AVOID MISTAKES /
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- Опубліковано 18 лют 2024
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@linguamarina@TheEnglishCoach
American pronunciation, Spoken English, English with native speakers, Conversational English, American English, Speak English fluently, Learn American English, Speak like a native speaker, How to pronounce, Correct pronunciation, Real-life English, Speak like an American, How to speak English, How to pronounce in English, Conversation in English, English grammar, Basic grammar, Intermediate English, Advanced English, English lesson, English class, English for Spanish speakers, English for Asian people, English for Russian speaking people, Study English, Learn beginner English, Learn English online, Online English classes, Online English tutor, Find English tutor, How to learn English, How to pronounce correctly, Level up your vocabulary, Learn English vocabulary, How to understand English
@linguamarina
Lisa: you and your husband are the greatest English teachers on the web. Both should have 5 million subscribers at least. I recommend watching your videos to all my acquaintances. Greetings from Mexico city.
Wonderful lesson as always. Thanks a lot
I hope Stefanie won't feel offended with this, the real offender here is the American flag guy bringing it up for the sake of his own argument. He advertently picked it up as an example of something that he thought could justify someone else's incompetence. But actually it's just a good example to see what kind of minor mistakes native speakers make in unscripted speech
These are from the Oxford Advanced Dictionary.
talk in something - We couldn't understand them because they were talking in Chinese.
talk something - Are they talking Swedish or Danish?
It might be used only in British English.
When you learn English, you'd better learn correct English. When you speak English in casual conversations, it's ok for you to make some small mistakes just as long as you are able to get things across.
If I were a UA-cam English teacher (non-native), I would panicked AF the moment I saw my mug on a Kevin's video thumbnail.
Luckily, I'm not, so I can mess up articles and all that without a fear (a fear, the fear, fear?) of being roasted by Kevin.
😂
Thank you very much! Being native doesn't mean you speak correctly... Just means you're a native so you can speak the language without worries about making mistakes because that's the way you speak, you're not alone and people can understand you. They don't even notice they make those mistakes. Speak a language and teach a language are different things and you should have a proper level of knowledge to teach a language. I do notice those mistakes in my native language so I really appreciate these kinds of lessons because speaking correctly and natural is really important for me.
So many nuances. I also make all these mistakes. Tkanks a lot for these corrections.
I am starting to make my own videos so I get corrected for FREE. Lmao
Guys, you are the best! Honestly!
A real best UA-cam English teacher.
Actually I do understand very well what it means to sound weird in my language. You’re bound to be understood but people start smiling or even giggling having heard something like that. Thanks a bunch, Kevin and Liza. You rock! I’m being filled with some positive emotions 😃
Thank you so much.
Have a good night. Liza and Kevin 👍
Thank you very much good teachers🎉🎉🎉!
great channel, great idea, great video
Great job as always and we missed you!
Great real teacher, I am natural Spanish speaker I know the grammar spelling and most Spanish grammar rules, but that does not make me a teacher, in any language just because you were born speaking that language it does not make you a teacher, a lot of the English grammar rules are parallel to the Spanish grammar rules so that is how I know you guys are trained professional English teachers.
Thank you 💕💕💕 so much for this amazing lesson
My favorite type of videos. 👏
Dear Liza, I really enjoy myself every time while listening to your American pronunciation. If you hadn’t said one day that English was your third!!! language I would never think about it. That’s the aim to reach for every AmE learner 😊
Maybe you meant to say:
" I would never HAVE THOUGHT about it.
- Every time I listen to your american pronunciation.
"For every NON-NATIVE speaker who's learning the language".
Thanks for reading my comment and I hope you don't get upset.👍.
@@fredylopez2477 Absolutely, I’m thankful when someone fixes my mistakes. But I just thought that a mixed conditional structure could be used in that case😀
Thanks ❤
professionnel thanks a lot
Thank you very much 😊
Thanks a lot for a very usefull lesson🤗
Were going on. A trip in our fav rocket ship!!
Teacher you both are very much underated ❤ you deserve millions of subscribers
The verb To Go is very special.
Native speakers often use 2 negative statements in movies - "she ain't got no panties on". But you can understand this. It's for emphasize а negative statement. The most difficult topic is the difference between "that", "this" and "it" when it comes to referring to a sentence.
Example:
-You need to stay here
-I understand this\that\it
It would be great if you break down this difference.
Thank you for great lessons 🙏
Thank you so much teacher
You have done superb.❤
I love the way you teaching👏👍🌺thank you man🙏🏻🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺🌺👍👍
Hola Kevin y Liza. Excelente video.
Thank you so much, Kevin!
❤❤ thanks
Great job, Kevin and Lisa 👍🏻
Thank you so much! I’ve learned a lot of English from you 😊
You always my best teacher ❤️
Interesting, @TheEnglishCoach is a native speaker. How could she make a mistake like "to do a mistake"? Was it a slip of the tongue?
Thank you!
😊😊😊. Thank you.
Awesome ❤
Great lesson! I can Say You are Masters of English. Keep it up
Amazing 😊😊
I really appreciate you for your lessons - they are very informative
However, I find multiple examples from fragments of series quite distracting and just too much. Maybe 1-3 examples would be better and we could move on to another mistake quicker
Lisa, you are the best❤
Hello❤ thanks ❤
✍✍✍✍✍Thanks a lot dear Liza!
Thank you so much for everything
Thx ❤
great job. i love your lessons . hope one day i stop making mistakes . sorry for my english😄
mam I am going to subscribe your channel
What if 2 people are talking to each other, in English. Would it be wrong to say they are talking in English even in that case?
8:00 woww that's a really interesting story, your father took it as something happened! I'm a Spanish speaker and I've always said "talk to" just because it's how I've heard it from Americans, I've learnt it naturally.
It's funny because in one of the examples of how to speak correctly an actress says: Since when do you speak English? 😅
I went on vacation to Paris last year!!!😉
Sir please make a video on full uses of would because it's too confusing, i heard a lot of time that I would go there and I will go there and both sentence has been used for future sense only please make video on would because if you make a video,you are going in a depth of it nobody can teach like you
👍👍👍
Making us aware of false teaching is actually one of the most loving things we can find. Thank you, Kevin!
Really American English!👍🔥
To be honest your number one
I found this problem 2 days ago so I want to talk to her
“Talk to me like lovers do”
😍👏❗️❗️❗️
🙏🤗❤️
So difficult..
1:08 Cenk from TYT
As far as I'm concerned, Stefani is a native English speaker, so the question that occurs in my mind right now is if native speakers of the language make mistakes, then how will I know whether or not I'm learning correct English?!
sometimes even native speakers break grammar rules or make unintentionally grammar mistakes, so what ? I have watched some videos from Stefanie and based on these she is an excellent english coach. It's all about the ability to express yourself in English - it doesn't have to be perfect. Use your own words which means paraphrase and even make grammar mistakes as long as you get your point across.
@@wolfgangdurst267
Thank you so much. Definitely I will 👍🏽
I disagree that errors should be overlooked regardless of teaching quality. Language accuracy is crucial for effective learning, particularly for non-native speakers. While native speakers may err, educators like Stefanie bear the responsibility of providing a solid grammatical foundation. Though communication is key, linguistic proficiency is equally vital for student comprehension and development. Let's ensure both effective expression and grammatical accuracy in teaching.
In my humble opinion, it is better to stick to speak properly to avoid errors, because in any circumstances probably you will make some mistakes, imagine what would happened if you overlook mistakes.
To me, the only way to know that is:
- to consult another native English speakers or teachers.
👍
Where does she come from?
How about 'we talked in English for a while but then switched back to Russian'?
If u want to sound strange, it's up to u😂😂😂
Thank you Kevin and Liza!
It think this goes to show that native speakers aren't completely immune to these amateurish mistakes. My native language is Portuguese and we tend to make A LOT of mistakes, especially since Portuguese is riddled with convoluted and mindboggling grammar rules 😅
They're not native English speakers, I mean, they wereb't born in the USA, they wouldn't speak like that if they were citizens, I mean people who was born in the USA and who haven't learned any other foreign language. They just learned to speak the language (not learned HOW, because they make basic mistakes that they shouldn't make if they were natural citizens).
@theenglishcoach is American. She’s from California.
She LIVES in California, it doesn't mean she was born in the USA.
@@fredylopez2477 she was born in the United States. Check your facts!
@@fredylopez2477 You're wrong. Stefani was indeed born in the US
Did you change your camera? Quality is good
i Cant believe this. she is native from USA. her english is perfect. i guess we make mistake in our mother languages too,. 🧐
She is not a native) she is an American😁
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@squirejohnson5878 He knows what he means, but you tried to split the hairs.
The fact that she makes those mistakes, shows that she doesn't speak a perfect English and she's not a native English speaker, either, let alone, teacher. I mean she wasn't born in the USA.
Natives might make mistakes but not that kind of mistakes.
@@fredylopez2477She was born in The USA. She is American
Is Stefanie The English Coach a native English speaker?
Hi ,
Could you please tell me ? Which is correct?
1) He is on a team
2( He is in a team
On or in what is the difference
so, the woman talking with Marina is not a native speaker? I thought se was.
For sure she picked up Marina's mistakes 😂
She is from the United States.
Stephanie, I believe, is a native American English speaker, Spanish by birth. I don't know why she made such basic mistakes.
To me, neither of them are native speakers.
Hello Kevin
If I said we're going to travel. is that correct or incorrect?
Yeah, it's correct if you're talking about the future tense.
Doesn't "talk in a language" just have a different usage? For example, "we talk in English everyday" or "I never talk in Spanish with that guy".
yeah.. this is what im thinking...
The Lady from TheEnglishCoach she's an american; why did she make lots of basic mistakes
Does anyone know where Stephanie comes from? Is she a native American English speaker? I've never heard of her before.
I think she's Argentinian
She is from California native English
Why did you say? 'thee most formal?
Is It posible to pronounce dii, when the noun after the article starts with a consonant sound?
I mean you are the native one.
Hope Utupe gets rid of unprofessional tutors and coaches and is going to ban these channels. Thank u guys for revealing mistakes🙏 you spend your precious time to correct their mistakes.
A genuine doubt, what is unprofessional for you? Unprofessional would be teaching vocabulary that natives don't use; unprofessional would be charging a lot of money for courses that teach nothing. I wonder if there is a native English speaker, either professor or not, who doesn't make any mistakes at all; I think that it is impossible. I have had teachers who teach Spanish grammar but they may make mistakes when speaking. When recording a video continuously, it's really hard not to make any mistake.
In my humble opinion, it doesn't make someone unprofessional.
@@adanvazquez5663I totally agree with you. We all make mistakes.
Is the first lady a native? If she is, it's quite odd that she makes basic mistakes...
There's currently a movement against Nativespeakerism. I think it's ridiculous.
The fact that a native English speaker could make these kinds of mistakes is embarrassing.
Natives make mistakes in any language, don't they?
Exactly, they make mistakes, like everybody else, they're human beings, but they don't make that kind of mistakes, they make more profound mistakes, more complex.
Not really, native speakers make mistakes in any language
Why everybody uses ''if...or...'' if ''or'' has to be with ''whether''???
Both are correct pal.
- I don't know WHETHER to go to the movies OR not.
Or.
- I don't know if I should go to the movies.
Both expressions mean the same WITH DIFFERENT STRUCTURES.
@@fredylopez2477 both mean the same thing but Kevin said ''we don't use IF with OR
@@vladimirbaloyan440 Yeah, that's right, we use the structure "whether..... or", we use "if" with another structure but that doesn't affect at all, both structures mean the same.
BUT, in spoken English natives sometimes say:
- I don't know IF I should go to the movies OR not.
They just break the rule, well, it's their own language they can speak it as they please. 😊.
I think that Stephanie and this guy, I think his name is Kris, are not native speakers, I think they became citizens of the USA and learned the language informally, that is, without studying it, but the fact that they learned it that way doesn't mean they can teach correct English, let alone, Grammar, Phonetics etc...
Stephanie, I believe, is a native American English speaker, Spanish by birth. I don't know why she made such basic mistakes.
@@EDP2500 Because she's not a native speaker, she learned the language but she wasn't born in the USA, the fact that she learned the language doesn't mean she can teach it correctly as a native English teacher or speaker does.
A native English teacher or speaker might make mistakes but not that kind of mistakes, they make more profound mistakes, the ones we wouldn't understand.
Funny, some people shown in the videos are natives. Even though they are natives, are they speaking their own language wrong?
How can she(theEnglishCoach) make such mistakes, she is a native English speaker?))
I don’t think so.
She is like Arianita la Gringa, she is originally Polish, so definitely can make mistakes while they are speaking, but they shouldn’t teach and spread wrong information.
@@ackjulia6949she isn’t like Arianita. stefanie is American. She was born in California. She lived in Argentina for 5 years, so she speaks Spanish fluently.
The fact of living in a country, doesn't necessarily mean you're gonna speak the language fluently
But The English Coach is the American English teacher? Who is she? Is she native?
She is. Her husband is a non-native speaker, though.
She might not be a native speaker
@@frederickwalzer5555She is!
She is American. She was born in California.
I thought Stephanie was a native speaker, so why is she making those mistakes? Or is she purposely teaching wrong grammar to her students?
She says this to promote her channel but she is from Argentina
Is Stefani a native english speaker?
Can you say "did he sent ?" Kevin said that. Is it correct? Or a mistake?
The correct expression or question is:
- Did he SEND ?.
- "sent" is the past tense of the verb "send"
When the auxiliary verb is used, I mean, "did" we must use the verb in the present tense "send" not the past tense "sent", 'cause it's a direct question.
"Send" is an irregular verb.
No I am confused. Natives correcting natives. Who's right? 🤔
Let's learn Spanish insted! 🇪🇸
Thank you so much teacher