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English Listening Practice for Beginners

English Listening Practice for Beginners

English Listening Practice for Beginners


In this section he writes and holds self-learning lessons according to the levels of the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR). Your studies include recordings of various situational and interactive exercises that exercise well-developed listening skills, to advance work and communicate in your spare time. The tapes are made to show how the speakers you hear are of different nationalities and how English is used in the world today.



The four types of listening are commendable, empathetic, inclusive and complex. Become familiar with these different types of listening so that you can strengthen and improve your ability to think and evaluate what you listen to.

Become a Keen Listener


List 2 reasons why it is difficult to listen. Tune in to boring things: become a lazy listener and tune in to boring things. Pretending attention: when we pretend to pay attention to boring conversations. Yield to distraction: when we pay attention to the sounds that surround us.

See how they feel.
Listen to their talk.
Get out of the distraction.
Avoid going your way.
Turn off selective hearing.
There are no unsolicited quick fixes.
Be patient.

Take our free online English exam to find out which level to choose. Choose your level from beginner (CEFR A1 level) to advanced (CEFR level C1) and improve your listening skills at your own pace whenever you feel comfortable.

English Listening Tips


Watch a few movies in English every week.
Listen to something in English 3 – 5 times a week.
Listen to English for 15 minutes per day.
Find An English-Speaking Conversation Partner. First of all, it's important to find native speakers to practice with. ...
Make Sure To Listen As Well As Speak. ...
Record Your Conversation Practice. ...
Surround Yourself With The English Language. ...
Practice With Music and Movies. ...
Read Aloud. 
Talk To Yourself.
Listening Strategy: Start with a Positive Mindset for Learning English. Listening in English is hard! ...
Listen, Read and Speak in English. Try and find different ways to practice your English skills. ...
Choose Diverse Listening Materials. ...
Guess First from the Context. ...
Understand the Big Ideas. ...
Go Natural English.

How to Listening English Very Well


Hi and welcome everyone. This is Mino from Anglo-Link.
Today's video is about understanding listening.
I have some interesting tips for you. This is specifically for you
It is still a little difficult to understand native speakers
Or watch television in English
Or listen to the radio in English.
Let me tell you about some specific aspects of the English sound system
And some vocal patterns used by native speakers
It can be heard in English
A little demanding
At the end of this video,
You will have a better understanding of where the problem came from
And what can you do to overcome them
It really does improve understanding of listening.
So when you're ready, let's get started!
Quite right!
Today I want to share
3 keys with you
It really improves the listening comprehension of native speakers.
Let's see what these 3 keys are.
The first thing is that it makes it difficult for native speakers to understand.
The second key is to improve your pronunciation.
It is the third key to improving listening comprehension
Mainly by learning
With ears
Unlike your eyes.
Well, let's start to understand native speakers
It's difficult to understand.
They are the two main reasons for this.
The first
English has a large number of vowels and diphthongs.
And some of these are very similar to each other.
There are many words where consonants are exactly in one place.
And changing the sound of the vowel
The meaning is changing.
And when these vowels seem very similar
And especially if there is one or the other
Not in your language.
It can be done
Very challenging
To understand the native speaker.
Let's see some examples.
These are called minimum pairs.
Same consonants,
Different vowels.
Minimum matches.
Boat
And I bought it. Mad-mad.
Hurd
Heart
Men
The main
More
Then. Bit - bet. To live
Start
So take note
The only difference is the mold
Or diphthong e
They are very similar. So, in connected discourse, they are not easy
To put it aside.
This is the first reason
Because it is difficult to listen to native English speakers.
Now let's take a look at the second reason.
The second reason is the way native speakers are cut
And connecting sounds.
Let me give you a quick example. Look at this sentence:
How are you?
You will hear from a local speaker:
"How are you?"
There are three specific language schemes
Used by all native speakers.
And I'll take you one by one.
Contractions number one of the vocal model.
Contractual and negative verbs.
You are well aware of this.
I'm
he
They will do it
We did it
It will not be
Not
etc ...
It is important to remember
Mother tongue
Always use these patterns while talking.
Unless they want to point out a point.
That's why there is a difference in tone and meaning
'Also. I will do it. '
IS
'I will do it.'
"Nothing will stop me."
When we use contraction there is no pressure
In the form of a contract. There is no special emotion.
Another example,
When using the complete form,
'I want it'.
You want to show the will.
Hence, it is the norm to use contractions rather than the exception in spoken English.
I advise you to try to use them as much as possible.
First of all, you look more natural
And secondly
You can listen to them more easily when using native speakers.
Be careful not to use contractions
In official writing. When you write a letter or report,
Or an article.
Always
Keep it in full form.
Keep the contractions
To talk.
Voice pattern number two is moving.
The voice sample number is called two weekly modules.
Grammatical terms, such as modal verbs,
Possessive adjectives,
The case,
etc ...
Very rarely pronounced in a sentence.
The mold in them shrinks
To a small mold
OR
It disappears completely.
Here are some examples:
Here we have the modal verb 'ken'.
Phrase,
It's like "kn".
The mold disappears.
'I kni ski.'
Let's see another example:
Adjective potential:
'My'
Very clearly,
Only mine".
But in the sentence
It seems so
"Here's the book for me."
You can't feel it.
And another example:
Preposition: for.
Phrase
The vowel is reduced to "fa".
"It's Fa yu."
Now, there is no need to use forms this week when you speak.
Your message will be
Even using them is obvious.
However,
You must know them
And hold them tight
When listening to a native speaker.
Let's take a look at three of the lines of speech.
They are phonetic links.
Any word that usually starts with a vowel
Connected with the previous word.
And it does
Difficult to listen
Each word is typical.
Here are some examples:
'He works
Engineer. 'You have to
Three words that begin with the vowel. 'as', 'an'
And "Engineer".
In connected speech
They all meet.
"Work as Sajanen Gainer."
Second example:
here it is
Four words that begin with the vowel.
IS
Interested in
And everyone runs into it.

Let's take an example:
If you think combinations are characters
'E' and 'A'
It always looks like this:
/ I: /
As in
'Jean'
So you lose the pronunciation
The following words:
"Fantastic", "Here"
'Learn'
'Exchange'
This is an excellent example of a combination of letters
'IT'S AT'
I have five
Different sounds
Another deceptive letter is the letter "U".
If you want the letter "u" to always be / u /
As in "put".
You mispronounce it
The following two words:
'Justice'
He is furious
Because the letter "u" is sometimes / u /
Many times ...
And every now and then ...
Okay, let's take a look at the second round of pronouncing comments.
What:
Word pressure.
In many languages
The strength of your accent spreads evenly between the letters of a word.
However in English
If your word has more than one character, you need to decide
It is one or more letters
Take the pressure off your voice. And which
De-emphasized.
Let's see an example:
Here's a word
With four letters. Now let's decide
This is the letter
Relieve the pressure.
This is the first one:
'Development'.
This is the second:
'Development'.
Third:
'Development'.
Or the last letter:
'Development'.
In this case
This is the second letter
'Development'.
Now, you don't know if you don't hear the word
Many times.
Consider the second example:
Let's take a look at these two terms.
They are very similar in their spelling. So, you hoped to have them
Same rhythms, same music, same pressure of the word.
Of the former, however,
This is the second underlined syllable.
And secondly
This is the first letter
And change the pronunciation
Completely.
First word:
"To propose".
And the second word:
'Purpose'.
So what's the end of the examples we've seen?
Have we looked at the pronunciation loops?
You must avoid how a word is pronounced.
Always check the pronunciation of your learned words.
Just ask someone
Or use a spoken dictionary.
Talking dictionaries are now widely available on the Internet
And you've heard the term many times and you can even make a few
Record your voice and match your pronunciation
With a pattern, this is a wonderful exercise.
Again, you don't have to be one hundred percent correct on your own
Pronunciation to understand.
But if you don't listen
The correct pronunciation of the word is enough times
Your danger is not caught
When the native speaker speaks;
In the flow of other words,
With phonetic links and weak forms around it.
So, work on your pronunciation. This is an important key
Optimize
Your listening understanding.
And finally to the third key,
Improve your oral comprehension.
Learn primarily with your ears
Unlike your eyes.
Now you have a better understanding of why I am a native speaker
It is not always easy to understand.
Especially if you learn your English
From the book
This is a common cause
This is what you see
That's not what they say.
Therefore, the best way to learn new words and expressions is first of all
Hearing them
See them in writing.
So here are some final tips
How to use it
Your ears
Instead of your eyes.
Listen to audiobooks
Rather than reading the printed version of the book.
Listen to the radio
And watch shows and movies
In English as far as possible.
Although at the beginning your perception is very small.
This is a great exercise for tuning your ears into a rhythm of sounds
Music of language.
You may be surprised at how quickly you start to listen and understand more
And many others.
If you are using a textbook,
Work more with co CD
Rather than the book.
Finally,
If you are using the word learned by reading
And never
Heard before,
Make sure to check the pronunciation.
To offer you more tools to improve listening comprehension and pronunciation,
We have recorded all the grammar exercises you have access to
on anglo-link.com
These are available as audio files.
And they will make sure to learn the correct pronunciation and sound
Of important structures
And useful expressions
We have included ours
Anglo-Pedia.
If you haven't done the transcription training, this is your chance
That's all.
I hope you enjoyed it
Video on how to improve listening comprehension
And all the tips are useful.

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