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- Vanessa: Hi, I'm Vanessa from SpeakEnglishWithVanessa.com.
- Are you ready to understand fast English conversations?
- Let's talk about it.
- Speaking naturally and fluently in English is a great skill, but when you're having a
- conversation, if you can't understand what the other person is saying, you're going to
- have a big problem.
- So today, I want to share with you my top tip that will help you to understand fast
- English conversations.
- Today you're going to learn how to understand fast English conversations, we're going to
- practice this method together right now today, and then I'm going to help you know how to
- continue practicing this method so that it doesn't just stop today so that you can continue
- and build your listening skills.
- So how can you understand fast conversations?
- Can you learn like a child, just taking in a lot of information for two, three, four,
- five years, 24/7?
- Or maybe you just think, "Oh, I can watch English TV shows 500 times and eventually
- I'll just understand what they're saying"?
- Well, if you listen to these conversations and you only understand 10%, 20%, we need
- to take it back a little bit.
- The best way to understand fast English speakers is to study and analyze native real conversations.
- Make sure that you understand each word and then you can also imitate that same sentence
- structure yourself when you speak.
- Today, we're going to be doing this together.
- We're going to be analyzing a short English conversation, including some idioms, expressions,
- phrasal verbs that are included in that conversation.
- So what I want you to do is I want you to get a pen and pencil ready because I want
- you to be active during today's lesson.
- We're going to be following four steps.
- The first step is to listen to a fast, original conversation clip.
- We're going to be listening to a clip from a guy named Nathan, who is a native English
- speaker, and he's going to be talking a little bit about his experience with an international
- public speaking organization called Toastmasters.
- Then number two, we're going to listen to a slow version of this clip.
- This means that hopefully in the slow version, you're going to catch each word, you're going
- to hear words that you didn't hear the first time because with Nathan it was pretty fast,
- but in the slowed down version it's going to be a little bit clearer for you to hear
- each word.
- Step number three is to write everything that you hear.
- Whatever you hear Nathan say, whatever you hear me say, try to write exactly what you
- hear.
- And in the fourth step, we're going to check your writing with the original transcript.
- You'll probably see, "Oh, I got that word correct.
- I didn't know that that's what they said, but I wrote it correctly."
- And you'll probably also see, "Oh wow, I didn't hear that at all," maybe there are some linkings
- and reductions that you didn't know before.
- So this is a good way to test what you know and also test what's difficult for you so
- that you can improve that.
- Maybe you don't write the correct word because you simply don't know it, maybe it's a new
- vocabulary word for you.
- This is a good way to expand your vocabulary.
- Today, we're going to be talking about three words that you're going to hear in the conversation
- with Nathan, so hopefully those will just add to your vocabulary.
- Today's YouTube lesson is a free sample of my course, the 30 Day Listening Challenge,
- which opens today, December 20th.
- In the course, you'll study one lesson exactly like what we're going to do today.
- You're going to build your listening skills day by day.
- Students who have joined past Listening Challenges have said that the first few days in the course
- are generally pretty tough.
- This is a difficult technique because you're trying to listen for every single word, but
- after a few days it gets easier and easier, and you really are building your listening
- skills.
- So if it's challenging for you, push on.
- You can do it.
- Remember that I said you'll need a pen and a piece of paper?
- Well, today is an active lesson, you need to participate.
- Let's take a look at the worksheet so that you can see exactly what I want you to be
- writing down on your paper.
- Here's the conversation outline, first you'll hear Nathan's voice, then you'll hear my voice,
- then his, then mine.
- And if you have a piece of paper, I recommend writing at least N, V, N, V, N, V so that
- you can prepare yourself for what you're going to hear.
- This is actually day 25 of the 30-day Listening Challenge, but it's a free sample today.
- The course is open now December 20th to December 31st for only $30.
- This means that on January 25th, you will study this lesson, but today it's a free sample.
- Now let's listen to the fast original version of this conversation.
- The clip is only 30 seconds, so it's going to go pretty fast, but try to write what you
- hear.
- Test your listening skills.
- Let's listen.
- Nathan: You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech
- off the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech
- off the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one two minute speech off
- the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- Vanessa: Did you feel like that was definitely too fast?
- Well, Nathan was speaking pretty naturally, and I was too.
- Native English speakers can definitely understand this conversation, so I want you to be able
- to do that too.
- You'll hear this style of speaking when you travel to the US, when you have a business
- meeting, when you meet some international friends so this is a good way to test your
- listening skills.
- Now let's go to the slow version.
- Remember, this is step two.
- You're going to hear my husband, Dan, and I say the exact same words that you just heard
- from the conversation with Nathan, but when my husband Dan and I say these words, it's
- going to be reduced significantly.
- It's going to be slower.
- It's going to be clearer.
- Hopefully, you'll pick up on other words that you didn't hear in the conversation with Nathan.
- All right, let's listen.
- Dan: You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Dan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech off
- the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Dan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Dan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Dan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech off
- the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Dan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Dan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Dan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech off
- the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Dan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Dan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- Vanessa: Did you write down everything that you heard?
- In the 30 Day Listening Challenge, you're going to be able to download or stream those
- audio files so you can listen to them as many times as you want.
- This is just a sample, this is just a practice, but you're welcome to pause the video and
- go back and listen to them again.
- How was it?
- Was it too slow?
- Was it too fast?
- Did you pick on some words that you didn't hear the first time?
- I hope so.
- Now we're going to take a look at the transcript.
- This is step number four.
- And you're going to be able to compare what you wrote and what you heard to actually what
- was said in the conversation.
- In the transcript as well, we're going to focus on three new vocabulary words that will
- help to build your vocabulary and increase your understanding.
- You just heard Nathan say, "You will receive a topic or a prompt."
- "Okay."
- "And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech off the
- cuff."
- "Wow."
- "With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech."
- "That's bound to terrify anybody."
- "Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most."
- In this quick conversation, Nathan is explaining different parts of the Toastmasters meeting
- that they have to improve public speaking each week.
- One of the parts is giving a spontaneous speech in front of the group and that's what he's
- talking about in the beginning up here, let's talk about these specific expressions, and
- he says, yeah, this is really uncomfortable, but you grow the most, you learn the most
- because you are feeling uncomfortable.
- I think this is a great idea for learning English because when you get outside your
- comfort zone, it's tough, it's uncomfortable, but you can grow a lot when you get outside
- your comfort zone.
- So let's talk about these three specific vocabulary words that we're going to focus on in this
- conversation.
- The first one is one to two.
- You probably know what one and two means, but when we put the preposition to between
- there, one to two, we're talking about a range.
- He says you need to do a one to two minute speech.
- The speech could be one minute, it could be one and a half minutes, it could be two minutes,
- but it cannot be two and a half minutes.
- The range is one to two.
- And our sample sentence here is plane tickets to Asia are usually one to $2,000.
- The range is $1,000 to $2,000.
- At the end of that sentence, he explains that this isn't an ordinary speech that you prepare
- for.
- It's a speech that you do off the cuff.
- Off the cuff.
- What is this expression?
- Well, a cuff is a part of a dress shirt, it goes around your wrist.
- We say that's your cuff around your wrist, but this is an idiom, so it's not really related
- to dress shirts.
- It just means that you're doing something without planning, so you have to give a spontaneous
- speech or you have to give a speech off the cuff.
- Our sample sentence here is, he told me off the cuff that he is moving to Mexico.
- He didn't plan to tell me, we weren't talking about his future plans, he just said, "Hey,
- I'm moving to Mexico week."
- Whoa, this is really spontaneous and off the cuff.
- The final expression that we're going to talk about is one that I used, and it's to be bound
- to do something.
- The word bound has several different meanings, but specifically in this conversation I'm
- talking about something that's definite.
- It's certain.
- So I said that's bound to terrify anybody.
- We can substitute some words here and say, that is definitely going to terrify anybody.
- Giving a spontaneous speech for one to two minutes, I think anybody would be terrified,
- fearful about doing that, so I use the wonderful verb that's bound to terrify anybody.
- Our sample sentence here is if you win the lottery, old friends from high school are
- bound to contact you and ask for money.
- This is kind of the stereotypical situation that when you suddenly get a lot of money
- and it's a publicly known fact, people from your past start to call you and say, "Oh,
- I've missed you.
- How have you been?"
- Because they just want some money.
- So this is a definite, a certain situation.
- Old friends from high school are definitely going to contact you and ask for money.
- Or we could say, they are bound to contact you and ask for money.
- If you didn't understand those three vocabulary words when Nathan and I said them, it's probably
- because you don't know them and hopefully now they feel a little bit more comfortable
- to you.
- So what we're going to do is we're going to listen to the original fast conversation again
- and I hope that this time you'll be able to hear some of those new expressions because
- you know the general meaning of the conversation, you'll feel a little bit more comfortable,
- and you'll see that just in the last couple minutes, your listening skills group.
- Are you ready to listen?
- Let's listen to the original conversation a couple times while looking at the transcript
- so that you can listen and see at the same time.
- Let's listen.
- Nathan: You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech
- off the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech
- off the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- You will receive a topic or a prompt- Vanessa: Okay.
- Nathan: And you have to get up in front of the group and do a one to two minute speech
- off the cuff.
- Vanessa: Wow.
- Nathan: With an introduction, you know, just like any normal speech.
- Vanessa: That's bound to terrify anybody.
- Nathan: Right.
- And that's really the most uncomfortable part of the meeting, but it's where you grow the
- most.
- Vanessa: How did you do?
- Could you understand a little bit better than before?
- Imagine if you studied like this for five to 10 minutes every day for 30 days.
- If you did this and studied consistently, your listening skills are bound to increase.
- Thousands of English learners around the world have already joined the 30 Day Listening Challenge
- pack one, pack two, and pack three, and now the pack four is open.
- So I encourage you to check it out and to study like this every day for 30 days.
- Students in the course said that some days were more challenging for them and some days
- were easier for them, but by the end of the month they had dedicated themselves to studying
- and analyzing real conversation clips with over 11 different native English speakers
- for five to 10 minutes every day.
- And in the end, their listening fluency improved, but most importantly they could take those
- skills that they learned in the course and use them in the real world.
- It's great to improve with the course material, but it's essential to be able to use that
- when you travel to another country, when you have a business meeting, when you have a conversation
- with someone, when you're watching a TV show.
- You want to be able to transfer those skills to the real world and that's something that's
- excellent about the Listening Challenge because this is real material, this is real conversations
- from native speakers.
- So you'll be able to use it in the real world.
- Starting from today, December 20th to December 31st the 30-day English Listening Challenge
- pack four is open for $30.
- If you haven't joined pack one, two or three, don't worry.
- It's okay.
- Each pack is an individual course.
- They all are the same level because they all feature real English conversations with real
- native speakers, but you can study each course, each pack individually.
- The challenge will start on January 1st.
- This means that I will send you the day one material on January 1st.
- It includes all four things that we looked at today, the fast original clip, a slow version
- of the clip, a worksheet so that you can write down exactly what you hear, and also a transcript
- with three new vocabulary expressions so that you can expand your vocabulary out as well
- as your listening skills.
- Let's go on and take a quick sneak peak inside the course website so that you can see exactly
- what you'd be studying.
- When you join the 30-day Listening Challenge pack four, you'll get access to this page
- immediately.
- Today is day zero.
- Any day before January 1st is day zero.
- Let's see what you can access today.
- You'll find a course guide with my recommended study plan for each day, as well as a calendar
- that you can use to check off each day when you finish.
- I recommend printing these two documents and looking them over before January 1st so that
- you're comfortable with how you're going to study the different material that you're going
- to study before the course actually begins on January 1st.
- On day one, January 1st, you'll have access to the day one lesson, which you can download
- or stream on the website.
- Then on January 2nd, you'll have access to the day to lesson, and on January 3rd you'll
- have access to the day three lesson, etc. throughout the rest of the month.
- If you enjoyed today's lesson but you'd like some more information, no problem, you can
- click on the link up here or in the description to learn more about the 30-day Listening Challenge
- pack four, which is open starting today.
- And now I have a question for you, was today's lesson helpful for you?
- I hope so.
- Thank you so much for learning English with me, and I hope to see you for five to 10 minutes
- every day in the month of January for the 30-day Listening Challenge.
- Thanks so much.
- I'll see you next Friday for a new lesson here on my YouTube channel.
- Bye.
- The next step is to join the 30 Day English Listening Challenge.
- You'll be on the right path to increasing your listening skills and understanding fast
- English speakers.
- Don't forget to subscribe to my YouTube channel for more free lessons.
- Thanks so much.
- Bye.