Elena masterfully deconstructs the phonetic "black box" of native speech, proving that listening is a science of subtraction rather than just addition. It is a vital reality check for those who excel at academic English but remain functionally deaf to the rhythmic economy of natural conversation.
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Deep Dive
Stop Using Subtitles: Train Your Ears to Understand Fast Native EnglishAdded:
Hello everyone. I'm Elena and today's lesson is different from anything we have done before on this channel. This lesson is not for beginners. It is not even for intermediate learners. Today's lesson is specifically designed for you, the advanced English learner, the person who has spent years studying. The person who can read English novels, write professional emails, follow academic lectures, and hold sophisticated conversations. The person whose grammar is strong, whose vocabulary is wide, and whose confidence in formal English settings is genuine. And yet, you sit down to watch an American film without subtitles, and you catch maybe 70%.
You listen to a podcast with two native speakers talking naturally and something slips past you every few sentences. You are in a real conversation with a native speaker who is relaxed and talking at their normal pace and you find yourself nodding and smiling and hoping you haven't missed anything crucial. You hear Jeet and your brain processes it as noise before you realize 3 seconds later that someone just asked did you eat? If any of that sounds familiar, this lesson is exactly what you have been waiting for. Today we are going to tackle the single biggest remaining obstacle for advanced English learners. Not vocabulary, not grammar, not even confidence. The obstacle is this. The English you learned is not quite the English that native speakers actually speak when they are relaxed, tired, happy, talking to friends, talking on the phone, arguing, laughing, thinking out loud. There is a gap between written English and spoken English, between formal English and natural English, between slow clear English and fast connected English. And that gap has a name. It is called connected speech. And today we are going to close it. By the end of this lesson, you will understand exactly what happens to English sounds when native speakers talk at natural speed. You will have heard, identified, and practiced the most common reductions, contractions, illisions, and assimilations in natural English. You will have trained your ear through real example sentences and you will have a daily practice plan that will transform your listening comprehension permanently.
This is the final frontier of English fluency and you are ready for it. Before we begin, subscribe to the channel and press the bell icon. We publish a new English learning video every single day.
And if you are at C1 or C2 level, there is something here for you every single day. Let's begin. Part one, why native speakers don't sound like your textbook.
Before we start listening to and practicing reduced speech, we need to understand why it exists. Because once you understand the mechanics, the sounds will stop feeling like errors or carelessness and start feeling like exactly what they are. The natural, efficient, logical evolution of spoken language.
When you learned English, you probably learned it from recordings made slowly and deliberately for learners, from teachers who were careful about pronunciation, from textbooks where every word was printed clearly and could be read as well as heard. All of this was enormously useful, but it created an expectation in your ear that is now working against you. The expectation that every word in a sentence is spoken fully, separately, and clearly. That expectation is false. And here is why.
The human mouth is a remarkable instrument, but it is also fundamentally lazy. Not in a negative sense, in an efficient sense. When we speak quickly, our mouths look for the shortest path between sounds. Two sounds that are next to each other will influence each other.
A sound that requires a lot of effort will be reduced or dropped if the surrounding context makes the meaning clear. Words that appear hundreds of times in every conversation will be compressed into something shorter and faster because the brain can fill in the gap. This is not an accident. It is not sloppiness. It happens in every language on earth. French speakers do it. Spanish speakers do it. Arabic speakers do it.
Every language compresses itself under the pressure of natural fast emotional human speech. In English specifically, this compression happens in several distinct ways. Today we are going to learn each one. We call them the five forces of connected speech. Reduction, elision, assimilation, linking and contraction.
Each one operates slightly differently.
Each one changes the sound of English in a different way and together they explain almost everything that confuses advanced learners when they listen to natural native speech. Let us go through each one now. Part two.
The first force reduction.
Reduction is the most widespread and important phenomenon in natural English speech. It is what happens when a word, particularly a short grammatical word, is shortened or weakened because it is not the most important word in the sentence.
In English, there are two types of words.
Content words and function words.
Content words carry the main meaning.
Nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs.
These words are almost always pronounced fully and clearly because they carry the information the listener needs.
Function words are different.
articles, prepositions, pronouns, auxiliary verbs, conjunctions.
These words serve a grammatical purpose, but they rarely carry new information.
And because they don't need to stand out in natural fast speech, they are reduced, weakened, compressed, sometimes almost swallowed.
Let me show you exactly what this looks like. For each example, I will first say the full formal version. Then I will say the natural reduced version.
Listen carefully to the difference.
The word to full form to the sound is a clear to reduced form t. The vowel collapses to awah.
Full sentence I want to go to the market.
Natural sentence I want to go to the market.
Listen again. I want to go to the market.
I want to go to the market.
Repeat the natural version after me. I want to go to the market.
Again, I want to go to the market.
This is not slang. This is standard natural American and British English in informal speech. Every native speaker says this. Every single one.
The word of full form of a clear of sound.
Reduced form a just awah.
Almost nothing.
Full sentence. A cup of tea.
Natural sentence. A cup of tea.
Full sentence. A lot of people.
Natural sentence. A lot of people.
Repeat after me. A cup of tea.
Again. A cup of tea.
Repeat.
A lot of people.
Again. A lot of people.
The word and.
Full form. And.
A clear and reduced form n or in almost swallowed.
Full sentence bread and butter.
Natural sentence bread and butter.
Full sentence. Come and sit down.
Natural sentence. Come and sit down.
Repeat. Bread and butter.
Again, bread and butter.
Repeat. Come and sit down.
Again, come and sit down.
The word for full form for a clear for.
Reduced form for schwah replaces the vowel.
Full sentence. I've been waiting for an hour.
Natural sentence. I've been waiting for an hour.
Repeat. I've been waiting for an hour.
Again, I've been waiting for an hour.
The words him and her.
Full form him. A clear him.
Reduced form him. The H is dropped entirely.
Full sentence. Give it to him.
Natural sentence. Give it to him.
Full sentence. Tell her I called.
Natural sentence. Tell her I called.
Repeat. Give it to him.
Again. Give it to him.
Repeat. Tell her I called again. Tell her I called.
The word then.
Full form them. A clear them.
Reduced form them. The th disappears.
Full sentence. I'll call them later.
Natural sentence. I'll call them later.
Full sentence, give them a minute.
Natural sentence, give them a minute.
Repeat. I'll call them later again. I'll call them later.
Repeat. Give them a minute.
Again. Give them a minute.
The auxiliary verbs have, has, had.
Full form have a clear have reduced form ve compressed to almost nothing.
Full sentence, I have already eaten.
Natural sentence, I've already eaten.
Full sentence, they have been waiting.
Natural sentence, they've been waiting.
But here is where it gets interesting for advanced learners.
In fast speech, have does not just become the. It sometimes disappears almost entirely in the middle of a sentence.
Full sentence. I should have called you.
Natural sentence, I should have called you.
Full sentence, you could have told me.
Natural sentence, you could have told me.
Full sentence, we would have been there.
Natural sentence, we would have been there.
Repeat after me. I should have called you.
Again, I should have called you.
Repeat, you could have told me.
Again, you could have told me.
Repeat. We would have been there.
Again, we would have been there.
These forms should have, could have, would have are extremely common in natural speech. They are not mistakes.
They are not informal slang. They are the standard spoken forms of should have, could have, and would have in fast natural English.
Now let us practice reduction with full sentences.
Listen to each sentence in its full form.
Then listen to the natural reduced version.
Then repeat the natural version.
Full. I want to get a cup of tea and then go to the library. Natural.
I want to get a cup of tea and then go to the library.
Repeat.
I want to get a cup of tea and then go to the library.
Again, I want to get a cup of tea and then go to the library.
full. You should have told him about the problem.
Natural.
You should have told him about the problem.
Repeat. You should have told him about the problem.
Again, you should have told him about the problem.
Full. Give them a couple of minutes.
Natural.
Give them a couple of minutes.
Repeat. Give him a couple of minutes.
Again. Give him a couple of minutes.
Full. I've been trying to call her for an hour.
Natural. I've been trying to call her for an hour.
Repeat. I've been trying to call her for an hour.
Again. I've been trying to call her for an hour.
your listening challenge for this section. For the next two days, every time you hear someone say wanna, going to, shoulda, coulda, would aa, lot of, or am, notice it. Write it down.
Identify what the full form would be.
This active noticing is the fastest way to train your ear to catch these forms automatically.
Part three, the second force, elision.
Elision is when a sound disappears completely from a word in fast speech.
Not weakened, not reduced, entirely gone. And it happens far more often than most learners realize.
The most common elisions in English involve the letter T, the letter D, and certain consonant clusters that are simply too effortful to pronounce fully at speed. Let us go through the most important ones.
T elision. The disappearing T. The letter T is one of the most frequently elided sounds in English. Specifically, when t appears between two other consonants or at the end of a word before a consonant, it tends to disappear or become a very soft glottle stop rather than a clear t sound.
Full word. Important.
You hear the t clearly.
Natural speech. Important.
The T in the middle softens or disappears.
Full word. Exactly.
You hear the T clearly.
Natural speech. Exactly.
The T disappears.
Full word. Internet.
You hear the T clearly.
Natural speech. Internet or even internet. The middle t softens.
Full word 20.
You hear the t clearly.
Natural speech 20. The t in the middle becomes n like full word. Plenty.
A clear t. Natural speech. Plenty. The tea softens.
Full word center.
A clear t natural speech center.
The tea softens to almost nothing.
Let us practice these. Repeat after me.
It was important to get there on time.
Again, it was important to get there on time.
Repeat. I don't know exactly what happened again. I don't know exactly what happened.
Repeat. I've been on the internet all morning.
Again, I've been on the internet all morning.
Repeat. There were 20 people in the room. Again, there were 20 people in the room.
T elision at word boundaries.
When a T appears at the end of one word and the next word begins with a consonant, the T is often completely dropped in natural speech.
Full last night.
You hear both T sounds.
Natural last night.
The T in last disappears before the N.
full next door. You hear the T. Natural next door. The T disappears before the D.
Full. Most people.
You hear the T.
Natural. Most people. The T softens before the P.
Full. Just wait. You hear both T sounds natural. Just wait. The first T disappears.
Full best friend.
You hear the T.
Natural. Best friend.
The T disappears before the F.
Repeat after me. We talked about it last night again. We talked about it last night.
Repeat. She lives next door to my brother again. She lives next door to my brother.
Repeat.
Most people wouldn't notice the difference.
Again, most people wouldn't notice the difference.
Repeat. He's my best friend. I've known him for years.
Again, he's my best friend. I've known him for years.
Dillision. The disappearing D.
Dillision follows similar patterns. When D appears between consonants or at the end of words before other consonants, it tends to soften or disappear.
Full old man.
You hear the D.
Natural old man.
The D disappears.
Full cold weather.
You hear the D. Natural cold weather.
The D disappears before W.
Full and they.
You hear the D natural and they the D drops full. He said that you hear the D natural. He said that the final T also drops.
Repeat. He's a really nice old man.
Lives just down the street. Again, he's a really nice old man. Lives just down the street. Repeat. I can't stand cold weather. Give me summer any day. Again.
I can't stand cold weather. Give me summer any day.
Repeat.
She told me and then left without saying anything else again.
She told me and then left without saying anything else.
Collision. The dropped H.
The H at the beginning of pronouns is one of the most commonly dropped sounds in natural English speech. We touched on this in the reduction section. But it goes further than just him and her.
Full.
What does he think?
Natural.
What does he think?
Full. Have you seen her today?
Natural. Have you seen her today?
Full.
Tell him I'll be late.
Natural. Tell him I'll be late.
full. Did she call him?
Natural. Did she call him?
Repeat.
What does he think about the whole situation?
Again, what does he think about the whole situation?
Repeat. Have you seen her since the meeting?
Again. Have you seen her since the meeting?
Consonant cluster reduction.
When several consonants appear together, English speakers frequently simplify the cluster by dropping one or more of the sounds.
Full facts.
A clear KTS cluster at the end.
Natural facts.
The T drops from the cluster.
Full axe.
A clear KTS cluster.
Natural axe. The T drops.
Full asks.
A clear SKS cluster.
Natural acts.
Simplified entirely full texts.
A clear ks cluster.
Natural text.
Multiple sounds drop.
Full months.
An NTS cluster.
Natural months or months.
Simplified.
Repeat.
She always faxs me the documents, never emails.
Again, she always faxs me the documents, never emails.
Repeat.
He texts me this morning, but I haven't replied yet. Again, he texts me this morning, but I haven't replied yet.
Now, let us do a full sentence elision practice. Listen to the full careful version, then the natural version, then repeat.
Full.
It was the best night I have had in months.
Natural.
It was the best night I've had in months.
Repeat. It was the best night I've had in months.
Again, it was the best night I've had in months.
full. I asked him exactly what happened next door.
Natural. I asked him exactly what happened next door.
Repeat. I asked him exactly what happened next door.
Again, I ask him exactly what happened next door.
Full.
Most people just want cold weather to end.
Natural.
Most people just want cold weather to end.
Repeat.
Most people just want cold weather to end. Again, most people just want cold weather to end.
Part four, the third force, assimilation.
Assimilation is one of the most fascinating and least taught aspects of connected speech. It is what happens when two sounds that are next to each other, often at a word boundary, influence each other and change each other. One sound essentially borrows qualities from its neighbor. This is why did you becomes did you. Why would you becomes would you? Why can't you becomes can't you? The sounds are colliding at the boundary and transforming into something new. Let us work through the most important assimilation patterns.
T + Y becomes ch. When a T sound at the end of a word meets a Y sound at the beginning of the next word, they fuse into a ch sound.
full.
Did you? Natural. Did you or written phonetically?
Did you?
Full. What you?
Natural.
Watch you. Or what?
Full.
Don't you?
Natural. Don't you?
Full.
Can't you natural?
Can't you full?
Won't you?
Natural.
Won't you?
Full.
Could you?
Natural.
Could you? Or could you?
Full.
Would you?
Natural.
Would you? or would you?
Let us practice these in real sentences.
Full sentence.
Did you eat already?
Natural.
Did you eat already?
Repeat.
Did you eat already?
Again. Did you eat already?
Full sentence.
What you did was really brave.
Natural.
What you did was really brave.
Repeat.
What you did was really brave.
Again, what you did was really brave.
Full sentence.
Don't you think that's a bit unfair?
Natural.
Don't you think that's a bit unfair?
Repeat.
Don't you think that's a bit unfair?
Again, don't you think that's a bit unfair?
Full sentence. Would you like to come with us?
Natural.
Would you like to come with us?
Repeat.
Would you like to come with us? Again.
Would you like to come with us?
Full sentence.
Could you do me a favor?
Natural.
Could you do me a favor?
Repeat.
Could you do me a favor?
Again. Could you do me a favor? Full sentence. Won't you stay for dinner?
Natural. Won't you stay for dinner?
Repeat. Won't you stay for dinner?
Again. Won't you stay for dinner?
D + Y becomes J. When a D sound at the end of a word meets a Y sound, they fuse into a J sound.
Full.
Did your natural.
Did or just did full. Would your natural Would your full sentence did your brother call?
Natural. Did your brother call?
Repeat. Did your brother call?
Again, did your brother call?
Full sentence. Would your friend be interested?
Natural. Would your friend be interested?
Repeat. Would your friend be interested?
Again. Would your friend be interested?
S plus Y becomes shh. When an S sound meets a Y sound, they can fuse into a shh sound.
Full this year.
Natural this year. or this year full miss you natural miss you full sentence I've been thinking about this year a lot natural I've been thinking about this year a lot repeat I've been thinking about this year a lot again I've been thinking about this year a lot.
Full sentence. I really miss you when you're away.
Natural. I really miss you when you're away.
Repeat. I really miss you when you're away.
Again. I really miss you when you're away.
N + Y becomes N Y as in canyon.
When an N sound meets a Y sound, they can fuse into a N Y sound.
Full in your natural in your or in your full on your natural on your or on your full sentence. What's in your bag?
Natural.
What's in your bag?
Repeat. What's in your bag?
Again. What's in your bag?
Full sentence. Is that on your phone?
Natural. Is that on your phone?
Repeat. Is that on your phone?
Again. Is that on your phone?
Progressive assimilation when the first sound wins. Sometimes the first sound influences the second rather than the other way around. This is called progressive assimilation.
The most common example in English involves the word 'the' before certain sounds.
The before a vowel sound becomes the.the The before a consonant remains the. But in very fast speech, even this distinction can blur.
Full in the morning.
Natural in the morning or even in a morning.
Full at the end. Natural at the end or at the end.
Repeat. I'll see you in the morning.
Again, I'll see you in the morning.
Repeat. We'll talk about it at the end of the week. Again, we'll talk about it at the end of the week.
Now, a full assimilation practice. These sentences contain multiple assimilation events. Listen carefully for each one.
Sentence one, full. Did you eat yet?
Don't you want anything?
Natural.
Did you eat yet? Don't you want anything?
Repeat. Did you eat yet? Don't you want anything?
Again. Did you eat yet? Don't you want anything?
Sentence two. Full. Would you like me to call your friend?
Natural. Would you like me to call your friend?
Repeat. Would you like me to call your friend again? Would you like me to call your friend?
Sentence three, full. Could you tell me what you think about this year?
Natural.
Could you tell me what you think about this year?
Repeat. Could you tell me what you think about this year?
Again. Could you tell me what you think about this year?
Part five. The fourth force. Linking.
Linking is what happens when the last sound of one word connects directly to the first sound of the next word, creating a smooth, unbroken stream of sound rather than separate, distinct words. Native speakers do not speak in words. They speak in breath groups, streams of connected sound.
The spaces between words in written English rarely correspond to actual pauses in spoken English. And this is one of the main reasons that fast natural speech sounds like one long blur to learners who are trained to expect separated words.
There are three main types of linking in English. Consonant to vowel linking.
When a word ends in a consonant and the next word begins with a vowel, the consonant naturally links to the vowel.
It sounds as though the consonant has moved to the beginning of the next word.
Full words not at all. Linked not at all said as one smooth unit.
Full words. Pick it up.
Linked.
Pick it up.
One smooth unit.
Full words. Turn it off.
Linked.
Turn it off.
One smooth unit.
Full words. An apple.
Linked apple. The N moves to begin apple.
Full words come in linked.
Come in.
One smooth unit.
Full words. Take it easy.
Linked tit smooth and connected. Repeat after me.
Not at all.
Not too tall.
Repeat. It's not too tall what I expected.
Again, it's not to tall what I expected.
Repeat. Pick it up and put it over there.
Pick it up and put Tid there again. Pick it up and put Tid there.
Repeat. Take it easy.
Titzy, there's no rush again. Titzy, there's no rush.
Vowelto vowel linking.
The intrusive sounds.
When one word ends in a vowel and the next begins with a vowel, native speakers naturally insert a tiny linking sound to smooth the transition.
There are three of these intrusive sounds. The intrusive W. When a word ends in an ooh sound and the next begins with a vowel, a tiny W appears.
Full. Go away.
Natural. Go w away. The W slides in.
Full. Do it. Natural.
Do were it full? Who else?
Natural.
Who were else?
Full. Two of them. Natural.
Two were of them. Repeat. Can you go away for a second? I need to think again. Can you go wo for a second? I need to think. Repeat. Just do it. Stop overthinking.
Again. Just do it. Stop overthinking.
The intrusive Y. When a word ends in an e or a sound and the next begins with a vowel, a tiny Y appears.
Full. They asked.
Natural.
They y asked full I always natural I y always full she ought to natural she y ought to full we all natural we y all repeat they ya asked asked me directly, but I wasn't sure what to say. Again, they y asked me directly, but I wasn't sure what to say. Repeat. We y all knew it was coming. Nobody was surprised.
Again, we y all knew it was coming.
Nobody was surprised.
The intrusive R. This one is particularly common in British English.
When a word ends in a vowel sound and the next begins with a vowel, some British speakers insert an R.
Full. The idea is natural British. The idea is full China and India. Natural British.
China and India full law and order.
Natural British law and order.
This intrusive R is one of the things that makes British English sound distinctly different from American English to learners. Listen for it specifically when you watch British television or films.
Consonant toconsonant linking gemination.
When a word ends in a consonant and the next word begins with the same consonant, the two sounds fuse into one slightly lengthened sound rather than being said twice.
Full black coffee.
Natural black coffee.
One long k sound bridges the two words.
Full. Good day. Natural.
Good day.
One long d sound.
Full. First time.
Natural.
First time.
One long t sound. Full some more.
Natural some more.
One long m sound.
Repeat. Can I get a black coffee, please? No milk. Again. Can I get a black coffee, please? No milk.
Repeat. It was the first time I had ever seen anything like it. Again, it was the first time I had ever seen anything like it. Repeat. Would you like some more?
There's plenty left.
Again, would you like some more? There's plenty left.
Now, a full linking practice passage.
This is one paragraph of natural English. Listen for every link. Then repeat the whole paragraph.
Full careful version.
I told him to pick it up and take it away.
He looked at me and said he already did it. I said, "No, you didn't." He said, "I always do it first thing." I said, "Go and check again."
Natural linked version. I told him to pick it up and tuck it away.
He looked at me and said he already did it. I said, "No, you didn't." He said, "I y always do it first thing."
I said, "Go w and check again."
Repeat the natural version with me. I told him to pick it up and tuck it away.
He looked at me and said he already did it. I said, "No, you didn't." He said, "I y always do it first thing."
I said, "Go w and check again."
Again. I told him to pick it up and tuck it away. He looked at me and said he already did it. I said, "No, you didn't." He said, "I y always do it first thing."
I said, "Go w and check again." Part six, the fifth force, contraction and compression. The fifth force is the one most learners are already partially aware of, contraction.
But in fast natural speech contraction goes much further than the written contractions you already know. You know that I am becomes I'm that do not becomes don't. That they are becomes there. These are standard written contractions that appear in every textbook. But in fast natural speech the compression goes much further. And understanding these extra contractions is essential for advanced listening comprehension.
Double contractions in very fast speech. Two or even three words can be compressed into one short sound. I would have becomes I'd have said as one compressed unit. Full. I would have told you. Natural. I'd have told you. Repeat. I'd have told you if I'd known earlier. Again. I'd have told you if I'd known earlier.
She would not have becomes She wouldn't have. Full. She would not have done that. Natural. She wouldn't have done that. Repeat. She wouldn't have done that if she'd known again. She wouldn't have done that if she'd known. You should not have becomes you shouldn't have. Full. You should not have said that. Natural. You shouldn't have said that. Repeat. You shouldn't have said that to her. She was upset enough already. Again. You shouldn't have said that to her. She was upset enough already. They could have been becomes they could have been full. They could have been there an hour ago. Natural.
They could have been there an hour ago.
Repeat. They could have been there an hour ago if they hadn't got lost. Again, they could have been there an hour ago if they hadn't got lost.
Gonna, gota, wanna, have to, let me, give me, kind of, sort of, den, betcha, gotcha. These are the compressed forms that appear constantly in natural speech and that advanced learners often know but are not yet catching in real time.
Let us practice every single one. going to going to full I'm going to call her later natural I'm going to call her later full it's going to rain natural it's going to rain repeat I'm going to need more time than I thought again I'm going to need more time than I thought repeat this is going to be interesting Again, this is going to be interesting.
Got to have got to or have to full. I have got to go. Natural. I got to go.
Full. You have got to see this. Natural.
You got to see this. Repeat. I got to be honest with you about something. Again.
I gotta be honest with you about something. Repeat. You gotta see this.
It's incredible.
Again, you gotta see this. It's incredible.
W to want to full. Do you want to come?
Natural. Do you want to come full?
I want to know what happened.
Natural. I want to know what happened.
Repeat.
Want to grab a coffee before the meeting?
Again. Want to grab a coffee before the meeting?
Repeat. I want to hear your side of it before I decide.
Again. I want to hear your side of it before I decide.
Have to have to full. I have to finish this by tonight.
Natural. I have to finish this by tonight.
Full. Do we have to go?
Natural. Do we have to go?
Repeat. I have to admit I wasn't entirely honest with you earlier.
Again. I have to admit I wasn't entirely honest with you earlier.
Repeat. Do we have to decide right now?
Again. Do we have to decide right now?
Let me.
Let me.
Full. Let me think about that.
Natural. Let me think about that.
Full. Let me know when you're ready.
Natural. Let me know when you're ready.
Repeat. Let me get this straight. You knew the whole time.
Again. Let me get this straight. You knew the whole time.
Repeat. Let me know if you need anything. I'll be right here.
Again. Let me know if you need anything.
I'll be right here.
Give me.
Give me.
Full. Give me a second.
Natural. Give me a second.
Full. Give me a break.
Natural. Give me a break.
Repeat. Give me a minute. I'm almost done.
Again. Give me a minute. I'm almost done.
Repeat. Oh, come on. Give me a break.
That's not fair.
again. Oh, come on. Give me a break.
That's not fair.
Kind of kind of full. It was kind of strange.
Natural. It was kind of strange.
Full. I kind of expected that.
Natural. I kind of expected that.
Repeat. It was kind of awkward to be honest. Nobody quite knew what to say.
Again, it was kind of awkward to be honest. Nobody quite knew what to say.
Repeat. I kind of knew it wasn't going to work out. I just didn't want to admit it again. I kind of knew it wasn't going to work out. I just didn't want to admit it.
Sort of.
Sort of.
Full. It sort of makes sense.
Natural. It sort of makes sense.
Full. I sort of remember.
Natural. I sort of remember.
Repeat. It sort of depends on what you mean by that. Again, it sort of depends on what you mean by that. Repeat. I sort of want to go, but I'm also really tired.
Again, I sort of want to go, but I'm also really tired.
Den know.
Don't know.
Full. I don't know.
Natural. I don't know.
Full. I don't know what happened.
Natural. I don't know what happened.
Repeat. I don't know. It's hard to say without knowing more.
Again. I don't know. It's hard to say without knowing more.
Repeat. She just left. Didn't say anything.
I don't know what's going on again. She just left. didn't say anything. I don't know what's going on.
Betcha.
Bet you.
Full. I bet you didn't know that.
Natural. I bet you didn't know that.
Full. I bet you can't guess.
Natural. I bet you can't guess.
Repeat. I bet you didn't expect to hear that.
again. I bet you didn't expect to hear that.
Repeat. I bet you she knew the whole time and just didn't say anything again. I bet you she knew the whole time and just didn't say anything.
Gotcha.
Got you or I understand.
Full. I've got you or I understand you.
Natural. Gotcha.
Full. I've got you. I'll take care of it.
Natural. Gotcha. I'll take care of it.
Repeat. Gotcha. So, you want me to send it before noon? No problem.
Again. Gotcha. So, you want me to send it before noon? No problem.
Repeat. Gotcha. I'll let them know again. Gotcha. I'll let them know. Part seven, real conversation listening practice.
Now, we are going to put everything together. I am going to give you several short natural conversations.
Each one is written exactly as native speakers would say it in a relaxed natural setting. Listen carefully.
Notice every reduction, elision, assimilation, link, and contraction.
Then repeat the whole conversation.
This is the most advanced practice in today's lesson. Do not worry if some of it moves fast. That is the point. Your ear needs to be exposed to this pace in order to calibrate.
Conversation one, between two colleagues at work. Person A, did you see what happened at the meeting yesterday?
Person B, no, I had to leave early. What happened?
Person A, basically the whole thing fell apart. Nobody knew what to talk about.
Person B, you're kidding. I bet you Johnson wasn't happy. Person A, he was furious. Wouldn't even let me explain.
Person B, oh man, what you going to do?
Person A, don't know. Have to figure it out. Give me a sec to think.
Repeat the whole conversation after me.
Did you see what happened at the meeting yesterday?
No, I had to leave early. What happened?
Basically, the whole thing fell apart.
Nobody knew what to talk about. You're kidding. I bet you Johnson wasn't happy.
He was furious. Wouldn't even let me explain. Oh, man. What you going to do?
Don't know. Have to figure it out. Give me a sec to think again from the top.
Did you see what happened at the meeting yesterday?
No, I had to leave early. What happened?
Basically, the whole thing fell apart.
Nobody knew what to talk about. You're kidding. I bet you Johnson wasn't happy.
He was furious. Wouldn't even let me explain. Oh man, what you going to do?
Don't know. Have to figure it out. Give me a sec to think.
Conversation two, two friends making plans.
Person A, want to do something this weekend?
Person B, kind of. What you thinking?
Person A, I don't know. We could go to that new place downtown.
Person B, the one next to the cinema.
Person A. Yeah, I've heard it's pretty good. A lot of people been talking about it. Person B. All right. Let me check if Sarah want to come, too.
Person A. Yeah, definitely. Tell her I'll give her a call later. Person B.
Gotcha. I'll let her know. What time you thinking?
Person A, most places get busy around 8, so maybe 7. Person B, sounds good. I'll text you if anything changes.
Repeat the whole conversation.
Want to do something this weekend?
Kind of. What you thinking?
I don't know. We could go to that new place downtown.
The one next to the cinema?
Yeah, I've heard it's pretty good. A lot of people been talking about it. All right, let me check if Sarah want to come, too.
Yeah, definitely. Tell her I'll give me her a call later.
Gotcha. I'll let her know. What time you thinking?
Most places get busy around 8, so maybe 7.
Sounds good. I'll text you if anything changes.
again from the top.
Want to do something this weekend?
Kind of. What you thinking?
I don't know. We could go to that new place downtown.
The one next to the cinema.
Yeah, I've heard it's pretty good. A lot of people been talking about it. All right. Let me check if Sarah want to come, too.
Yeah, definitely. Tell her I'll give me her a call later.
Gotcha. I'll let her know. What time you thinking?
Most places get busy around 8, so maybe 7. Sounds good. I'll text you if anything changes.
Conversation three, a phone call.
Person A, hey, did you get my message?
Person B, oh yeah, sorry. I was going to call you back, but I completely forgot.
Person A. No worries. What you up to right now? Person B. Just getting ready to head out. Actually, got to pick up the kids.
Person A. Oh, right. I won't keep you then. I just wanted to ask, could you do me a favor?
Person B, of course. What you need?
Person A, could you let me know what Tom said when you talked to him? I've been trying to get hold of him all week.
Person B, oh yeah, definitely. I should have told you earlier, actually. Let me call you back tonight when I've sorted the kids out.
Person A, brilliant. Appreciate it. Talk later.
Person B, gotcha. speak soon.
Repeat the whole conversation.
Hey, did you get my message?
Oh, yeah. Sorry. I was going to call you back, but I completely forgot.
No worries. What you up to right now?
Just getting ready to head out, actually. Got to pick up the kids.
Oh, right. I won't keep you then. I just wanted to ask, could you do me a favor?
Of course. What you need. Could you let me know what Tom said when you talked to him? I've been trying to get hold of him all week.
Oh, yeah. Definitely. I should have told you earlier, actually. Let me call you back tonight when I've sorted the kids out.
Brilliant. Appreciate it. Talk later.
Gotcha. Speak soon.
Part eight. Accent variations.
how connected speech differs across Englishes.
One of the most important things for a C1 and C2 learner to understand is that connected speech is not uniform across all varieties of English. The reductions, elisionions, and assimilations we have practiced are broadly common across most native English accents.
But there are significant variations between American English, British English, Australian English, and others.
And understanding these variations is what allows you to move fluidly between different native English contexts.
American English, the Tflap.
One of the most distinctive features of American English is what linguists call the T flap. In American English, when the letter T appears between two vowel sounds, it is not pronounced as a clear T. Instead, it becomes a very fast D like sound, almost like a very quick tap of the tongue. This is why water in American English sounds like water.
Better sounds like better. City sounds like city. Pretty sounds like pretty.
Getting sounds like getting. Butter sounds like butter. Bitter sounds like bitter. Letter sounds like letter.
Matter sounds like matter.
later sounds like later.
This is one of the primary reasons that British and American English sound so different to learners, even when both speakers are saying the same words. The tlap is everywhere in American English.
Repeat the American English versions after me.
Water.
Water.
I need some water.
Better.
Better.
That's much better.
Pretty.
Pretty. It was pretty impressive.
Getting getting I'm getting tired.
Later.
Later.
See you later.
Matter.
Matter.
It doesn't matter.
Letter letter letter I got a letter in the post city it's a beautiful city British English the glottle stop in British English particularly in workingclass and urban varieties the t in the middle or at the end of words is often replaced with a glottle stop The glottle stop is not a sound. It is the absence of sound. A brief closure of the throat that replaces the t. This is why bottle in cochnney or urban British English sounds like bowl. The t is replaced by a glottle stop. Button sounds like button.
Better sounds like bear.
Water sounds like where.
Getting sounds like gang.
Bitten sounds like bin.
Brittain sounds like brien.
Butter sounds like burr.
Cotton sounds like cotton.
Saturday sounds like Saturday.
The glottle stop is extremely common in London English. Scottish English, Northern English, and many other British varieties. If you have ever watched British television and wondered why certain speakers seem to be swallowing their tea sounds, this is exactly what is happening. Repeat the British glottle stop versions.
Bottle.
Bowl.
Pass me that bowl of water.
Better bear.
That's a low bear.
Water.
Where? Can I have some wear, please?
Getting gang. It's gang late.
Saturday.
Saturday.
See you Saturday.
Britain.
Brienne.
Made in Brienne.
Australian English rising intonation and vowel shifts.
Australian English has its own distinctive features that can confuse learners. The most famous is the Australian question intonation where statements are delivered with a rising intonation that sounds like a question to nonustralian ears. This can cause confusion because a learner may hear what they think is a question, respond, and only then realize it was a statement.
Australian English also has distinctive vowel shifts. Today sounds like today.
Face sounds like vice.
Late sounds like light.
Mate sounds like might.
Day sounds like D.
These vowel shifts are consistent throughout Australian English and once you recognize them, Australian speech becomes much more predictable and understandable.
Scottish English, the preserved sounds.
Scottish English is fascinating because it actually preserves several sounds that other varieties of English have lost. Scottish English speakers often pronounce every consonant clearly, including final T sounds and the letter R after vowels.
Scottish English butter. Both the T and the final R are clearly pronounced.
Water. Again, both sounds are clear.
Car. The R is clearly heard.
First, the R before S is clearly heard.
This means Scottish English is often actually easier for learners who are used to textbook English than other varieties because it is closer to the written form. However, the vowel sounds are quite different and can take adjustment.
Part nine, advanced listening drills.
Decode and reconstruct.
Now we move to our most advanced practice section. Decode and reconstruct.
In this section, I will give you a passage of completely natural fast English exactly as a native speaker would say it in real life. No slowing down, no exaggeration of clarity, just natural. Your job is to listen, decode what you hear into standard written English, and then repeat it back in the natural fast form. This is the closest thing to real native listening comprehension practice that you can do in a lesson setting.
Drill one, natural fast English.
I don't know what happened, but I should have called her earlier. She was kind of upset, I think, but she wouldn't really say. I told him about it and E said I'd have done the same thing. I don't know.
I'm going to call her tonight and see if she want to talk.
Now, the full written version.
I don't know what happened, but I should have called her earlier. She was kind of upset, I think, but she wouldn't really say. I told him about it and he said I would have done the same thing. I don't know. I'm going to call her tonight and see if she wants to talk.
Now repeat the natural fast version.
I don't know what happened, but I should have called her earlier. She was kind of upset, I think, but she wouldn't really say. I told him about it, and E said I'd have done the same thing. I don't know.
I'm going to call her tonight and see if she want to talk again.
I don't know what happened, but I should have called her earlier. She was kind of upset, I think, but she wouldn't really say. I told him about it, and E said I'd have done the same thing. I don't know.
I'm gonna call her tonight and see if she want to talk.
Drill two. Natural fast English.
Did you have to be there? I thought it was optional. I would have gone if I'd known it was important.
Nobody told me. I bet you half the team didn't know either. Let me check with Sarah and see what you think we should do.
Full written version.
Did you have to be there? I thought it was optional. I would have gone if I had known it was important. Nobody told me.
I bet you half the team didn't know either. Let me check with Sarah and see what you think we should do.
Now repeat the natural fast version.
Did you have to be there? I thought it was optional. I would have gone if I'd known it was important.
Nobody told me. I bet you half the team didn't know either. Let me check with Sarah and see what you think we should do again. Did you have to be there? I thought it was optional. I would have gone if I'd known it was important.
Nobody told me. I bet you half the team didn't know either. Let me check with Sarah and see what you think we should do.
Drill three. Natural fast English.
I'm kind of worried about him to be honest. He's been a lot of trouble lately and I don't know if anyone's really talked to him about it. I should have said something earlier, but I didn't want to make it worse. Could you have a word? You're closer to him than I am. I think he'd listen to you.
Full written version.
I'm kind of worried about him to be honest. He's been a lot of trouble lately and I don't know if anyone's really talked to him about it. I should have said something earlier, but I didn't want to make it worse. Could you have a word? You're closer to him than I am. I think he would listen to you.
Now, repeat the natural version.
I'm kind of worried about him, to be honest. He's been a lot of trouble lately and I don't know if anyone's really talked to him about it. I should have said something earlier, but I didn't want to make it worse. Could you have a word? You're closer to him than I am. I think he'd listen to you again. I'm kind of worried about him to be honest. He's been a lot of trouble lately and I don't know if anyone's really talked to him about it. I should have said something earlier, but I didn't want to make it worse. Could you have a word? You're closer to him than I am. I think he'd listen to you.
Drill four. Natural fast English.
What you going to do if he doesn't show up? We can't just wait around all day.
I've already been waiting for him for an hour. I could have been doing something important with this time. Let me know if you hear from him. I'm going to grab a coffee and come back in 20 minutes.
Full written version. What are you going to do if he doesn't show up? We can't just wait around all day. I've already been waiting for him for an hour. I could have been doing something important with this time. Let me know if you hear from him. I'm going to grab a coffee and come back in 20 minutes.
Now, repeat the natural version.
What you going to do if he doesn't show up? We can't just wait around all day.
I've already been waiting for him for an hour. I could have been doing something important with this time. Let me know if you hear from him. I'm going to grab a coffee and come back in 20 minutes again.
What you going to do if he doesn't show up? We can't just wait around all day.
I've already been waiting for him for an hour. I could have been doing something important with this time. Let me know if you hear from him. I'm going to grab a coffee and come back in 20 minutes.
Part 10. The sounds that disappear. A complete reference.
Now, I want to give you a complete reference of the most commonly reduced and altered words in natural English speech. Think of this as your connected speech dictionary.
Every word on this list is something you will hear in real natural speech that may not immediately register as the word you know. Read each entry. Say the full form, then say the natural form.
Practice them until they feel automatic.
gonna going to I'm going to do it tomorrow.
wanna want to I want to know the truth.
Gota have got to I got to be somewhere.
Have to have to. You have to see this.
Has to has to. She has to finish it first.
Used to used to. I used to live near here.
ought to ought to. You ought to call him. Should have. Should have. I should have known.
Could have. Could have. You could have told me. Would have. Would have. I would have been there. Might have. Might have.
She might have left already.
Must have. Must have. He must have forgotten.
Don't know. Don't know. I don't know what happened.
Let me Let me Let me think about that.
Give me. Give me. Give me a second. Kind of. Kind of. It was kind of strange.
Sort of. Sort of. I sort of knew it was wrong.
Lots of lots of There were lots of people there.
Lot of a lot of A lot of things have changed.
Couple of a couple of. Give me a couple of minutes.
Bunch of a bunch of There was a bunch of us there. Betcha. Bet you. I bet you didn't know that. Gotcha. Got you. Or I understand.
Gotcha.
No problem.
Whatcha? What are you? What you doing tonight? How you? How are you? How you doing?
Ca. See you. See youa tomorrow.
Told you. Told you. I told you. So, did you Did you Did you finish it? Did you Did you Did you eat yet? Would you would you would you like some help?
Could you Could you could you do me a favor?
Don't you Don't you Don't you think it's too late?
Won't you? Won't you? Won't you stay a little longer?
Can't you Can't you Can't you see I'm busy?
Instead of instead of instead of complaining, do something out of out of get out of here. Kind of kind of. That's kind of rude into into She walked into the room.
ought to ought to. You ought to apologize.
Trying to trying to I'm trying to concentrate.
Supposed to supposed to. You're supposed to be here by 8.
Have to. Have to. She have to leave early.
Practice challenge. Choose 10 of these forms from the list above. Write one natural sentence for each one. Then say each sentence out loud three times at natural speed. Record yourself. Listen back. Notice whether your natural form sounds genuinely reduced or whether it still sounds careful and deliberate.
Part 11. your daily C1 and C2 listening improvement plan. Understanding connected speech in a lesson is one thing. Training your ear to process it automatically in real time is another.
The gap between these two states is where most advanced learners get stuck.
They understand the rules when they are explained slowly and clearly. But in the middle of a real conversation or a natural film, everything happens too fast and the rules evaporate.
The only way to close this gap is consistent, deliberate exposure practice. Here is a structured 7-day plan that will train your ear at the C1 and C2 level.
Day one, active reduction hunting.
Choose any English language podcast with native speakers talking naturally and informally. A comedy podcast, a sports discussion, a culture chat show, anything where the speakers are relaxed and unscripted.
Listen for 15 minutes. Every time you hear one of the reduced forms from today's lesson, going to, wanna, kind of, should, could, don't know, did you, or any other, write it down immediately.
At the end of 15 minutes, count how many you caught. On day two, try to catch more. The goal is not comprehension initially. The goal is recognition.
training your brain to flag these forms when they appear. Day two, shadowing at natural speed. Take the three conversations from part seven of today's lesson. Read the natural fast version of each one out loud. Try to speak at genuine natural speed, not slowly with clear pronunciation.
Actually fast, casually as if you are saying it to a friend. Record yourself.
Compare your recording to the natural versions. Notice which forms still sound careful and deliberate in your mouth.
Those are the ones to focus on for day three. Day three, film without subtitles.
Choose a scene from any American or British film or television series, something between 3 and 5 minutes long.
Watch it once with subtitles to understand the content fully. Then watch it again without subtitles. Then again without subtitles.
Notice the specific moments where you lost comprehension.
Identify which connected speech phenomenon caused each gap. Was it a reduction, an elision, an assimilation, a linking pattern? Name it.
Understanding why you missed something is as important as missing it.
Day four, reconstruction practice. Take any short piece of naturally spoken English, a clip from YouTube, a podcast segment, a film scene. Listen to it once. Then try to transcribe exactly what you hear. Not what you know the words should be, but what you actually hear, including the reduced forms, the dropped sounds, the compressed words.
Compare your transcription to the actual transcript if one is available. Notice the gaps. These gaps are your specific remaining weak points in connected speech comprehension.
Day five, production practice. Today we reverse the process. Instead of decoding natural speech, you produce it. Take three or four sentences of formal written English and compress them into natural fast speech. Apply every reduction, elision, and assimilation.
You know, for example, I would have told you if I had known about it earlier.
Could you let him know that I am going to be late? Becomes I would have told you if I'd have known about it earlier.
Could you let him know I'm going to be late? Record yourself. Listen back. Push for more speed and more naturalness each time.
Day six. Accent immersion. Choose a specific English accent that you find most difficult. Australian, Scottish, Glaswegian, Cochnney, New York, Southern American, Texas. Find 30 minutes of content featuring that accent and immerse yourself in it. Don't try to understand every word on first listen.
Simply let the rhythm and the sound patterns of the accent wash over you. On second listen, focus on comprehension.
On third listen, identify the specific sounds and reductions unique to that accent.
Day seven, real conversation.
Have a real conversation with a native English speaker if possible. This could be a language exchange partner, a teacher, a colleague, or even a brief interaction with anyone who speaks English natively.
Pay active attention to their connected speech. Notice the reductions. Notice the linked words. Notice the dropped sounds. This is where everything from the week comes together in the most important setting of all, real human interaction. Repeat this 7-day cycle every week for 1 month. After 4 weeks, your comprehension of natural fast native English will be at a level you previously thought was years away. Part 12, final advanced listening passage. We are going to close today's lesson with one final extended passage of completely natural English. This is the most advanced piece in today's lesson. It is long, it is fast, it contains every phenomenon we studied today. Listen first, then I will go through it section by section. Then we will read the whole thing together at natural speed. Here is the passage in natural fast English.
I don't know if you've heard, but apparently the whole project's being restructured. I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself.
Tom said he'd have sorted it out weeks ago if they'd let him get involved earlier, but he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat. Now, I bet you they're going to have to start the whole thing over and that's going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money. Could you believe it? Anyway, I'm trying to stay out of it to be honest. I've got enough on my plate. Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it's supposed to be important this time. Let me know and I'll save you a seat.
Now, let us go through it section by section.
Section one. I don't know if you've heard, but apparently the whole project's being restructured.
Full form. I don't know if you have heard, but apparently the whole project is being restructured.
Repeat the natural form. I don't know if you've heard, but apparently the whole project's being restructured.
Section two. I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself.
full form. I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself.
Repeat the natural form. I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself.
Section three. Tom said he'd have sorted it out weeks ago if they'd let me get involved earlier.
Full form. Tom said he would have sorted it out weeks ago if they had let him get involved earlier.
Repeat the natural form. Tom said he'd have sorted it out weeks ago if they'd let me get involved earlier.
Section four. But he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat.
Full form. But he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat.
Repeat the natural form. But he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat.
Section five. Now, I bet you they're going to have to start the whole thing over, and that's going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money. Full form. Now, I bet you they are going to have to start the whole thing over. and that is going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money. Repeat the natural form.
Now, I bet you they're going to have to start the whole thing over and that's going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money. Section six. Could you believe it? Anyway, I'm trying to stay out of it to be honest. I've got enough on my plate. Full form. Could you believe it? Anyway, I am trying to stay out of it to be honest. I have got enough on my plate.
Repeat the natural form. Could you believe it? Anyway, I'm trying to stay out of it to be honest. I've got enough on my plate.
Section seven. Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it's supposed to be important this time. Let me know and I'll save you a seat.
full form. Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it is supposed to be important this time. Let me know and I will save you a seat.
Repeat the natural form. Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it's supposed to be important this time.
Let me know and I'll save you a seat.
Now, the entire passage from beginning to end. Natural speed. Go. I don't know if you've heard, but apparently the whole project's being restructured.
I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself.
Tom said he'd have sorted it out weeks ago if they'd let him get involved earlier, but he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat. Now, I bet you they're going to have to start the whole thing over, and that's going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money.
Could you believe it? Anyway, I'm trying to stay out of it, to be honest. I've got enough on my plate. Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it's supposed to be important this time.
Let me know and I'll save you a seat.
Again, full speed. Natural. Go. I don't know if you've heard, but apparently the whole project's being restructured. I should have told you earlier, but I just found out myself. Tom said he'd have sorted it out weeks ago if they'd let me get involved earlier, but he was kind of sidelined for a while. I told him he ought to have a word with management, but he didn't want to rock the boat.
Now, I bet you they're going to have to start the whole thing over and that's going to cost them a lot of time and a lot of money. Could you believe it?
Anyway, I'm trying to stay out of it to be honest. I've got enough on my plate.
Did you want to come to the meeting on Thursday? I think it's supposed to be important this time. Let me know and I'll save you a seat.
Today you have done something that most English courses never teach. You have gone inside the engine of spoken English and understood exactly how it works at natural speed.
You have learned the five forces of connected speech. Reduction, elision, assimilation, linking and contraction.
You have heard how British, American, Australian, and Scottish English each shape these forces differently.
You have decoded and repeated real conversations at natural native speed.
And you have built a 7-day practice plan that will transform your listening comprehension permanently.
This is the knowledge that separates a C1 learner from someone who genuinely passes for a near-native speaker.
Not more vocabulary, not better grammar. The ability to hear what is actually being said rather than what you expect to hear.
I want to say something important before we close.
Everything you learn today is not about speaking like this yourself unless you want to. You are not required to reduce your own speech. Your clear and careful pronunciation is perfectly correct and perfectly respectful.
But you absolutely need to understand these forms when you hear them because native speakers will use them whether or not you do. And understanding is always the first step to everything else.
Keep your ear open.
Every conversation, every film, every podcast, every overheard exchange, the sounds are all there. Now you know what to listen for.
Before you go, please subscribe to English in Moments and press the bell icon so you never miss a new lesson. We publish a brand new English learning video every single day. And for C1 and C2 learners, we have more of this level coming because you deserve lessons that match where you actually are.
Thank you for being here, for being advanced enough to want this, for pushing past the comfortable and into the real. I'm Elena and I will see you in the very next lesson.
Bonus part one, the sounds between the words, discourse markers in fast speech.
There is one more layer of natural English speech that C1 and C2 learners often overlook and it is not a word at all. It is the connective tissue between words. The sounds and short phrases that native speakers use constantly to hold their speech together, to signal that they are thinking, to show agreement, to indicate surprise, or simply to keep the conversation flowing while their brain catches up with their mouth. These are called discourse markers. And in fast natural speech, they are themselves reduced and compressed. Let us go through the most important ones. You know the universal filler. In formal writing, you know means you are aware of something. In fast natural speech, it means almost nothing at all. It is a filler, a rhythm holder, a signal that more is coming. In natural speech, you know becomes you know. said in one compressed syllable. Listen. It was, you know, kind of unexpected.
Repeat. It was, you know, kind of unexpected.
Listen. She's, you know, really good at what she does. Repeat. She's, you know, really good at what she does. Listen. I was, you know, not really sure how to respond.
Repeat. I was, you know, not really sure how to respond. I mean, the clarifier and softener. I mean, in natural fast speech becomes I mean, or even mean. It signals that the speaker is about to clarify or qualify what they just said.
Listen.
It was good. I mean, not perfect, but good. Repeat. It was good. I mean, not perfect, but good. Listen. She's talented. I mean, really talented. Not just, you know, competent.
Repeat. She's talented. I mean, really talented. Not just, you know, competent.
Like, the most controversial filler.
Like is one of the most common words in informal American English. It serves multiple functions. as a filler, as a way of introducing reported speech, as a way of describing something approximate, and as a general intensifier.
In fast, natural speech, it appears constantly and reduces to almost a schwa sound. Listen, she was like completely shocked. Like she didn't even know what to say. Repeat. She was like completely shocked. Like she didn't even know what to say. Listen. I was like, "Wait, what?" And he was like, "Yeah." And I was like, "Are you serious?"
Repeat. I was like, "Wait, what?" And he was like, "Yeah." And I was like, "Are you serious?
This use of like as reported speech introduction is extremely common in American English and increasingly in British English. When a native speaker says I was like, they are introducing what they thought or said, not necessarily the exact words.
Right? The comprehension check in fast natural speech. right appears at the end of statements as a quick check that the listener is following. It is compressed to a very quick rising right listen. So she'd been working on it for weeks, right? And then at the last minute they changed everything.
Repeat. So she'd been working on it for weeks, right? And then at the last minute they changed everything.
Listen. We were supposed to leave at 7, right? But nobody told him. Repeat. We were supposed to leave at 7, right? But nobody told him.
Basically and literally in fast speech, these two words are used constantly in informal English, often far beyond their strict definitions.
Basically in fast speech compresses to basically or even basely.
Literally compresses to literally or literally. And in informal modern English, literally is frequently used for emphasis even when the situation is not literal at all. Listen. It was basely impossible to get anything done.
Repeat. It was basically impossible to get anything done. Listen. I literally could not believe what he said. Repeat.
I literally could not believe what he said.
Actually, the soft contradiction.
Actually in natural speech is used to softly contradict, correct, or introduce surprising information.
In fast speech, it compresses to actually or actually.
Listen. It was actually pretty good.
Better than I expected.
Repeat. It was actually pretty good.
Better than I expected.
Listen. Actually, I think you might be right about that. Repeat. Actually, I think you might be right about that.
honestly and to be honest. Truth signals. These phrases signal that the speaker is about to say something genuine or potentially uncomfortable.
In fast speech, honestly compresses to honestly or even Nestly. And to be honest becomes to be honest.
Listen. Honestly, I have no idea what's going on.
Repeat. Honestly, I have no idea what's going on.
Listen. To be honest, I wasn't really paying attention.
Repeat. To be honest, I wasn't really paying attention.
Apparently, the reported information marker. Apparently, signals that the speaker heard or read something but is not certain of it. In fast speech, it compresses to apparently or apparently.
Listen. Apparently, the whole thing was a misunderstanding.
Repeat. Apparently, the whole thing was a misunderstanding. Listen. Prunly.
Nobody actually told him the meeting was cancelled. Repeat. Prunly. Nobody actually told him the meeting was cancelled.
Now, let us practice a full natural conversation that uses all of these discourse markers together.
So, apparently Tom's leaving like for good. I mean, I knew he wasn't happy, but I didn't think it was that serious, you know? She was like completely shocked when she found out. Actually, I think most people were.
Honestly, I don't know what they're going to do without him. He was basically running the whole department.
Repeat. So, apparently Tom's leaving like for good. I mean, I knew he wasn't happy, but I didn't think it was that serious, you know? She was like completely shocked when she found out.
Actually, I think most people were.
Honestly, I don't know what they're going to do without him. He was basically running the whole department again. So, apparently Tom's leaving like for good. I mean, I knew he wasn't happy, but I didn't think it was that serious, you know? She was like completely shocked when she found out.
Actually, I think most people were.
Honestly, I don't know what they're going to do without him. He was basically running the whole department.
Bonus part two. Numbers, dates, and times in fast speech. One area that causes particular difficulty for advanced learners is how native speakers say numbers, dates, and times in fast natural speech. These sound very different from how they are formally taught. Times formal. It is 3:15.
Natural American. It's a quarter after 3.
Formal. It is 3:45.
Natural. It's a/4 to 4. Formal. It is 12:00 midday.
Natural. It's noon or simply 12. In fast natural speech, times compress further.
Half 7 becomes half 7 in British English. 7:30 becomes 7:30 in American English with a T flap. 8:45 becomes 8:45 or a/4 to 9. Repeat. I'll meet you there at half 7. Don't you be late again. I'll meet you there at half 7. Don't you be late. The meeting's at 2:30. Got to be there by then again. The meeting's at 2:30. Got to be there by then. Years formal 2024.
Natural 2024.
Most native speakers drop 2000 and after the year 2009 formal 1995 natural 95 in fast speech with surrounding context the 19 is often dropped formal 1984 natural 84 again the decade is dropped in context text. Repeat. This all happened back in 95. A long time ago again. This all happened back in 95. A long time ago. She was born in ' 89.
Same year as me. Again, she was born in ' 89. Same year as me. Numbers in speech. 100 in fast speech often drops to 100 or even hundred. Thousand compresses to thousand. Million compresses to million. About before numbers becomes around or about.
Approximately becomes roughly in informal speech or around before a number. Repeat. It costs somewhere around $200, maybe a bit more.
Again, it cost somewhere around $200, maybe a bit more. There were like 3,000 people there. It was packed.
Again, there were like 3,000 people there. It was packed.
Address and place names. Native speakers also reduce street addresses and place names. Fifth Avenue becomes Fifth Avenue. St. James Street becomes St. James's in British English. The underground becomes the tube in London.
The subway becomes just the train in New York casual speech.
These reductions are less about sound and more about the cultural vocabulary of a specific city or region. Learning these for the specific accent you are targeting is an important part of advanced listening comprehension.
Bonus part three. When native speakers mishar each other. Here is something that might surprise you. Native speakers mishar each other all the time. This is not a problem unique to learners. It is simply what happens when connected speech is this compressed and this fast.
What makes native speakers different is not that they never mishar. It is that they have strategies for managing misunderstanding gracefully and quickly.
Here are the most natural ways native speakers ask for repetition or clarification.
Sorry. The simplest and most common one word rising inonation means please repeat.
Even simpler just a rising humus between close friends. Come again.
Informal American means please say that again. Say that again.
Direct and casual.
You what? Very British informal said with surprise means I'm not sure I heard you correctly.
Huh?
Very informal American. Rising intonation.
I didn't catch that.
Slightly more formal used in semi-professional contexts.
Sorry, what was that? Polite and clear.
Could you repeat that?
Formal used in professional settings.
You said the speaker repeats what they thought they heard with rising inonation, checking understanding. These phrases are useful both for your own listening comprehension moments and as models for what you will hear when a native speaker misses something. Repeat each one after me. Sorry again.
Sorry.
Come again.
Again. Come again.
You what? Again? You what? Huh? Again.
Huh? I didn't catch that again. I didn't catch that. Sorry, what was that again?
Sorry, what was that? Could you repeat that again? Could you repeat that? Now, a short practice conversation where misunderstanding and repair happen naturally. Person A, I was talking to Sarah and apparently she's going to be in London next month. Person B, sorry, she's going to be where? Person A, London, next month, end of October, I think. Person B. Oh, right. For work.
Person A. Yeah, some sort of conference.
Don't know the details. Person B.
Gotcha. We should try and meet up while she's there. Person A, definitely I'll text her. Repeat the whole conversation.
I was talking to Sarah and apparently she's going to be in London next month.
Sorry, she's going to be where?
London next month. End of October, I think. Oh, right. For work. Yeah, some sort of conference. Don't know the details.
Gotcha. We should try and meet up while she's there. Definitely. I'll text her again. I was talking to Sarah and apparently she's going to be in London next month.
Sorry. She's going to be where? London next month. End of October, I think. Oh, right. For work.
Yeah. some sort of conference. Don't know the details.
Gotcha. We should try and meet up while she's there. Definitely. I'll text her.
Bonus part four. Stress and rhythm. The music of natural English.
We have spent most of today's lesson focusing on individual sounds and how they change in fast speech. But there is one more dimension of natural English that separates advanced learners from near native speakers and it is something that operates above the level of individual sounds. It is the rhythm, the music, the beat of English.
English is what linguists call a stresstimed language. This means that in natural English speech, stressed syllables tend to appear at roughly regular intervals, regardless of how many unstressed syllables appear between them. The unstressed syllables are compressed and rushed to fit between the stressed beats. This is fundamentally different from syllable timed languages like Spanish, French, Italian, Arabic and many others where every syllable takes roughly equal time.
Learners who come from syllable timed languages often give every English syllable equal weight and equal length.
And this more than any misprononunciation is what makes their speech sound non-native.
Let me demonstrate.
Take this sentence. The cat sat on the mat. The stressed words are cat and mat.
Everything else the sat onthe, is unstressed and compressed. The rhythm goes, "The cat sat on the mat." Like a heartbeat with small sounds packed between the beats. Repeat. "The cat sat on the mat."
Again, the cat sat on the mat.
Now, a longer sentence. I want to go to the shop and get some bread.
The stressed words are want, shop, bread. Everything else compresses between them. The rhythm, I want to go to the shop and get some bread.
Repeat. I want to go to the shop and get some bread.
Again, I want to go to the shop and get some bread.
Do you feel the difference? The stressed syllables arrive like drum beats. The unstressed syllables flow between them like water between rocks.
This rhythm pattern explains why so many function words are reduced in fast speech. They are simply unstressed beats. They must be short or the rhythm collapses.
to cannot be a full two because it would take the place of a stressed beat and disrupt the music. So, it becomes t a tiny schwa that fits between the beats without breaking the rhythm.
Understanding this helps you not just hear English better, but also speak it more naturally. Because if you can feel the rhythm, the reductions happen almost automatically.
You don't need to memorize that to becomes t. You simply feel that it needs to be short in that position.
Let us practice rhythm with some longer sentences. I will mark the stressed beats in capitals. Repeat each sentence with the rhythm clearly felt. Sentence one. She told me she was going to call, but she never did.
She told me she was going to call, but she never did. Repeat. She told me she was going to call, but she never did.
Again, she told me she was going to call, but she never did.
Sentence two. I've been waiting for an hour and nobody's called me back.
I've been waiting for an hour and nobody's called me back. Repeat. I've been waiting for an hour and nobody's called me back.
Again, I've been waiting for an hour and nobody's called me back.
Sentence three. The problem is that nobody told him what was happening.
The problem is that nobody told him what was happening.
Repeat. The problem is that nobody told him what was happening.
Again, the problem is that nobody told him what was happening.
Sentence four. I think she's probably going to be late again. I think she's probably going to be late again.
Repeat. I think she's probably going to be late again.
Again. I think she's probably going to be late again.
Sentence five. You should have called me before you made the decision.
You should have called me before you made the decision.
Repeat. You should have called me before you made the decision.
again. You should have called me before you made the decision.
Focus stress when meaning changes with stress.
Here is one of the most subtle and important aspects of English rhythm for advanced learners.
In English, the same sentence can mean very different things depending on which word receives the primary stress.
Take the sentence, I didn't say she stole the money. With stress on I. I didn't say she stole the money. Someone else said it, not me.
With stress on say. I didn't say she stole the money. I implied it but didn't say it directly.
With stress on she.
I didn't say she stole the money. I was talking about someone else.
With stress on stole, I didn't say she stole the money. Maybe she borrowed it. With stress on money, I didn't say she stole the money. She stole something else.
This one sentence has at least five different meanings depending entirely on stress. and native speakers navigate this automatically every single conversation without thinking about it.
Repeat each version after me and feel how the meaning shifts.
I didn't say she stole the money. I didn't say she stole the money.
I didn't say she stole the money. I didn't say she stole the money.
I didn't say she stole the money.
This is focus stress and becoming sensitive to it is one of the highest level listening skills in English because in a fast natural conversation, the stressed word in a sentence tells you what is new information, what is being contrasted, and what the speaker considers most important.
Practice challenge.
Take any simple five or sixword sentence. Say it five times, stressing a different word each time. Notice how the implied meaning shifts.
This exercise will sharpen your ear for focus stress dramatically.
Bonus part five, intonation patterns in natural speech.
The final piece of the connected speech puzzle is intonation.
the rise and fall of the voice. And while a complete guide to English intonation could fill an entire course, there are several key patterns that every C1 and C2 learner needs to know for comprehension.
The falling tone, finality, and certainty. A falling intonation at the end of a statement signals that the speaker has finished their thought and is certain about what they said. I'm not going. Falling on not firm. Final she already knows.
Falling on already.
Certain that's definitely wrong. Falling on definitely.
No doubt. Repeat. I'm not going. That's final. Again. I'm not going. That's final.
The rising tone. Questions and uncertainty.
A rising intonation signals a question or uncertainty.
You're coming. Rising. A yes no question. He said what? Rising on what?
Surprise and disbelief.
3:00.
Rising on clock. Checking understanding.
Repeat with rising intonation.
He said what? 3:00.
You're serious.
The fall rise. The most sophisticated pattern. This is the most complex intonation pattern in English and the one that most advanced learners have not yet fully internalized.
The fall rise signals reservation implication or that there is more to be said. It says yes, but she's good. Falling. She is good. Full stop. She's good.
Fall rise. She's good, but there is something I'm not saying. Maybe not good enough. may be good in some ways but not others.
The fall rise is everywhere in British English specifically. It signals politeness combined with reservation.
And for learners who don't recognize it, they may miss the implied meaning entirely.
Listen to these pairs. First the falling version, then the fall rise version.
Notice the different implications.
Falling. The food was fine. The food was fine. No issue.
Fall rise. The food was fine. The food was acceptable but not great. Something was missing.
Falling. He's quite clever. He is genuinely clever.
Fall. Rise. He's quite clever. He's clever in some ways, but don't expect too much.
Falling. It was interesting. It genuinely interested me. Fall rise. It was interesting. I am being polite. It was strange or not what I expected.
Repeat the fall rise versions after me.
The food was fine with fall rise on fine.
He's quite clever with fall rise on clever.
It was interesting with fall rise on interesting.
Recognizing the fall rise will unlock an entire layer of implied meaning in British English that most learners completely miss. It is the sound of British understatement. The sound of someone saying one thing and meaning something slightly different. And now you know what to listen for. The list intonation. When native speakers list items, each item except the last has a rising intonation.
The last item falls. This signals to the listener that the list is complete. I need milk, bread, eggs, and butter.
Rising on milk, bread, eggs. falling on butter.
This pattern is automatic for native speakers. For learners, it is often reversed or flattened, which can make it unclear when a list has finished. Repeat with correct list intonation.
I need to call the office. Send the report. And then I can leave again. I need to call the office. Send the report. and then I can leave.
She's smart, ambitious, hardworking, and completely trustworthy.
Again, she's smart, ambitious, hardworking, and completely trustworthy.
Bonus part six, full immersion passage.
Everything together.
We close with the most advanced passage in today's entire lesson. This passage contains every phenomenon we have studied today. Reduction, elision, assimilation, linking, contraction, discourse markers, rhythm, stress, and intonation.
This is real English. The English of real people in real conversations.
The English of films and podcasts and phone calls and overheard conversations in cafes.
Read it once silently.
Identify every compressed form. Then repeat it with me. Then say it alone at full natural speed. Here is the passage.
You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the start. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work, but we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she'd ever say it. She's too, you know, but I literally felt terrible when I realized. Could you have done anything differently?
Honestly, I think we both could have. We would have seen it coming if we'd been paying proper attention.
Anyway, what you going to do? It's done now, in it. Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on. You want to come with me when I talk to her? Might be easier with the two of us. Or is that too much?
Don't know. Tell me what you think. Now, the full written form for reference.
You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the start. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work, but we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she would ever say it. She's too, you know. But I literally felt terrible when I realized.
Could you have done anything differently?
Honestly, I think we both could have. We would have seen it coming if we had been paying proper attention.
Anyway, what are you going to do? It's done now, isn't it? Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on. Do you want to come with me when I talk to her?
Might be easier with the two of us or is that too much? Don't know. Tell me what you think. Now let us repeat the natural version together section by section.
Section one. You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know.
Repeat. You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know. Section two. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the star.
Repeat. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the star. Section three. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work.
Repeat. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work. Section four.
But we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. Repeat. But we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. Section five. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she'd ever say it. Repeat. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she'd ever say it. Section six. She's too, you know, but I literally felt terrible when I realized.
Repeat. She's too, you know, but I literally felt terrible when I realized.
Section seven. Could you have done anything differently?
Honestly, I think we both could have.
Repeat. Could you have done anything differently?
Honestly, I think we both could have.
Section 8. We would have seen it coming if we'd been paying proper attention.
Repeat. We would have seen it coming if we'd been paying proper attention.
Section nine. Anyway, what you going to do? It's done now, ain't it? Repeat.
Anyway, what you going to do? It's done now, isn't it? Section 10. Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on.
Repeat. Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on. Section 11. You want to come with me when I talk to her? Might be easier with the two of us. Repeat.
You want to come with me when I talk to her? Might be easier with the two of us.
Section 12. Or is that too much? Don't know. Tell me what you think. Repeat. Or is that too much? Don't know. Tell me what you think. Now, the entire passage from beginning to end, natural speed, everything connected. Go. You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the start. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work, but we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she'd ever say it. She's too, you know. But I literally felt terrible when I realized. Could you have done anything differently? Honestly, I think we both could have. We would have seen it coming if we'd been paying proper attention.
Anyway, what you going to do? It's done now in it. Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on. You want to come with me when I talk to her? Might be easier with the two of us. Or is that too much?
Don't know. Tell me what you think. One more time. Push for full natural speed.
This is your final practice. You know, I was thinking about it last night and I don't know. I think we should have handled the whole thing differently from the star. I mean, she tried to tell us, didn't she? I mean, she basically said it wasn't going to work, but we were so caught up in the excitement of it, we didn't want to hear it. I bet you she's thinking I told you so right now. Not that she'd ever say it. She's too, you know. But I literally felt terrible when I realized. Could you have done anything differently? Honestly, I think we both could have. We would have seen it coming if we'd been paying proper attention.
Anyway, what you going to do? It's done now in it. Let me just say sorry to her and we'll move on. You want to come with me when I talk to her? Might be easier with the two of us. Or is that too much?
Don't know. Tell me what you think. That is real English. Fast, messy, and completely natural. If you made it through this entire master class, including all of these advanced bonus sections, you have done an incredible amount of work today. I am so proud of your dedication. Remember, mastering connected speech takes time and patience. Do not expect to catch every single sound tomorrow. Just keep your ears open. Listen to native speakers every chance you get and keep coming back to practice with me. Before you go, please make sure you have subscribed to English in Moments and pressed the bell icon. We are here every single day to help you push past your limits and reach that native level. Thank you so much for your time, your energy, and your trust.
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