Thứ Ba, 5 tháng 6, 2018

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Hi there, Vladimir here with another video about how to learn English

How many words are there in the English language?

But more importantly

How many words do we really need to know?

How many words in the English language?

This is a very difficult question to answer for a couple of reasons:

first we need to define what we mean by an English word

English is originally a Germanic language

as a result of the Norman Conquest,

thousands of French words entered the English language

Then during the industrial revolution

English borrowed heavily from Greek and Latin

for all those chemicals and other scientific entities

And more recently as a result of globalization,

more words from all over the world enter the English language

What counts as English?

It is hard to say

Another problem is that

it is hard to decide what counts as a word

B-O-W

pronounced /bau/

Bow means Bend

Bow out = leave a job

Bow pronounced /bou/

Bow means Knot

Bow = Weapon

Is that 4 words?

Do we count the plural: Bows as a separate word?

Is that different from the third person Bows

How about the gerund: Bowing

According to Google there are over 1 million words in the English language

Webster's Third New International Dictionary,

includes some 470,000 entries.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 6th Edition includes

230,000 words, phrases and meanings

The Second Edition of the 20-volume Oxford English Dictionary contains

full entries for over 170,000 words

Cambridge Dictionary has over 140,000 words, phrases, and meanings.

How many words in the English language?

Lots of words

A better question might be:

How many words does your average native speaker know?

well it depends but according to the Economist

it ranges from 20,000 to 35,000 words

Still quite a lot

A better question still is

How many words do native speakers actually use?

According to Oxford dictionary:

7,000 words account for 90% of the language

Most native speakers know on average about 27,000 words, but 90% of the time

native speakers of English use just 7,000 words in speech and writing

27,000 vs 7,000 is a considerable difference.

It's Passive vs Active vocabulary

But those numbers are for native speakers

how about non-native speakers?

How many words do we really need to know?

there are 3 answers to that question,

there are 3 numbers:

The first number

is about being able to speak and express our every thought

The second number is about

being able to understand other people in a face-to-face conversation.

The third number is about

watching movies, TV, passing a language test and everything else.

It's basically the size of your Active vs Passive vocabulary.

Let us look at each of these 3 numbers.

How many words do we need in order to speak fluently?

The answer to that question is in the most important piece of advice

I give every language learner:

use monolingual learner's dictionaries

Listen carefully:

monolingual learner's dictionaries use a limited list of common words

for writing simple definitions of every word in the dictionary.

The list is called "defining vocabulary"

according to Wikipedia,

in 1978 Longman was one of the first modern dictionaries to use defining vocabulary,

How many words are on the defining vocabulary list?

Longman uses defining vocabulary of just 2,000 words in its definitions

Macmillan writes the definitions using a special defining vocabulary of 2,500 words

Oxford uses around 3,000 words

here is your answer to the question of speaking:

You need between 2,000 and 3,000 words in order to speak well.

With about 2,500 words you can express

ANY idea

and make a sentence on ANY topic

from literature to business,

from philosophy to mathematics,

from sports to movies,

every conceivable topic

Granted, not in the most eloquent of ways

but still,

you will be able to get your message across.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 words,

Let's meet in the middle: 2,500 words for speaking

How about listening comprehension?

How many words do we need in order to understand what others are telling us

in a typical face-to-face conversation

it depends, but in most cases

2,000 to 3,000 words should do,

same number,

for two reasons:

Firstly, in a face-to-face conversation

native speakers are kind enough to adjust their level,

cutting down on the slang and focusing on more common words and phrases

The second reason you could get by with even 2,000 words

in a face-to-face conversation is that

you can Confirm and Clarify when you don't understand.

In a face-to-face conversation you could ask:

These are the few questions every language learner must learn first.

There is nothing wrong with not being able to hear or understand what other people say,

but there is plenty wrong not being able to ask, confirm and clarify

How about language tests?

the answer to that question is once again in my favorite English learner's dictionaries

According to Macmillan dictionary

90% of the time, speakers of English use just 7,500 words in speech and writing

Oxford dictionary gives a similar number:

7,000 words account for 90% of the language

2,000 vs 7,000 is a considerable difference.

It's Active vs Passive vocabulary:

Active is vocabulary we use with great ease on a daily basis.

Passive is vocabulary we understand when we hear or read but don't use daily.

Let's recap:

2,000 to 3,000 words for speaking

That's active vocabulary

2,000 to 3,000 words for listening in a typical face-to-face conversation

That's active and passive vocabulary

7,000 words for language tests as well as movies, newspapers and news on TV

passive and active vocabulary

And the good news is that

most language learners already know 2,000 words.

The bad news is that

most language learners don't know how to use them quickly

and in grammatically correct sentences.

Most people can't remember the words they know

Remember quickly and use accurately

Because most language learners don't know how to learn vocabulary

that's what Virtually Native is all about How to learn

It is truly shocking how much time people waste because they don't know how to learn English

Don't waste your time and read my book Virtually Native

which is available on Amazon and virtuallynative.com

For more infomation >> How Many Words in the English Language and How Many do we Need? - Duration: 12:23.

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How many of the 50 biggest R-rated horror movies in U.S. box office history have you seen? - Duration: 1:58.

Sitting in the dark, with terrifying images glowing on a huge screen, surrounded by the gasps of fellow movie-goers, the cinema is a perfectly designed space for facing our fears

It's fun to be scared while safe in the knowledge that very soon the lights will come up and you can return safely home

 Hollywood has always relied on horror tropes to draw audiences. In the 1930s, directors recognized the thrilling power of scary movies, and made adaptations of gothic literary classics like Dracula and Frankenstein

By the 1950s, contemporary fears began creeping into horror movies. Godzilla (1954) played into anxiety around nuclear attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, while The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) tackled existentialism

Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) represented a huge step forward for genre, turning the traditional plot structure on its head and making even the editing scary

The 1968 repeal of the Motion Picture Production Code—which censored violence and controversial themes—allowed directors even greater freedom to delve into the deepest reaches of the audience's psyches

Decades after classics such as The Exorcist (1973) and Scream (1995), horror movies show no sign of slowing down

2017 was widely declared the biggest year in horror history, with scary movies collecting their highest ever revenue from ticket sales

But which individual horror movie can claim the all-time number one spot at the U

S. box office? Using data from Box Office Mojo, here are the top fifty horror highest-earners—and to make sure they're really scary, they're R-rated only

Turn on all the lights, check under your bed, and dive right in.

For more infomation >> How many of the 50 biggest R-rated horror movies in U.S. box office history have you seen? - Duration: 1:58.

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Tristan Thompson's Kids: How Many Children Does He Have? | Heavy.com - Duration: 1:40.

Tristan Thompson's Kids: How Many Children Does He Have? | Heavy.com

Tristan Thompson has two kids, a son named Prince and a daughter named True.

The Cleveland Cavaliers star welcomed his first child back in 2016.

He welcomed his second child back in April.

Thompson and his ex-girlfriend, Jordan Craig, a fashion and lifestyle blogger, dated from 2014 through 2016.

Soon after the two broke up, Craig found out she was pregnant.

There were rumors that Thompson cheated on Craig with his current girlfriend, Khloe Kardashian, but Craig was quick to clear up that gossip and set the record straight.

She and Thompson had already broken up when he started dating Kardashian, which debunks the reports that he left his pregnant girlfriend for the reality star.

  #MemoriesWithYou.

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