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(单词翻译:双击或拖选)
Today on Ask a Teacher, we answer a question from Valens in Rwanda.
Question:
“Please explain how to use ‘gonna.’" – Valens, Rwanda
Answer:
Dear Valens,
You probably hear native English speakers on television and in movies using reduced forms of words all the time. Examples are the terms gonna, gotta, wanna, shoulda and oughta.
In spoken English, we often put words together. In the process, we also leave out some letters and the vowel1 sounds change a little. So the expression "going to" becomes "gonna."
Reduced forms are informal2 speech
Here are a few examples of reduced forms in formal and informal speech:
Formal: What are you going to do tonight? Do you want to see a movie?
Informal: Whatcha gonna do tonight? Wanna see a movie?
Formal: Sorry, but I've got to do my homework. You ought to do yours, too.
Informal: Sorry, but I gotta do my homework. You oughta do yours, too.
Note that the informal examples are how many people normally3 speak. It would sound very formal and, as a result, strange to pronounce every sound of every word. This shortening4 of sounds happens in many languages.
Use reduced forms in speech, not in writing
In English, you may not see the short forms in writing because writers are usually more careful to spell each word. But when a writer wants to show how a person is really speaking, these short forms can appear in books and, more commonly, in popular culture.
Compare these examples from popular movies. The first is the reduced form of "Get out of there!"
(phone rings. Tom Cruise5 answers) Cruise: Hello. Voice: Get outta there! They know. Get out!
Woman: Get outta there.
Man: Don't talk to him. Get outta there!
Here are examples of "It's going to blow." [explode]
Ironman: Got a nuke comin' in. It's gonna blow in less than a minute.
Boy: But wait, but the plane - it's gonna blow up, it's gonna blow up!
Sometimes, people have little time to tell others about their exact problem, so they use reduced form words. But people in everyday life also use reduced forms to seem friendly.
It's fine to use terms like these when you are speaking with friends. It's better not to use them in English class or a formal situation, like an office.
Remember that you should not write the reduced forms, except in informal communication to friends or family.
That's Ask a Teacher for this week. So I've gotta get outta here.
I’m Jill Robbins.
Words in This Story
vowel – n. a speech sound made with your mouth open and your tongue in the middle of your mouth not touching6 your teeth, lips7, or other parts of the mouth
formal – adj. (of language) suitable8 for serious or official speech and writing
informal – adj. (of language) relaxed in tone9 or not suited for serious or official speech and writing
pronounce – v. to make the sound of (a word or letter) with your voice
spell – v. to say, write, or print the letters of (a word or name)
nuke - n. (informal) a nuclear weapon
blow – v. (informal) to explode; to damage or destroy (something) with an explosion
1 vowel | |
n.元音;元音字母 | |
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2 informal | |
adj.非正式的,不拘礼的,通俗的 | |
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3 normally | |
adv.正常地,通常地 | |
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4 shortening | |
n.缩针,简写;酥油/雪白奶油v.弄短,缩短( shorten的现在分词 ) | |
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5 cruise | |
v.巡航,航游,缓慢巡行;n.海上航游 | |
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6 touching | |
adj.动人的,使人感伤的 | |
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7 lips | |
abbr.logical inferences per second 每秒的逻辑推论n.嘴唇( lip的名词复数 );(容器或凹陷地方的)边缘;粗鲁无礼的话 | |
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8 suitable | |
adj.合适的,适当的,适宜的 | |
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9 tone | |
n.语气,音调,气度,色调;vt.(up)增强 | |
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