This past weekend, I was in Autrans with some teacher friends and we were playing a game called Bananagrams.
It’s a word game (like Scrabble, but more fun!), so I’m sure you can imagine that we English teachers were having a blast, having lots of fun.
As we were playing, I placed the word “Totem.”
Jane, a British friend asked me what word I had.
“Todem.” I said, with my American accent.
“That’s not a word. Totem is, but not todem!” (The difference is in the pronunciation—try it!)
That’s what I said “to-Tem”, I replied, trying to do my best British accent.
Clearly, my American accent meant that British Jane didn’t understand what I said. And we speak the same language!
If you have problems understanding your American colleagues, perhaps you thought that it was because English is not your native language.
But in fact, it can also be due to their American accent.
I don’t have to tell you that Americans don’t always articulate and that it sometimes (ok, often…) seems all the sounds run together.
It’s so frustrating, especially when you know that your English is decent.
But it doesn’t have to be so difficult, if you’ve got some of the “secrets” to understanding the American accent.
Of course, I can’t give you all the secrets at once, but this week’s episode shows you how to understand some VERY common expressions: “What are you…” and “What do you…”.
It’s one very useful secret. 🙂
Don’t let the simplicity of the written structures fool you. When you read them, they’re extremely simple. When you hear them…well, that’s where it gets complicated.
This week’s episode will greatly help you better understand your American colleagues.
So, whuduhya think?
I’d love to hear from you. Did this video help you? Have you heard your American colleagues talk like this?
Leave a comment below and let us know.
You know, thousands of other French-speaking professionals come to this blog to boost their English and boost their career.
Share your story and join the conversation! After all, we can all learn from each other!
Thank you as always for reading, sharing and joining in!
Have a fantastic week in English,
Christina
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Thank you so much for this lesson it was really helpful and please keep making such videos so that we can differentiate between what we hear and what we read
Great Sanjana, I’m glad to hear that this lesson helped you! What’s ONE thing that you learned from it that you didn’t know before?
Many thanks Cristina ☺,
Your lessons help me because it’s pretty hard to understand English people so image American…
Have fun
Sandrine
Great, Sandrine, I’m happy to know that you’re improving your English with my lessons, and that you’re enjoying it too. All the best!
Thanks you so much for this lesson and all lesson. It is very usefully for me . I live in AMERICA since few times and I need really to understand very faster