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@indikasampath2392
@indikasampath2392 19 сағат бұрын
😍😍😍
@bienvenidosacalgarycanada258
@bienvenidosacalgarycanada258 Күн бұрын
Calgary
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 7 күн бұрын
Question of the day 💡Do you find it harder to speak in formal or informal situations? Let us know in the comments below! 👇 Get 50% off our CLB 9 CELPIP course today! A jam-packed self-study program that includes 2 official paid practice tests ➡ courses.englishforcanada.com/courses/CELPIP?coupon=50OFF
@michelleroach6696
@michelleroach6696 14 күн бұрын
See I wouldn't say that Vancouver is cliquey, we just hang on to our friends and put more effort into our current relationships. We also just at the same time value our private bubbles and we are more honest with our relationships I feel, and so this makes it so we would rather put time and effort into the people we value instead of a fake acquaintance friendship that isn't really established. Most friendships are made out of shared situations like school, work and hobbies and mutual friends. Another point is Vancouverites are more honest about the fact that they just don't know you. You can definitely make friends with Vancouverites though! There are lots of social activities around the city and in nature to get involved in that help you to make friends. Just don't bother people on the street/bus.
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 13 күн бұрын
I appreciate this comment! We just filmed an updated version of this video (being edited so stay tuned) and I agree with you. My views on this have changed as well. I now view friendships as “quality over quantity” and I can now see how Vancouverites take time to develop friendships, not because they’re cold or cliquey, but because they value their time and prefer to invest in genuine friendships. This can be reflected in respecting each other’s time (being punctual) and planning activities in advance. At least this has been my experience over the last few years 😀 I can’t generalize but I’ve met some lovely people from around the world, including people born and raised here like me.
@judyrichardson9607
@judyrichardson9607 14 күн бұрын
So you speak the softer Brazilian Portuguese.
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 13 күн бұрын
I lived in Rio de Janeiro for 8 years so I picked it up there. I have a bit of a Carioca accent but I guess it’s not that strong 😅
@_sshh_
@_sshh_ 14 күн бұрын
Right at the beggining she says she prounonces it normally like 'about' then seconds later turns to the other lady andsays what ABOOT you?? Canadians just dont want tk admit that that is indeed how they all say it lol
@Ringogoldenfinger65
@Ringogoldenfinger65 19 күн бұрын
Why would anyone stay in this fake woke, virtue signaling, highly taxed, frozen hell?
@smritidharchhatwal2661
@smritidharchhatwal2661 19 күн бұрын
For people immigrating yo Australia
@smritidharchhatwal2661
@smritidharchhatwal2661 19 күн бұрын
Yes its Pearson who invented PTE
@user-zf9us1ud1y
@user-zf9us1ud1y 26 күн бұрын
Hello How are you Very good your class great information about The immigration
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 21 күн бұрын
Thank you! :)
@tkuser2143
@tkuser2143 29 күн бұрын
I never practised reading, speaking and writing. Always for 9... but that damn listening never higher then 8...
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 21 күн бұрын
I'll have to create more tips videos! One suggestion for now is to create organized notes going from top to bottom. Also pay attention to the speakers' emotions, intonation, and even what they're wearing in the video! One of the hardest parts about the CELPIP listening test is that you don't get an opportunity to read the questions before you listen to the audio passages. That's why note taking is so important. I do have another video on my channel with some tips for the CELPIP listening test - check it out :)
@intmedubchosp4110
@intmedubchosp4110 29 күн бұрын
No, we don’t
@newbigjon
@newbigjon Ай бұрын
Raincouver? I thought it was Hongcouver.
@MartinJames389
@MartinJames389 Ай бұрын
There is no such thing as "British" English. "Aboot" and "hoose" are Scots vestiges in Canadian English.
@ML-ov7wo
@ML-ov7wo Ай бұрын
Torontonians are just blunt and don't waste time, they don't have short fuses. Ever get in the way of a yogi in Vancouver? They go from Zen to Demon in 1 second. What ever is great about Toronto was created by the people. Whatever is great about Vancouver was already there, and they built around it. Toronto has depth, true culture. Vancouver has mountains, ocean, incredible nature so close to a major city. But the culture is very clique, vapid, and much colder than their big Brother Toronto. Also, people in vancouver love hating on Torontonians (even though they've never been there), yet Torontonians only complain about their own city (and maybe Quebecois).
@tinacurkovic9063
@tinacurkovic9063 5 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing that,I'm moving to Toronto soon,can't live in Vancouver anymore-no vibe,no soul,like a cemetery.
@aleksandrnestrato
@aleksandrnestrato Ай бұрын
Oh, come on! This is the first time this word is pronounced letter by letter! It is literally ‘ou’.
@pfarotub
@pfarotub Ай бұрын
The value of a video of this depth is in helping test takers practice and compare their own responses with real examples presented here by EnglishforCanada. After watching other youtubers, one can realize that what we have here is a full preparation class from start to end. Do you agree?
@shazshaz3142
@shazshaz3142 Ай бұрын
Hey, Keep up the good work! Could you please make a short video on writing component of celpip? It'll be helpful. Thanks!!
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Will do! ❤ Thanks for watching!
@targetpractice2351
@targetpractice2351 Ай бұрын
I swear hollywood has no idea what Canadians really sound like, so they just made up an accent and now all of the USA is trying to gaslight us into thinking we actually have it.
@timberwolfdtproductions3890
@timberwolfdtproductions3890 Ай бұрын
I'm sure this will come as a shock to our American friends, but Canada is a huge country with many differing regional dialects, just like the U.S.
@jamesstuart3346
@jamesstuart3346 Ай бұрын
Canadians from small towns sound different from Canadians from big cities? Rubbish. Source: Lived in Canadian small towns and big cities for 71 years
@Creativeeedit
@Creativeeedit Ай бұрын
@hzadeducation-coachingcent986 so you have to change your templates and thats why i got screwed
@wendynunezfernandez1100
@wendynunezfernandez1100 Ай бұрын
Same situation here... with those templates, I scored less than my first test :(
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada 13 күн бұрын
The examples in the video are of memorized responses - exactly of what you want to avoid doing on the test :) Avoid using any pre-prepared or memorized responses on the day of your test. Watch till the end of the video for my tips on what to do instead 😀
@OstidMongol
@OstidMongol Ай бұрын
Wacko slang !
@greathopforward1705
@greathopforward1705 Ай бұрын
Never heard "hang a Larry" or "hang a Roger" spoken anywhere in BC that I've been to. Is that regional or generational? Also, I've only known a Two-Four as referring to 24 beer. While a Mickey is a 13oz bottle of spirits, a regular bottle of spirits is 26oz, i.e. a 26er.
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Sounds like you’re on Team Marc 😊
@user-fh9tv7pu4e
@user-fh9tv7pu4e Ай бұрын
You both are so beautiful😍❤
@tommasodegiovanni2147
@tommasodegiovanni2147 Ай бұрын
How do Canadians say rackalicious?
@blenderboy1900
@blenderboy1900 Ай бұрын
Why would ANYONE want to sound more Canadian 😭😭😭😭
@hwy27west
@hwy27west Ай бұрын
I don’t think I will ever fool a Canadian, being a 7th generation Texan, I met a couple guys from Glenwood Springs, and I was wanting to hear them say “ey”, they didn’t have to wait long to hear “y’all” from me!
@wiesejay
@wiesejay Ай бұрын
Talk about a boat
@bmolitor615
@bmolitor615 Ай бұрын
No. We don't.
@beautyfulboi
@beautyfulboi Ай бұрын
Hi. Can one choose the order of answering the questions, for instance, can I choose to take the listening section last?
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Hello! No, the test is set and is standardized. Part 1: Speaking & Writing. Part 2: Reading. Part 3: Listening. Fortunately, the listening section IS last on the PTE Core test!
@beautyfulboi
@beautyfulboi Ай бұрын
@@englishforcanada thank you. Is listening also the last section on the CELPIP?
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
@@beautyfulboi No. The CELPIP test goes as follows and you cannot request to change it: Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking. I hope this helps. Check out our other videos for more tips!
@beautyfulboi
@beautyfulboi Ай бұрын
@@englishforcanada thank you. Will do!
@bhaveshgoldenguy
@bhaveshgoldenguy Ай бұрын
What's the conclusion? Is the PTE core actually easier than CELPIP or not?
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
I still recommend the CELPIP test :)
@edwardbach5893
@edwardbach5893 Ай бұрын
You people are hearing things that I can't hear, even when you slow it down and emphasize it. I don't say oot and aboot and I don't hear you saying it either. And I've never heard anyone else say it unless it was an American trying to tell Canadians that we say that.
@pfarotub
@pfarotub Ай бұрын
Very entertaining - a great way of learning. Loved it
@bigdaddy4197
@bigdaddy4197 Ай бұрын
I am Canadian and dont want to sound Canadian anymore. Trudolf made us an embaressment.
@fai8t
@fai8t Ай бұрын
a bawet
@mehedihasanne
@mehedihasanne Ай бұрын
Hello, There I visited your KZbin channel. I saw your content. Your content is so good. You have uploaded regular videos. But why are your videos not showing up on KZbin top? Here you can see your video SEO score is very poor (23 out of 100). And there is no ranking keyword in your video. That's why your video doesn't reach out to people. I can help you grow your channel.
@dalenesbitt
@dalenesbitt Ай бұрын
Check out JJ McCullough. His "about" is very exaggerated to even the Canadian ear.
@nightinthetwilight
@nightinthetwilight Ай бұрын
It's definitely fake. He says it's his natural Canadian accent but he was born and raised in BC. Even if a parent grew up with a maritimes accent, living among so many other people outside of his one parent who doesn't speak in that accent would heavily dilute the potency of whatever influence his parent would give.
@StantonMcCandlish
@StantonMcCandlish Ай бұрын
When I lived in Canada, I noticed quickly that the so-called "aboot" sound was not "oo" (International Phonetic Alphabet "uː") at all, but really roughly the sounds represented by German ö through ü (usually closer to the former, which in turn is closer to "o" and the sometimes-attested rural Canadian "aboat" pronunciation of "about"). To my ears, they varied in exact delivery depending on speaker/region, with sounds that have IPA symbols of œ, ɤ, ɵ, and ʏ depending on exact point of articulation. Something similar happens with the same class of words ("about", "out", "house", etc.) in parts of rural Pennsylvania. I've noticed a similar pattern in Scottish Gaelic, which I've started studying recently. While the pronuciation guides for that language generally don't get so fine, recordings of actual dialectal speakers from various parts of the Scottish Highlands and Islands clearly sometimes have sounds in the œ, ɤ, ɵ, and ʏ range, and vary regionally (and possibly also by age group, with younger speakers often being school-taught; a similar shift is happening in Irish Gaelic, with a national and "simplified" standard starting to supplant local dialectal variation). Given that Scottish and Scots-Irish (Ulster Scots) immigrants were numerous both in colonial Pennsylania and colonial Upper Canada and the Canadian Martimes (the latter of which still have exant Gaelic-speaking populations in a few places), they seem a likely source of this range of vowels in Pennsylvania and Canada (though the German and Dutch immigrants to Pennsylvania may have reinforced these sounds there).
@shijoejoseph2011
@shijoejoseph2011 Ай бұрын
I love how Canadians say, O' HEY BUDD...
@LIUFintess
@LIUFintess Ай бұрын
Hello from America👋 We called Freezy popsicles or sometime icepop, but mostly Popsicles. In the north people say pop, but in the south we say soad.
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Awesome! In Canada, at least in my experience, popsicles are the ones that have the little sticks in them. Freezies are in long, clear bags. Love learning these differences! Thanks for commenting 🤩
@LIUFintess
@LIUFintess Ай бұрын
@englishforcanada You're welcome. I just came back from Langley, BC 2 weeks ago. I didn't realize gas in Canada are in litre, but in America, our gas is in gallon. In America, l can fill my Jeep up for $60.00 but in Canada, it costs me $198.74 to fill up.
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
@@LIUFintess Yes, BC is also particularly very expensive!! Welcome! haha :D
@LIUFintess
@LIUFintess Ай бұрын
@englishforcanada Hahaha. Yes, it took me by surprise. l love the food and the experience was amazing. Everyone was so nice and friendly. I'm from Texas, so we are one of the states that are friendly to people, but l will be back again just for the food and kindness of the people.
@user-zf9us1ud1y
@user-zf9us1ud1y Ай бұрын
Excelent teacher of french
@user-zf9us1ud1y
@user-zf9us1ud1y Ай бұрын
Hello great class of inglês amazing i Love your class online teacher
@acsummer-ol1ux
@acsummer-ol1ux Ай бұрын
We called freezy Popsicles
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Cool! Good to know! 😊 We called popsicles the ones that have the stick in them. Thanks for commenting ❤
@octatana
@octatana Ай бұрын
I've been living in Canada for almost 3 years now (NB and now ON), and the only slang words I've never heard are "hang a Larry" or "hang a Roger," maybe because I haven't owned a car until now. The rest of them are like everyday conversation. Thanks and good luck with this channel! ✌from Ottawa
@englishforcanada
@englishforcanada Ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment and the support!! Much appreciated!
@johnconway9882
@johnconway9882 Ай бұрын
Canadian men tend to lower their voices when they say "about" (sometimes sounding like "a boat")
@ShakuniMamaKaRishtedaar
@ShakuniMamaKaRishtedaar Ай бұрын
I am yet to see the entire video (gotta go somewhere...I am late), but I hope you have mentioned how we get milk in plastic bags in TO.
@fredyellowsnow7492
@fredyellowsnow7492 Ай бұрын
There's a moose loose, aboot the hoose. Only, the moose in Canada has horns and is the size of a truck.
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 Ай бұрын
You both say it.
@justkeepyappin
@justkeepyappin Ай бұрын
She’s not saying aboot though, she’s saying aboat. Nobody except JJ McCullough (I swear he’s the only Canadian I’ve ever heard say that) says aboot. Aboat is the REAL Canadian sounding pronunciation
@hilariousname6826
@hilariousname6826 Ай бұрын
There's 'aboat' and there's 'abowt' - but no 'aboot', definitely.