Hey.
My name's Ronnie, and I'm going to teach you
a really important lesson today, so stay glued
to your YouTube or your phone; probably already are.
This is sentence stress or emphasis of certain words in a sentence.
So depending on what word we stress or emphasize,
it's going to actually change the meaning
So, the flow or the intonation of an English
sentence, you have to be careful about this
If I take this sentence, for example, "I never said he ate my cookie."
I've said that with a very straight, flat intonation.
I don't give one or more words more emphasis or stress than the other.
So, generally, you get the idea that, yeah, okay,
well, the cookie, someone took Ronnie's cookie.
But if I say "I", if I emphasize the first subject, "I never said he ate my cookie",
so if I emphasize here, it means someone else said that he ate my cookie.
"I never said he ate my cookie", somebody else did.
Now, if I emphasize the word "never", "I never
said he ate my cookie", if I put the stress
or the emphasis on the word "never", it's
suggesting that that is not even in my style
to talk about things; that's not my vocabulary.
I would never say that, so I'm telling you that it's a lie.
Okay?
"I never said", sorry, let's try again, "I never said that he ate my cookie."
So, I didn't actually say it, okay?
Maybe I texted it to you, or I sent you an email about it, but I didn't verbalize it.
Okay?
So, if I emphasize the verb here, well, you can play with the verb.
Okay?
"I never said that he ate my cookie."
This is how to be snarky with people and win arguments.
Yes.
"He", if I put the emphasis on the person here, "I never said he ate my cookie."
I'm telling you that somebody else did it.
"I never said that she took my coffee."
Okay?
"I never said that he ate my cookie."
Hmm, what did he do to your cookie, Ronnie?
Well, he definitely didn't...
He could have took my cookie, or maybe touched
it, or took a little nibble, yum, yum, yum,
a little bite out of the cookie, but I didn't say he actually ate it.
Okay?
Now, "I never said he ate my cookie."
So, he could be a dirty little cookie monster,
and he could have eaten someone else's cookie.
I'm saying that he ate a cookie, but I didn't say it was mine.
So I'm emphasizing, I don't know, whose cookie was it?
"I never said he ate my cookie."
So he ate something else, but it definitely wasn't my cookie.
He ate something else of mine, maybe, but it definitely was not my cookie.
When you're learning the intonation of sentences,
be very careful where you put the stress on
each word, because you're going to convey different meanings with each emphasis...
With each stress on each word.
So, if you struggle with this, go down to the comments, leave me some examples, and
I'll let you know if you're on point with that or if you've got it.
Bye.