A Step-by-Step Guide to Perfect British Intonation

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  • Опубликовано: 21 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 168

  • @joseaugustopiresdemeneses2908
    @joseaugustopiresdemeneses2908 Год назад +6

    The best teacher ever.

  •  Год назад +46

    Two things. First - your lessons are brilliant! Thank you, you've made a lot of things about English clear to me. Second - as a Ukrainian I want to thank you for your support. That little bracelet you have on your wrist means much more than you think. Thank you and much respect from Kyiv, Ukraine. If you ever come here after the war I'll be happy to show you around.

    • @ОкейникЛайкин
      @ОкейникЛайкин Год назад

      Where were their bracelets when the US was in Afghanistan or in other countries they invaded? Is it only because THE Russian started the war? I love how propaganda works, that’s so big

    • @lenatanevska4761
      @lenatanevska4761 4 месяца назад +1

      Я також звернула увагу і мені стало приємно ))

  • @helenschwickrath3412
    @helenschwickrath3412 Год назад +3

    As an a New England speaker, born in central NY, I enjoy these segments. Many thanks!

  • @isabelatence7035
    @isabelatence7035 Год назад +28

    British English is elegant, intonation is an important differential, I met an English woman in Egypt, she used this variation when I said I was from Brazil, "Brazillll!! Incredible class, Gideon, your way of teaching is top notch. I'm going to practice🤩 thank so much

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +5

      Glad you liked it.

    • @eugeniomarins2936
      @eugeniomarins2936 Год назад +1

      Eu adoro as aulas desse cara, são ótimas. Eu leio e falo o idioma, os meus colegas me pedem para corrigir os artigos científicos deles! Mas esse cara me mostra que eu não sei chongas de inglês. 😂

    • @isabelatence7035
      @isabelatence7035 Год назад +1

      ​@@eugeniomarins2936 eu sigo Mr Gideon fazem um bom tempo, até hoje é o canal mais incrível para obter dicas e aulas, Gideon é o cara! É uma pessoa generosa em nos mostrar curiosidades da língua, humor fantástico.. 🤠

    • @eugeniomarins2936
      @eugeniomarins2936 Год назад +1

      @@isabelatence7035 E simpático!

    • @oswaldocaminos8431
      @oswaldocaminos8431 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@LetThemTalkTVHello Dear Gideon! I am already studying "The loom of language"; It is a wonderful book although quite difficult. Wiele Danke for the recomendation.🤭👏

  • @yevhenhoncharenko7862
    @yevhenhoncharenko7862 Год назад +7

    Watching this lesson from Ukraine and I've just noticed your blue-yellow bracelet hanging on your wrist! And that warmed my soul soooo much!! Thank you my dear British people for your support!!!

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +4

      We stand by Ukraine

    • @NatashaNosenko
      @NatashaNosenko 2 месяца назад

      @@LetThemTalkTV God bless you! Thanks for all your support💙💛

  • @leopard36cat
    @leopard36cat Год назад +1

    Fascinating , as a native speaker I learnt English as anyone else listening to my parents talking I was never taught any of this stuff, So we learn as kids just by listening but if you have to learn as a second language there's all this stuff we take for granted, Its a eye opener for an old fool like me and I love it.

  • @rickebuschcatherine2729
    @rickebuschcatherine2729 9 месяцев назад

    I improuve my intonation by slow down all the video an read at loud the subtitles.... thanks Gedeon, you're very helpfull !

  • @internations6272
    @internations6272 Год назад +4

    I feel so grateful especially for this one! Had a couple of never-ending gramma doubts that you have explained in a such an easy way to get. Thank you, thank you, thank you!

  • @ArtBlade
    @ArtBlade Год назад +5

    First off, thank you very much for your excellent videos. As to intonation, I learned how very important it was when a British friend once told me it wasn't my grammar or vocabulary that gave away I wasn't British but the lack of British intonation did. In other words, I didn't _sound_ British. He then imitated me by quoting one sentence the way I had said it and then repeating the same sentence "in English." It was an epiphany. And it stuck. And it motivated me. Having watched your video I am glad to report that I got most of it right and I thank you profusely for helping me with the rest. :)

  • @rook2635
    @rook2635 Год назад +31

    If there are any non native speakers watching this don't worry about sounding British it doesn't matter and foreign accents often sound nice

    • @juanhincapiemejia
      @juanhincapiemejia 4 месяца назад +2

      I hate the bad idea That North Americans speaks theperfect english ...it's Not true..too.much Slang and Boring rich Teenager accent

    • @walktheworld
      @walktheworld 19 дней назад

      @@juanhincapiemejiaYour myopic comment only tells us what kind of Americans you know.

  • @WNH3
    @WNH3 Год назад +1

    It's funny--as soon as you said, "I don't beLIEVE it!" I thought of Victor Meldrew. And there he was.

  • @marciogarcia4761
    @marciogarcia4761 Год назад +1

    I am from Brazil and now I am living in the UK since 2021.
    For me is a very nice head every day some British intonation, and stressed words. Until the basic "Good Morning" have a special intonation.

  • @StuffMadeOnDreams
    @StuffMadeOnDreams Год назад

    This is my first video ever where I have let the two ads run until the end with just one purpose. Like always, excellent content, good editing and better humour.

  • @olivewoohoo
    @olivewoohoo 11 месяцев назад +1

    this is a brilliant video🎉

  • @85Y85
    @85Y85 Год назад +2

    I love all your contents Old Bean , yet That episode about The Posh English was magnificent, mate! 💯 A Bravo Deserved👏🏼

  • @xPixelDreams
    @xPixelDreams Год назад

    I have to follow prosody classes for my English Linguistics course. This video is an invaluable resource, thank you so much!

  • @ildarmingazov2304
    @ildarmingazov2304 Год назад +2

    Hey there! The good explanation is a half of understanding.
    Thanks a lot!

  • @jassianterri
    @jassianterri Год назад +1

    Very interesting. Great content! Thank you. I do notice, that from my background, furious sounds like annoyed/ surprised and happy surprise sounds like faked surprise. Shows how much it matters what you were emotionally primed to as a child.

  • @OceanChild75
    @OceanChild75 Год назад +24

    Watching this video will be part of my morning routing from now on - I’m tired of being told I have a flat tone and of having people thinking I am being sarcastic when I am genuinely complimenting them 😅 it has taken me a while but I have now come to terms with the fact I will never sound English and having a good intonation is my new realistic(ish) goal.
    Thank you for your amazing video - once again sparkled with humour & Britishness 💛

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад +6

      I'm sure you speak beautifully already.

    • @simpleman7203
      @simpleman7203 Год назад +2

      That's interesting. Where are you from originally?

    • @OceanChild75
      @OceanChild75 Год назад +2

      @@simpleman7203France, we don’t really use intonation unless we want to stress on a particular word or want to ask a question without bothering with changing the word order ("Tu es LÀ?" instead of "es-tu là?" for instance - the first sentence without any stress could be an affirmation).
      I just read one of your comment saying you were Russian, it is such a gorgeous language 🙂 I love the sound of it, it’s really pleasing to the ear! I used to work with some Polish people and I got them to teach me fruits and pets in Polish (I have to confess that the fact Polish uses the Latin alphabet made it a lot less intimidating than Russian). I was so proud of myself, not that I could go anywhere with words like "pomidor" (tomato) or "shwinka morska" (guinea pig) but I’m a bit of a language nerd 😂 x

    • @simpleman7203
      @simpleman7203 Год назад +3

      @@OceanChild75 it was funny reading your flattering words about Russian language, because I was about to tell you how French sounds like music to me. That's why Im probably will never going to learn it. I'm scared of loosing that melody in it, I'm afraid I might become too caught up in finding meaning of the words instead of enjoying the flow 😅
      French accent is the cutest by the way, whether it is English or Russian!
      Polish sounds kinda funny for my Russian ear with their love of "czczhzc", "gzchze" sounds, haha 😂. But I think Polish might say something of that nature about Russian as well.
      I'm not really language nerd, but I know for a fact that current Russian language and classic literature was heavily influenced by French. Now I think we are predisposed in liking how it sounds :)

    • @OceanChild75
      @OceanChild75 Год назад +2

      @@simpleman7203 oh thank you haha I often have English people telling me they find my accent cute but whenever I meet a French person here and hear them speaking English, I feel like my ears are bleeding 🤣
      Yes France and Russia have a lot in common, not only literature but the way we got rid of our monarchy (I’ll have to be more careful otherwise I’ll never get British citizenship 🫢)

  • @jackdarby2168
    @jackdarby2168 10 месяцев назад +1

    This gold mate! Gold!

  • @sardorbek6399
    @sardorbek6399 Год назад +1

    Perfect, I enjoy learning from this Sir's lessons

  • @JLa_802
    @JLa_802 11 месяцев назад

    It just came to me that this world be an extremely helpful video for people who struggle reading other people’s emotions, especially if they have a hard time with facial expressions and body language. I don’t think vocal intonation is emphasized as much facial expression in therapeutic settings, specifically I’m thinking of autism. Part of the initial test is showing pictures of different faces and asking what that person is feeling, the more you get “wrong” the higher your score BUT intonation is a much more accurate way to read someone! We make silly faces all the time, especially when we’re being sarcastic! For people who struggle with eye contact and face blindness in general, diagnosis or no diagnosis, this would be a way more useful tool! Heck, it even helps me, I sometimes have a hard time getting my point across and changing my intonation might just be the fix! Thank you!

  • @Ignazio_Avulso
    @Ignazio_Avulso Год назад +1

    Great video, thank you.

  • @abidachaudhary874
    @abidachaudhary874 Год назад

    Love to listens to you Sir especially where I couldn't think of tomatoes and cucumbers sandwich and what else.

  • @amherst88
    @amherst88 Год назад +7

    You never cease to amuse/amaze me with new insights into my native language ❤

    • @dylancleverdon486
      @dylancleverdon486 5 месяцев назад

      i know its weird learning about how i speak im over here practicing the accent i already have lol

  • @rickebuschcatherine2729
    @rickebuschcatherine2729 Год назад

    I've already see a video on the subjet by a French, but you explain so much on this video thanks...

  • @stephenyuen1610
    @stephenyuen1610 Год назад

    Thanks, British intonation is a topic rarely being touched upon.

  • @claudiomolina4994
    @claudiomolina4994 Год назад +1

    I loved it!!! Thank you very much ❤

  • @Dragonbleps
    @Dragonbleps Год назад +1

    I've been watching videos about British accents to better understand a character I'm writing and how he would speak, in case I had to describe it to someone. But I've also been doing the examples and saying them aloud with your instruction!
    And it made me realize, as a monolingual American, how difficult it is to change one's accent. And how it's different from learning a completely different language in the sense that I know these words already, and my mouth already has a preferred way to pronounce them but I have to fight that, haha.
    Anyway, I've been having a lot of fun. Thank you for the videos :) Yours are some of the best.

  • @DarthGandalfTheGrey
    @DarthGandalfTheGrey Год назад +1

    Thumbs up for IT Crowd!

  • @miodragpopovic3301
    @miodragpopovic3301 Год назад +3

    Hi Gideon,
    many thanks for your clear and concise explanations.

  • @AlexanderVadVer
    @AlexanderVadVer Год назад +3

    You are Brilliant

  • @Sauvageonne
    @Sauvageonne Год назад +1

    Wonderful lesson! Never thought about this, but I can hear myself toning it down when speaking with people from other parts of the world (even the Irish) because, all of a sudden, I feel self aware when I'm the only one speaking like that.

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад

      toning what down?

    • @Sauvageonne
      @Sauvageonne Год назад

      @@LetThemTalkTV The musicality. I tone it down and unconsciously speak with my robot voice :-(.

    • @itsyourgirlzuzu
      @itsyourgirlzuzu Год назад

      @@Sauvageonne Embrace it, stand out in a good way and get recognised faster than others 😆 people are always like “ohhh! The British girl! I remember you!”

  • @дениселизаров-ъ3п
    @дениселизаров-ъ3п Год назад +1

    thank you very much indeed! absolutely brilliant video!!!!!!

  • @ThiccPhoenix
    @ThiccPhoenix Год назад +1

    I’ve never thought of these 🤯

  • @RizwanAhmedKhan-et7gu
    @RizwanAhmedKhan-et7gu Год назад

    Plz make a video on pronunciation explaining stress on particular syllables in 2, 3, and 4 syllabul words
    And if you have such video already made plz send the link

  • @sophiecooper81
    @sophiecooper81 Год назад +1

    Another great video!

  • @EnglishwithAlan
    @EnglishwithAlan 4 месяца назад

    as an EFL teacher, this is very helpful for my students. thank you. to be fair, I think all of these guidelines apply to American English as well. except for the marmite.

  • @francosecchi9288
    @francosecchi9288 Год назад

    Could you run some classes in London! Your lectures are the best!!!

  • @memel5206
    @memel5206 Год назад +1

    Excellent video, thanks sir! ☺️

  • @Tybold63
    @Tybold63 Год назад

    Excellent video am just hampered as I have some not neurotypical features but I think I could try when asking things at least.😉

  • @TheParadise8
    @TheParadise8 Месяц назад

    You Sir are the cream of the crop. 😘

  • @Konrad_K.
    @Konrad_K. 5 месяцев назад

    Fantastic lesson, thank you!

  • @rvcdc
    @rvcdc Год назад

    This is absolutely a hack. Brilliant!

  • @Banes.
    @Banes. Год назад +1

    Thank you. Love it.

  • @priscillateo1691
    @priscillateo1691 5 месяцев назад

    You are quite funny as well. 😊Thanks much for this!! Do you also have a lesson on intonation/stress on syllables of words, not sentences?

  • @Oyamakancho
    @Oyamakancho Год назад

    What an amazing video! Absolutely brilliant! Thank you very much indeed. You couldn't make a video about uptalk, could you? Cheers, Sir!

  • @mariambajelidze8515
    @mariambajelidze8515 Год назад

    Thanks ❤❤ I haven't watched your videos for awhile😥 Today this video popped up and I was ecstatic ❤❤love your channel

  • @majuran6699
    @majuran6699 19 дней назад

    4:59
    Meeting is a singular,
    Therefore it should be
    The meeting starts ....
    instead of 'Start"

  • @longaan2151
    @longaan2151 Год назад +1

    Love this

  • @Ruslan-rt6qe
    @Ruslan-rt6qe Год назад +1

    Great videos! Also Thank you for the Ukrainian bracelet on your wrist!

  • @grantofat6438
    @grantofat6438 Год назад

    I like how you stress: "there are rules", and then 30 seconds later: "of course, you can break this rule."

  • @nHans
    @nHans Год назад +3

    Compiling in one place all the viewers' ideas for food items containing cheese and tomatoes other than sandwiches:
    *Burger, pizza, pasta, salad, chips/crisps/Cheetos, curry, (savory) eclair, stuffed bun* etc. Feel free to contribute more ideas! (I'm personally lactose-intolerant and avoid most dairy products, including cheese.)

  • @rolandochavarria466
    @rolandochavarria466 Год назад

    It's a REALLY REALLY valuable video. Thanks a ton.. 🎉😅

  • @BberryHill1223
    @BberryHill1223 Год назад

    Cheese and tomato pizza…excellent video, by the way.

  • @annamiller9153
    @annamiller9153 Год назад

    Amazing, I found it really useful

  • @englishforadvancedlearners
    @englishforadvancedlearners Год назад

    You made me laugh a lot again with those examples! And besides that, it's a very helpful video. I just realized that I often either automatically use speach patterns from my own language, or I do use English intonation, but in the wrong kind of situation ;-) Some fine-tuning is certainly needed and not very often explained in books or courses. So thanks a lot!

  • @nHans
    @nHans Год назад +4

    Oh no, my natural Indian-English accent goes up and down in a sing-song fashion! Do the Brits think I'm being sarcastic all the time? 🤣
    Despite that, whenever I'm speaking to a room full of native English speakers, I deliberately speak in my natural accent. Paradoxically, that way, they pay closer attention and understand me better, than if I tried to fake a British or American accent. (I do fake my accent on phone calls though. And no, I don't work in a call center 🙄) Maybe it has to do with meeting expectations and avoiding surprises-they see an Indian guy with an Indian name, and are subconsciously primed to hear an Indian accent? 🤔

  • @ChimwangaFix
    @ChimwangaFix Месяц назад

    Helpful

  • @veroniquepeltier3631
    @veroniquepeltier3631 Год назад

    So precious and helpful! Thanks a bunch. The end is delicious.

  • @peaceandlove6854
    @peaceandlove6854 Год назад

    my favourite teacher uploaded a new video! Thank you

  • @fozzytheflyingmuppet
    @fozzytheflyingmuppet Год назад

    Thanks, I had a lot of fun watching this. But my love for everything British stops at warm beer. I don't think a Dutchman can even drink that ;-).

  • @raychat2816
    @raychat2816 Год назад +7

    Good series of videos, I personally still agree with Gideon saying you do NOT need to sound not like where you are from some time ago, English is a third language for me and my accent is ok for me 😊 I do however completely understand why some might have the utter need to lose their accent, specifically for work relations … not however for one’s identity … ultimately

  • @lynnodonnell4764
    @lynnodonnell4764 Год назад

    Alot of readers don't pay attention to words like WAS, ALMOST, WERE etc so I put those words in CAPITALS for EMPHASIS. Or when speaking use tone to accentuate.

  • @БогданКостюченко-ц4о

    Thank you for this splendid lesson, Gideon! By the way, I've got a question about pronunciation to you. Do you hear any difference between the sound in the beginning and the end of the words "under", "upper" and "utter"? The Oxford and the Cambridge dictionaries say they're pronounced /ˈʌndə/, /ˈʌpə/ and /ˈʌtə/, but I don't hear any difference between /ʌ/ and /ə/ Do you hear it?

  • @hatehypocrisy1
    @hatehypocrisy1 Год назад

    Thanks ❤

  • @maksym.kyrylov
    @maksym.kyrylov 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks for another lesson!) 💛💙

  • @andrescastro4836
    @andrescastro4836 Год назад +2

    How's it going' eh? After 40+ years I am still trying to sound Canadian, let alone Brit . Cheers from Van Isle...🙂

  • @ilaFNorte
    @ilaFNorte Год назад +1

    Amazing class! thank you. Am I sounding british? hehe

  • @mariakaraiskou3291
    @mariakaraiskou3291 Год назад

    Oh, what a GREAT lesson!(is this the proper word to put the emfasis on in order to show our positive surprise?)

    • @LetThemTalkTV
      @LetThemTalkTV  Год назад

      I guess if it was something like "the last 10 lessons were terrible but this was a GREAT lesson."

  • @saravananneother4868
    @saravananneother4868 Год назад

    Hi sir, where did you get your t-shirt which has a syntax tree? That's amazing.

  • @davidcanaandaniel
    @davidcanaandaniel Год назад

    That's why I like British English...

  • @Nunaromedus
    @Nunaromedus Год назад

    Thanks. It may help me when I'll be visiting the UK)))

  • @lindafortin7999
    @lindafortin7999 9 месяцев назад

    Bonjour, j’apprécie beaucoup cette vidéo qui nous permet de respecter notre personnalité, comme je suis une personne spontanée, d’apprendre que je peux monter le ton pour montrer ma surprise me plaît beaucoup puisque je peux ainsi être authentique. J’aurais une question pour vous, désolée de vous écrire en français, c’est que je suis une débutante. Comme je suis visuelle, j’appréciais beaucoup qu’au début vous avez démontré par des flèches, quelle partie de la phrase nous devions changer de ton. J’ai encore beaucoup de difficulté à entendre le changement de ton (montant ou descendant). Pouvez-vous me dire SVP dans la phrase : Who’s that guy I saw you talking to? Est-ce à partir de talking to que notre ton descend. Avez-vous une règle pour savoir à partir de quelle partie de la phrase on change le ton? Je vous trouve très brillant de nous enseigner l’intonation, car ça nous permet de s’exprimer en respectant les règles de l’anglais tout en respectant notre personnalité et ça nous donne ainsi plus confiance. Très peu de professeurs nous enseignent l’intonation et pourtant, c’est si important autant pour celui qui parle que pour celui qui reçoit l’information et ainsi se faire mieux comprendre, ça développe une confiance en nous que sans ces outils on n’aurait pas. Je vous admire pour nous enseigner quelque chose d’aussi important et quand on part avec de bonnes bases, ça nous motive à continuer notre apprentissage. Même à notre retraite et malgré l’âge, on a le temps et c’est enrichissant d’apprendre pour notre santé mentale et quel bel objectif. Une retraitée de Montréal, Québec (Canada) 🇨🇦 Merci beaucoup et bonne journée! Linda

  • @victormacgrey8427
    @victormacgrey8427 Год назад

    thank you for supporting Ukraine, really appriciate it , i ve noticed that BAND on your HAND:)

  • @vivianagambetta9197
    @vivianagambetta9197 2 месяца назад

    Super!

  • @insulaarachnid
    @insulaarachnid Год назад +2

    I recently became aware of some English people using the word sat rather than sit/sitting/seated. Is that a widespread habit in the UK?

    • @Sauvageonne
      @Sauvageonne Год назад

      That's quite common in the North.

    • @insulaarachnid
      @insulaarachnid Год назад +2

      @@Sauvageonne Ah, The person I heard using it was a Londoner.

  • @alish2alish
    @alish2alish Год назад

    Ha ha! The melody of british english is on point. As for any other language. But comparing to my mothertongue it's really the same in terms of the tone of emotion. It's just the same. The point is that many learners don't use intonation as much as in their native language. They sound flat like a machine.

  • @briza2022
    @briza2022 Год назад

    so nice video, teacher !!

  • @pianobar8440
    @pianobar8440 Год назад

    love it!

  • @maritzajimenez6690
    @maritzajimenez6690 Год назад

    Lol! You really made me laugh ! Thanks a lot !

  • @sebastianardila7263
    @sebastianardila7263 2 месяца назад

    You said enphasis with an n sound, I had to repeat it many times, its easier for a spanish speaker.

  • @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος
    @ΆγιοςΧίλαριος Год назад

    I'm learning German. Here there's a handful of little nasty words (Modalpartikeln aka, Redepartikeln) which are tbh much pain.

  • @HisHighnessMuadDib
    @HisHighnessMuadDib Год назад +2

    Thanks for supporting Ukraine. Your videos are great!💛💙

  • @Only.mosafeer93
    @Only.mosafeer93 Месяц назад +1

    excuse me sir,
    is it true when we used to be in a question the last intonation fall down
    and
    when we use auxiliary for in a question they will go up, aren't they?

  • @fabiocossa2420
    @fabiocossa2420 Год назад

    thanks, ... and may I ask? ... what does it mean "sounds needy" - that you are gonna ask for sthing?

  • @markedis5902
    @markedis5902 Год назад

    I always say that someone truly understands English when they can swear properly

  • @ДМИТРИЙПристромов-к2д

    Perfect! Some intonations are the same in Russian

  • @lindafortin7999
    @lindafortin7999 9 месяцев назад

    Bonjour, question importante, à cause du titre de votre vidéo : Est-ce que ça veut dire que l’intonation pour l’anglais américain est différente de l’intonation britannique??? Merci beaucoup et bonne journée! Linda 🇨🇦

  • @tetiana7868
    @tetiana7868 Год назад

    What ARE those scones, by the way?

  • @Bayerwaldler
    @Bayerwaldler Год назад +1

    9:11 a cheese and tomato BURGER! 😁

  • @LanaTESOL
    @LanaTESOL 3 месяца назад

    This always confuses me as I would use falling intonation on yes/no questions, such as "Are you hungry?" and I'm a native British speaker. Most people I know also would. I'm from the south. Is the rising intonation what's correct in RP?

  • @adieodds
    @adieodds 2 месяца назад

    After sharing a lab with people from different countries, I picked up bits of their intonation. Most of it leans towards American, and my British accent started sounding off, like some Americanised mix of accents. So now, my speech sounds like I’m from nowhere-or everywhere. Since I can’t really avoid this, I’m looking for ways to get my accent back. Any suggestions?

  • @CrazySoapmaker
    @CrazySoapmaker Год назад

    Thanks a lot for the very useful lesson. And, if you don't mind, please, tell: did you expect so much appreciation for wearing the blue-yellow bracelet in the comments below? It seems like one may say anything, even meaningless, but be gladly received just by wearing right colour laces 😂

  • @hubertheylen1188
    @hubertheylen1188 Год назад

    Quite nice but then, I already own most of it. Speaker is fun to watch though.

  • @lizzies9419
    @lizzies9419 Год назад +2

    Canadians use the rising tone, not just for questions.

  • @murtazinrustam5751
    @murtazinrustam5751 Год назад

    Mr. Good Grammarian!

  • @SevilAbbasova-p9m
    @SevilAbbasova-p9m Год назад

    🌸

  • @lindafortin7999
    @lindafortin7999 9 месяцев назад

    Bonjour,non, je dirais que ce n’est pas simple du tout. Quand vous avez dit que dans une phrase, parfois un mot était plus important qu’un autre. Mais, dans les exemples que vous nous avez donné, ça change complètement le sens. Elle a promis de me donner un sandwich au fromage et aux tomates et si je mets l’accentuation sur le mot TOMATO, on m’indiquait dans la traduction en français : pas de jambon et de tomate. Je ne comprends pas le sens. Au départ, on parlait de sandwich au fromage et tomates et là, on parle de JAMBON, voulez-vous dire : Qu’il a reçu un sandwich au jambon et tomates, alors qu’il ne voulait pas de tomates???? SVP éclairez-moi. Merci, c’est très enrichissant votre vidéo. Linda 🇨🇦

  • @PROCATICJOLT
    @PROCATICJOLT Год назад

    The first scene reminded me of pygmalion.