, thanks a million!

  • @23max232323232323
    @23max232323232323 Рік тому +5

    Thanks for this! If you're interested, I taught in Italy and Italians usually mispronounce:
    - Report as 'rEport
    - Apple as EIpol, or Epol, particularly when they talk in Italian about Apple products
    (these first two examples are almost impossible to correct as they are now part of the Italian language)
    - Continental as contEEnental
    - gasoline as gaso'lAIn
    - they pronounce every 's' between two vowels as /z/, for example increaZe, leaZe, cloZe friends (they struggle to hear the difference)
    - they pronounce every 's' in plurals and third persons as /s/, e.g. plays like place, rays like race and so on
    - interestingly, some Italians hold the view that English speakers 'eat letters' and that words like doubt and almond should be pronounced /daubt/, /almond/
    - some also believe that weak forms are just mistakes that native speakers make because they speak too fast
    On a different note, I've always said liqueur /lɪˈkjʊə/. I thought /lɪˈkʊər/ or /lɪˈkər/ was AE, without the /j/. I've been in Italy for over 20 years so my English might be corrupted. I also say vineyard /ˈvɪnjəd/ but I know you can say /ˈvɪnjɑːd/ as well.

  • @peaceandlove6854
    @peaceandlove6854 Рік тому +1

    Horray my fav series, 101! Thank you Gideon for this amazing lesson!

    • @peaceandlove6854
      @peaceandlove6854 Рік тому

      Just watched it all. I’ve noticed that I was making mistakes with everyday words and learnt some new words too. Thank you! I’m gonna repeat this:))

  • @joseantoniodavila2752
    @joseantoniodavila2752 Рік тому +5

    You have my thumb up! One of the best English lesson ever in the internet.

  • @nologo85
    @nologo85 Рік тому +10

    Hi Gideon, you are a phenomenon! Thanks a lot for the laughs and your teachings.

  • @Boldorion1958
    @Boldorion1958 Рік тому +3

    In California, we pronounce the "L" in "almond" and stress the final syllable in "caffeine"

  • @Karlopapa
    @Karlopapa Рік тому

    Thanks a lot for all your work.

  • @haroldocantanhede
    @haroldocantanhede Рік тому +2

    Excellent! Brilliant! I teach EFL and your videos are a great help/adition to any thing I do in class. Many thanks!!

  • @qzrnuiqntp
    @qzrnuiqntp Рік тому +1

    Most useful! Thank you sir!
    I just wish I can know how to pronunce all this words and the other 101 with a pure posh accent, since I've just seen your video on this topic.

  • @Cristina-cs2bj
    @Cristina-cs2bj Рік тому

    Thanks, Gideon, that’s very helpful😊

  • @dami-i
    @dami-i Рік тому +1

    I found the intrusive R in "drawing" a bit weird, but I was immediately reminded of an australian computer programming teacher who kept pronouncing "Java FX" as "javarefex".

  • @drikool3597
    @drikool3597 Рік тому +1

    always great videos. Got a few wrong so thanks for the lesson. Cheers.

  • @NikolaosEnmetanoia
    @NikolaosEnmetanoia Рік тому +1

    the amigo with ego thing was absolutely fantastic.........

  • @user-qq5hd9wo9t
    @user-qq5hd9wo9t Рік тому +2

    Thanks. I've got mostly of them correct even though I didn't know the meaning! 😁

  • @Alif.Kara33
    @Alif.Kara33 Рік тому

    Thanks a heap for your priceless informative videos! Can I kindly ask you which English dictionaries would you recommend to the advanced English learners and teachers? Particularly I am curious about your comment on the Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary 10th Edition.
    Thanks in advance!💝☺️

  • @conservativeokie
    @conservativeokie 3 місяці тому

    Absolutely LOVED the Sesame Street interjection!!!!

  • @SolveigaLidaka
    @SolveigaLidaka Рік тому

    Thank you for the video!

  • @Maria-rn4vn
    @Maria-rn4vn 5 місяців тому

    THANKS, Teacher, for your invaluable video lesson!

  • @marjorielynch6891
    @marjorielynch6891 Рік тому +3

    Hi from the southern US, we pronounce drawing with no intrusive R and flawless as flawless as in awe not floor.

    • @Edabee405
      @Edabee405 2 місяці тому

      For Brits, “flawless”, “awe” and “floor”, all have the same vowel sound.

  • @johanbrat8
    @johanbrat8 Рік тому

    Very, very, extraordinary!

  • @injujuan8993
    @injujuan8993 Рік тому +6

    Hello, Gideon! Lovely to see you ❤️☀️❤️☀️! Thanks for the lesson, tremendously appreciated!! Keep eavesdropping around with your famous black book in your pocket 📖; we will love to hear some lines from it👍🤓🤓🤓

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +1

      It's top secret but I might share some lines with you one day.

  • @bnu2b
    @bnu2b Рік тому

    I absolutely love your sense of humour, Gideon!

  • @deimexo
    @deimexo Рік тому

    Thank you for this video. Is there a video about word stress on your channel? Could you recommend some good books?

  • @einstein6195
    @einstein6195 Рік тому

    Very good!!!!! It is hard to find such a good English Teacher!!!!

  • @toddgoes7935
    @toddgoes7935 Рік тому +8

    I loved your video and I got 12 words that I can improve. Just two comments: "GUEST" was shown as "GIG". HOMAGE - I think the pronunciation can also be without the "H" sound. You should include "harass", as many people pronounce the stressed syllable incorrectly. Thanks for the video!

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous Рік тому

      News readers in Australia have taken to calling harASSment HARassment, it makes me wonder every time "how do you HARass someone, do you have to be named Harris to do it?"
      Edited for punctuation.

  • @karaw6598
    @karaw6598 Рік тому

    So amazingly beautiful teaching 💖🤩

  • @Agadoo5
    @Agadoo5 Рік тому

    Thank you Sir

  • @Lily_and_River
    @Lily_and_River Рік тому +3

    The explanation of liqueur and liquor was great! I didn't know you guys also use liqueur. As a Dutch person I always found it strange that liquor means all hard alcohol while here it's just the fruity alcohol that is called 'likeur'.

  • @hglundahl
    @hglundahl Рік тому

    18:03 I am so glad that "rowt" is just US, because I had such a vivid memory of homophone to "root" ...

  • @crazy_mind-ox8if
    @crazy_mind-ox8if Рік тому +4

    Native English speaker here(US). Never heard of the L in almond being silent. Is it a European thing?
    Edit: also a second r in drawing? You brits are crazy...
    Edit 2: I'm just gonna keep adding all the pronunciations I think are weird.
    Its flawless not floorless

    • @msjazzmeblues
      @msjazzmeblues Рік тому

      Yes, you Brits put Rs where there are not any and drop them where they should BE! On the other hand, in the U.S. a horrible thing is happening to our language with the rampant outbreak of the glottal stop in words where it never was before, as in "impor 'ant" for imporTant! I hate that!

  • @grawl69
    @grawl69 Рік тому +2

    Poland here. I've been reading and listening to English quite intensively for the last 28 years. And I am completely shattered by the pronunciation of cleanse, drawing, and vineyard. :)
    Thanks for your excellent work.

    • @AndreiBerezin
      @AndreiBerezin Рік тому +2

      Absolutely the same with me. Each time you think English phonetics can't get any more f**ked up they get exactly like that.

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous Рік тому +2

      @@AndreiBerezin There is a claim that English has no dialects. I think with the many accents in which English is spoken it does indeed have dialects but at least we all pronounce "f**ked up" the same!

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому

      @@AndreiBerezin indeed

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому

      @@A_nony_mous Actually not. Some Brits say fooked up.

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous Рік тому

      @@jasonmarks4627 If they're trying to avoid using the "F" word, yes they mispronounce it

  • @Sauvageonne
    @Sauvageonne Рік тому +3

    Thank you for the Nat King Cole snippet!

  • @AndreiBerezin
    @AndreiBerezin Рік тому +1

    14:27 A mischievous Mountain that was!

  • @manjirabanerjee7169
    @manjirabanerjee7169 Рік тому

    Thanks sir

  • @bernardchristensen9705
    @bernardchristensen9705 Рік тому

    Loads of fun, thanks.

  • @user-cw3nb8rc9e
    @user-cw3nb8rc9e Рік тому

    Amazing video. More like this, please.

  • @whukriede
    @whukriede Рік тому

    I had 25 mistakes or imprecisions out of those 101, oooh. That was quite a good one, dear Gideon, very well spotted.

  • @daveinnewmarket
    @daveinnewmarket Рік тому +17

    Interesting. I'm a native English speaker from Lancashire, living in the UK until my mid forties and in Canada for the past couple of decades, and I've always pronounced the L in almond. The BBC also seem to pronounce it at the start of this documentary - ua-cam.com/video/egS4cRBqAN0/v-deo.html I never realised that some people don't. pronounce the L. So I'll now be testing all my Canadian friends!

    • @gmr1241
      @gmr1241 Рік тому +4

      I always pronounce the L in almond and I ain't gonna stop now.

    • @marynoonan6111
      @marynoonan6111 Рік тому +2

      No nobody in Oz pronounces L in almond either 😂

    • @martalli
      @martalli Рік тому +2

      I'm in the American Midwest and i also pronounce the l in almond... But not like al-mond, but more like in the word "alm". I pronounce the alm in almond much different than the am in amend.

    • @thanementula
      @thanementula Рік тому

      @@martalli I'm from an old California Forty-niner family which has been growing almonds commercially (Blue Diamond) on the family ranch for well over 150 years. The cousin branches differ on the pronunciation however. The cousins who currently farm the almond orchards pronounce "almond" (bizarrely! grin) as "am-mand", both short A's as in "I am" or "amend." I and the other cousins and most other native Californians use and agree with your pronunciation with the soft "L" sound as in "alms" (rather than the hard "L" as in "already.")

  • @fernandomilicich8160
    @fernandomilicich8160 Рік тому +1

    Thanks a lot !

  • @kerstineisenhut8151
    @kerstineisenhut8151 Рік тому

    Your sentence examples are great 😂, Gideon. Thanks!

  • @afischer8327
    @afischer8327 Рік тому +1

    I am English, but I feel that this is a very useful guide to people learning the monumental catastrophe that is English pronunciation, due to historical invasions and the development of our language. In my experience, I have not encountered any language with so many contradictions and breaking of standard pronunciation rules. If you are learning English, please accept my humblest sympathies, and I wish you the best.

    • @PauloPereira-jj4jv
      @PauloPereira-jj4jv Рік тому

      Finally someone that says the truth.

    • @Jana-md5ot
      @Jana-md5ot Рік тому

      Thank you for your understanding. I’m cursing a lot about the inconsistent pronunciation.

  • @OliveraK
    @OliveraK Рік тому +13

    I sometimes mix British with American pronunciation and don't know which one is which. This video is amazing, I learned a lot. Thank you!
    Btw, there were a lot of words where I needed to correct my pronunciation, even though I thought there would be only a few. Some 20%

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +10

      As a native-born American with British parents, I say this: If it's correct in British English *_or_* American English, it's correct. 😁 It's only wrong if it's wrong in _both_ accents.

    • @A_nony_mous
      @A_nony_mous Рік тому +3

      @@Milesco I'll take exception this as an Aussie on only one word "route" is pronounced root, "rout" with the ou from ouch sound is when an army flees it's enemy in utter disarray. This one gets my goat every time.

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому +1

      @@A_nony_mous For me, route can be pronounced either root or rout with reckless abandon. Merely two ways of saying the same word.

    • @david2869
      @david2869 Рік тому +1

      @@A_nony_mous But to "rout" an army is spelled differently.

  • @sheelaghhalstead4549
    @sheelaghhalstead4549 Рік тому +1

    The image of you listening into conversations and making notes in your black book reminds me of Henry Higgens in Pygmalion or My Fair Lady.

  • @fleurblanche7642
    @fleurblanche7642 17 днів тому

    100 percent right Thanks for this exercise

  • @fouchermarguerite2037
    @fouchermarguerite2037 Рік тому

    Merci!

  • @ioanciumasu994
    @ioanciumasu994 Рік тому

    Very nice and funny video -- I caught a couple of mistakes I was doing too.

  • @roberth.5938
    @roberth.5938 Рік тому

    I just discovered your channel, would you mind to make a video on explaining how I can improve my accent as a German?

  • @sergeheute7938
    @sergeheute7938 Рік тому +2

    hi Giddeon, very useful for me, prononciation could be tricky sometimes, I have taken notes for vocabulary I didn t know. could you make a lesson about Bob Dylan writing? Thanks for the quality of the job.Serge from france.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +4

      I'm a huge Bob Dylan fan. There will be something on Dylan coming soon (probably September). Not a whole video but part of it. Stay tuned.

  • @boureaudenis4482
    @boureaudenis4482 Рік тому

    I literaly love today 's lesson.Useful and i m looking foward to finding out the next!
    I m going to share this vidéo to my Friends.WELL DONE
    Maestr6

  • @alanwareham7391
    @alanwareham7391 Рік тому

    Many thanks for putting these on as Old English is now a threatened language and we do need to keep it alive

  • @ismaeldescoings
    @ismaeldescoings Рік тому

    That's a good one, very useful:)

  • @mj-kawai
    @mj-kawai Рік тому

    Love your videos! The onion joke! 😆

  • @Mat_Gallusman
    @Mat_Gallusman Рік тому

    Jolly good, sir !

  • @ihavenoname6724
    @ihavenoname6724 Рік тому +4

    Thanks buddy for this extremely helpful video -- there are so many words I never use in speaking because I have no idea how they're pronounced. Disciple I would say 'di-si-pl, Vineyard obviously I'd say 'Vaine-yard, and a few others you talk about on the video (Colonel for instance). My trouble words (some out of many) are : Beard, I think my brain has developed some sort of mental block and I always pronounce it Berd, though I've read a thousand times it's Bird. Bow (the weapon) and to bow (the verb); Crow (the bird) and Brow (as in eyebrow); Bald; Abyss; Halt; Surface. And many, many more! 😂

    • @josephcote6120
      @josephcote6120 Рік тому +5

      American here. The only way I would say it is "beer'd" One syllable.

    • @ihavenoname6724
      @ihavenoname6724 Рік тому +3

      @@josephcote6120 Hi Joseph and thank you, by writing bird I meant beer'd; I had the international phonetic alphabet in mind (bɪrd).

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому

      @@josephcote6120 agreed

  • @polyanthajones8168
    @polyanthajones8168 Рік тому +2

    One of the most common mistakes my students make is pronouncing "nearby" as "nehr-bee". Just like Derby. When you point out to them that it is actually two words rolled into one you get the great aha-moment :D

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому

      And there’s albeit, notwithstanding,passersby, and wherewithal.

  • @yvonnesmith8245
    @yvonnesmith8245 5 місяців тому

    Nicely done 🙌☺️

  • @SilhouetteSE
    @SilhouetteSE Рік тому +3

    Thanks a lot for the vid! Very useful as always 👍 A quick question though: why did you say "sitting ON the table next to you", not AT? 0:38

  • @user-bb8vf3tq6l
    @user-bb8vf3tq6l Рік тому

    Thanks a million! Great work! I've made only 20 mistakes, but they all related to rarely met words. I really like your brilliant sense of humour too. I'd like to see the examples on the screen too. They are brilliant! I want to add that I've heard uncorrect pronunciation of the word " hotel" with a stress on the first syllable. I am sure that the pronunciation of this word in a famous song " Hotel California" by rock group The Eagles did influence it!

    • @gcewing
      @gcewing Рік тому +1

      I think many people would pronounce the name "Hotel California" that way when speaking. Same with any hotel name where the word after starts with a stressed syllable.

  • @frankgradus9474
    @frankgradus9474 Рік тому +2

    Thank you for picking me up on my pronunciation. That episode's been of a great help to me.
    I have trouble getting my tongue round a whole myriad of words - including a good deal of the ones listed here.
    Just the recent ones I tripped up on: warrior vs worrier, gnome, promenade, compatible, usually, gargoyle, doolally, garage, wander vs wonder ...

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +1

      Regarding "warrior" vs. "worrier"... maybe British pronunciation is different, but here in the States, both words are pronounced the same. First syllable = "wore". 😊

    • @frankgradus9474
      @frankgradus9474 Рік тому +1

      @@Milesco You must be right then about the US. I'm a non-native speaker and rather an English pronunciation worrier. These words I've listed were not actually covered by Gideon here - just my examples of words I struggled to pronounce correctly the other day.
      As regards "warrior" vs. "worrier", according to Longman Dictionary (first is British, second American $ pronunciation):
      wor‧ri‧er [ˈwʌriə $ ˈwɜːriər]
      war‧ri‧or [ˈwɒriə $ ˈwɔːriər, ˈwɑːriər]
      wore [wɔː $ wɔːr]
      but to be honest my foreigner's ear can't hear any difference between
      worrier ['wʌriə] and warrior [ˈwɒriə].

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +1

      @@frankgradus9474 Yeah, that IPA symbology is inscrutable to me -- it's like a foreign language in a foreign alphabet. It may as well be Chinese! 😄 And I don't have the time or inclination to learn it now.
      But in any event...different parts of the world will pronounce words differently, of course, but at least in the United States, both words are pronounced the same. Which would be WORE-ee-er. (With the "er" being the same sound as the "ir" in "bird".)

    • @frankgradus9474
      @frankgradus9474 Рік тому +2

      @@Milesco Thank you for your comments - very helpful.
      All the best!

    • @Milesco
      @Milesco Рік тому +3

      @@frankgradus9474 You're* very welcome! And all the best to you, too. 😊
      If you ever have any further questions about English grammar, spelling or pronunciation, just shoot me a question here and (hopefully) YT will notify me. I'm a native-born American with English parents, so English is one thing I'm pretty good at. 😁
      _______________________
      *And of course, "you're" ≠ "your" -- a very common mistake, especially since they're both pronounced the same in practice.
      "You're" means "you are", while "your" is a pronoun meaning "belonging to you".
      You probably already knew that, but it's such a common mistake (among native English speakers who should know better!) that I thought I'd take the opportunity to mention it. 😊
      And one other thing that I must mention because it drives me crazy: "loose" vs. "lose".
      "Loose" (pronounce "loos") means "not tight", while "lose" (pronounced "looz") means the opposite of "win" or to be deprived of something. ("Did you lose your keys again?")
      Sorry for the rant -- I just had to get that off my chest! 😁

  • @Eddi.M.
    @Eddi.M. Рік тому +1

    Good one! Cheers for that. I had 81 of the 99 correct but none totally butchered. It is 25°C and I am going for an afternoon walk through nature.

  • @olegkarpenko-actorandenter4096
    @olegkarpenko-actorandenter4096 9 місяців тому +3

    Thank you for the Ukrainian flag in the back, Sir! And thank you for your knowledge you share with us.
    🇺🇦 🇬🇧

  • @devikandel2442
    @devikandel2442 Рік тому

    What a brilliant video from Nepal

  • @willhovell9019
    @willhovell9019 10 місяців тому +1

    Very interesting note many words appear to be French in origin with English intonation and pronounciation😊

  • @dudablack2426
    @dudablack2426 11 місяців тому

    I loved the phoenomenum!! Will never forget ❤😅

  • @Lily_and_River
    @Lily_and_River Рік тому

    Thank you! This really helps to perfect my British pronunciation even though I know a lot of them already. The ones that were tricky to me were when the pronunciation changes depending on if it's a verb or not. Like use and uselessness. I noticed you say the 'oo' in soot very much in front of your mouth which makes it sound a bit like a short u. My mother language (Dutch) has a similar sound 'oe' (for example book = boek and it sounds almost the same) but I need to be very careful not to pronounce it in the back of my throat.
    It also helped with spelling. For example I knew how to pronounce 'sieve' but didn't know this word was a 'sieve' because of the spelling.

  • @vondur.kottur
    @vondur.kottur Рік тому

    Дякую за інформативне відео, дякую)

  • @mariannereuter
    @mariannereuter Рік тому +1

    Supposedly I should work on my pronunciation - it's no use pretending I got all words right when in fact there weren't more than 71 ... Thank you for this eye-opener!

  • @monicaconsigliereLavieenfleur

    I had few mistakes, so it was worth watching . Thanks

  • @maghdean
    @maghdean 7 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for the useful video, Gideon! And I appreciate your support of Ukraine and war refugees! Greetings from Kyiv.

  • @isabelatence7035
    @isabelatence7035 Рік тому +3

    The Words are well punctuated in our difficulty, perfect! 🎯 I like your pronunciation, I prefer it without the beard, I'm a fan of your hair... Thanks a lot Gideon!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +1

      Well I shaved off the beard in the end. I hope you learnt some pronunciation.

    • @isabelatence7035
      @isabelatence7035 Рік тому

      @@LetThemTalkTV I learn, with great satisfaction.👍

  • @TrueColours51
    @TrueColours51 10 місяців тому

    I certainly learned much more than a thing or two!

  • @tricanesloup6819
    @tricanesloup6819 Рік тому

    Hi Gideon, you are a wonderful teacher. I`ve been learning a lot from your videos. I got a question to make you. I want to know how to pronounce the preposition " with". I´ve noticed that sometimes you say (wɪð ) and others you say (wɪθ ) . My question is when I do use one or the other. Thank you very much in advance. Greetings from Uruguay .

    • @jasonmarks4627
      @jasonmarks4627 Рік тому

      In US English, the th in with is always voiceless, never voiced.

    • @msjazzmeblues
      @msjazzmeblues Рік тому +1

      Also there is only one R sound in "drawing" in 99% of the North American speakers. Adding that extra R is considered a bit underclass heRe! On the other hand, a great deal of North American English is much more rhotic than in Britain, (thanks to the many Scotch and Scotch-Irish immigrants in the 18th and 19th centuries, who rolled the Rs thoRoughly and woRds are pronounced as they aRe spelled, with little swallowing of syllables, thanks to OUR lexicographer, Noah Webster, (not Webstah) who tried to align our spelling with the pronunciation. For example, I am Glenda from BiR' ming-ham (Alabama),

  • @ohgames-jorgevaz
    @ohgames-jorgevaz Рік тому

    Thanks

  • @thephantomeagle2
    @thephantomeagle2 10 місяців тому

    These were a snap for me. Of course both my parents were English professors around the world. I was being corrected from the day I started speaking.

  • @Erik_Swiger
    @Erik_Swiger Рік тому +3

    Growing up, we always pronounced route as "rowt." Because of a single joke, I started pronouncing it as "root."
    "Did you hear about the mailman who got bit on his route?"
    "Got bit where?"
    "On his route!"

    • @david2869
      @david2869 Рік тому

      I use the pronunciation of "rowt" to refer to small country roads, but I use the pronunciation "root" when referring to larger well-known roads. Route 66 is pronounced "root 66". However, if you are not referring to a road, I use the "root" pronunciation, like a route to victory.

    • @ATurtle05
      @ATurtle05 Рік тому

      Why have a different pronunciation for a smaller route ( "root")? The route from Chicago to Los Angeles is along Route 66, both "routes"being pronounced "Root". The "rowt" version is for a defeat or for the woodworking tool the router.

  • @ulissesbraga-neto2123
    @ulissesbraga-neto2123 Рік тому +3

    Thank you for the video, it was useful. The online dictionary word reference gives the pronounciation of "drawing" without an "r". Also, it places a long "e" at the beginning of "event". Perhaps these could be regional differences?

    • @ulissesbraga-neto2123
      @ulissesbraga-neto2123 Рік тому

      Also, a suggestion for future videos = "haphazard".

    • @jwolfe01234
      @jwolfe01234 Рік тому +1

      American here.
      Americans never say "drawing" with an "r" sound. It's a British thing.
      For "event", I say it both ways: ee-VENT and uh-VENT. I think I probably say uh-VENT more, especially when I'm saying it in conversation. So, either is okay. The important thing, as he says, it to put the stress on the second syllable. So, e-VENT, not E-vent.

  • @hfitfxhfhfufgugugu6589
    @hfitfxhfhfufgugugu6589 Рік тому

    ~~"...and if you saw a strange guy, eavesdropping on your conversation on the metro or in a cafè or in the restaurant, sitting on the table next to you [...] Yes that was me with my black book and a pen noting things down..."~~ LetThemTalkTV 2022
    That is what I call a committed teacher

  • @cezarmonteirodk
    @cezarmonteirodk Рік тому

    Gideon is a brilhant teacher!👏🥂

  • @Piddeaux
    @Piddeaux Рік тому +2

    Drawring? Nope! FEB'-ru-ary! and that's final!!!! "Two nations separated by a common language" explains most of the differences.

  • @i.o.3563
    @i.o.3563 Рік тому

    Gideon, thanks for a lesson. A question: at 0:33 why you used the article there? There's nothing specific about them, are there? Shouldn't is be an indefinite article?

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Рік тому +1

      Thanks for your comment. I was talking about a specific café or restaurant so I'd use the definite article even though the place is hypothetical.

  • @fabiogerussibueriis
    @fabiogerussibueriis Рік тому

    Molto interessante

  • @tilleulenspiegel4394
    @tilleulenspiegel4394 4 місяці тому

    Hello Gideon, thanks a lot to the great videos, I love to see these videos and I'm learning a lot about the way of using the English language. Just one thing I would like to mention to you, there is a small gap for the word No. 39 (guest) - the answer which comes ist "gig".
    And another thing is "homage" do you have just two different prononciation or also different spelling? (hommage) Because I can't find this word in the dicitionaries and I think the book is named "homage to catalonia"
    By the way, the word No. 60 (mountain) has the written explanation for "mischievous".
    Great work, keep up the good work, I enjoy very much you explanations 😍👍🏻

  • @christinecollins6302
    @christinecollins6302 8 місяців тому

    Most Excellent! In 99. %. + of theae we pronounce these the same way in US English!

  • @dineshpratapsingh5263
    @dineshpratapsingh5263 Рік тому

    Hello Gideon,
    You might want to go through the mountain word once more, I saw mischievous written instead of mountain there.

  • @user-mb3vl3pn8l
    @user-mb3vl3pn8l Рік тому +1

    All of my pronunciations are spot on, thankfully. I noticed nominal differences, as an American, but I believe that's simply a matter of accent. [Such as your faint inclusion of an L in drawing, which becomes quite prominent for some who butcher the word here.]. Unfortunately (for me), I've never heard anyone in my state say route properly. They all use "root", which results in an automatic eye roll on my part.

  • @OceanChild75
    @OceanChild75 6 місяців тому

    “Here are your onions”
    “Oh thanks shallot 😊”
    How on Earth have I not noticed this before today? 😂 Honestly I must have watched this video at least 10 times-let’s say I was too focused on the way you were pronouncing key words haha.
    Thanks for all these hidden gems, you truly are a underrated genius 😇