Listening
Marrying sounds and words
Connecting sounds with their corresponding words takes time and patience.
Individually words frequently differ in pronunciation when spoken; the way sounds and words connect contributes to fluency.
Use the subtitles or transcript to understand how words are spoken: pronunciation, stress and emphasis.
I’ve caught over 200 great white sharks, here's how
How do you catch a great white shark? Brett McBride, captain of the M/V Ocearch hoping to study the elusive Mediterranean great white explains how his team catch and tag sharks without harming them.
Task
Listen to the video, then answer the questions.
Watch the video (without the transcript or subtitles).
Observe how speakers stress words and fit them together to form sentences.
Note timestamp for unclear speech, confusing words or phrases or perhaps where the speaker is a little too fast.
Watch again (with transcript or subtitles) and check against your noted timestamp: is it any clearer? What is unclear: a word, phrase or the structure?
Answer the questions before expanding and viewing answers.
Any doubts, contact your mentor.
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Anything like that refers to anything related to fishing rods, monofilament lines, or lines in general.
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Set refers to a group or collection of things that belong together or resemble one another or are usually found together.
I have brought a spare set of clothes.
We can order a replacement set for the printer.
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Get means succeed in attaining, achieving, or experiencing; obtain.
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Weight refers to responsibility.
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The world will know means he is transparent in all he does and any mistakes are not hidden nor covered.