I've finally become one of the people who watched all the videos on this channel from the first to the latest one. A great way to spend your free time has been found. Absolutely grateful and I'm looking forward to the next lessons, although much prefer reading. It's a job well done. Much appreciated! Hats off to the teacher!🎉❤😊
Thank you, Lori for this excellent explanation that I couldn't find anywhere else! Particularly in compound nouns this makes them sound so much more natural. Think of the word status report template - jeez 😅. Does this also apply to large numbers?7
Hi Susanne! Yes, it would also apply for those large numbers, like "seven hundred fifty-one." We would raise our pitch slightly on the "one," but in order to correctly stress "seven" and "hundred" and "fifty," we would use syllable elongation. Good to hear from you! 🙂
I have noticed that some words (eg. complex, default, compact) tend to have a word stress shift, depending on their role in a sentence. It's a COMplex matter vs This matter is very comPLEX. Is this shift correct or is it just my interlocutors messing with the stress as they think is correct?
Good day to you. Excause me, May I ask you a question, please? As an English native-speaker, are you able to understand Britain's Idioms, phrase verbs or slang, thank you very much.❤
Well, I've never been to Great Britain, so all I know is what I've seen on TV and in movies. I understand some of their idioms, slang, etc., but I'm sure there's a lot I don't know as well! Being a native English speaker doesn't help much if we're talking about two completely different regions of the world--these will have their own unique idioms, slang, etc. The same would be true of Australia.
Hallo , first thing first I would like thank you for your efforts , I learned from you a lot of things I would like to know what is the right Preposition in these sntrlenes . Is it Prove to me or Prove . Explain to me or explain me ?
Hi Nooralden--I'm not an English language teacher (my specialty is pronunciation, not grammar), but I can tell you that native speakers would say "prove to me" and "explain to me" rather than "prove me" or "explain me."
I've finally become one of the people who watched all the videos on this channel from the first to the latest one. A great way to spend your free time has been found. Absolutely grateful and I'm looking forward to the next lessons, although much prefer reading. It's a job well done. Much appreciated!
Hats off to the teacher!🎉❤😊
Thank you so much for taking the time to comment, and for your kind words, Alisa. I enjoy making these! 🙂
Wonders of nature!
Thanks, Geraldo! 🙂
Great video, very helpful!
Thanks much!
You're welcome--thanks for the suggestion! 🙂
It's a great video. I appreciate your videos and inspired a lot for my classes. As an ELT master student, it is also very helpful. thank you!
I really appreciate hearing that. Thanks so much! 🙂
Thanks 🙏🏻
I'm happy you found it helpful! 🙂
Awesome
Thank you , Fernando--I appreciate you watching my video! 🙂
Very helpful ❤
I'm so glad it helped you. Thanks for watching! 🙂
Great!
🙂
Thank you, Lori for this excellent explanation that I couldn't find anywhere else! Particularly in compound nouns this makes them sound so much more natural. Think of the word status report template - jeez 😅. Does this also apply to large numbers?7
Hi Susanne! Yes, it would also apply for those large numbers, like "seven hundred fifty-one." We would raise our pitch slightly on the "one," but in order to correctly stress "seven" and "hundred" and "fifty," we would use syllable elongation. Good to hear from you! 🙂
I have noticed that some words (eg. complex, default, compact) tend to have a word stress shift, depending on their role in a sentence. It's a COMplex matter vs This matter is very comPLEX. Is this shift correct or is it just my interlocutors messing with the stress as they think is correct?
Good day to you. Excause me, May I ask you a question, please? As an English native-speaker, are you able to understand Britain's Idioms, phrase verbs or slang, thank you very much.❤
Well, I've never been to Great Britain, so all I know is what I've seen on TV and in movies. I understand some of their idioms, slang, etc., but I'm sure there's a lot I don't know as well! Being a native English speaker doesn't help much if we're talking about two completely different regions of the world--these will have their own unique idioms, slang, etc. The same would be true of Australia.
Hallo , first thing first I would like thank you for your efforts , I learned from you a lot of things
I would like to know what is the right
Preposition in these sntrlenes .
Is it Prove to me or Prove .
Explain to me or explain me ?
Hi Nooralden--I'm not an English language teacher (my specialty is pronunciation, not grammar), but I can tell you that native speakers would say "prove to me" and "explain to me" rather than "prove me" or "explain me."
@@pronunciationsnippets, thank you
You're very welcome! 🙂