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  • Hi. How are you? Good. Cool.

  • I'm Ronnie, and I'm going to teach you some slang.

  • Probably the coolest thing in the world is to learn how to speak like a normal person,

  • instead of reading a textbook and sounding like my grandmother.

  • So, slang is really important and you have to use it, but there's a problem: It's really hard. Yeah. You...

  • If you study grammar, you don't understand how you could use two verbs together and it

  • has a completely different meaning - welcome to the world of slang.

  • And I invite you to make up your own slang, it's fun.

  • You can do whatever you want.

  • But I'm going to teach you three slang terms that we use a lot, and I think they're kind

  • of confusing for you, but once you learn this it'll be easier.

  • So, why is slang so hard to learn?

  • The answer is because grammatically it doesn't make sense, so I want you to take grammar

  • and throw it out the window, and think about how you communicate with people, how people

  • communicate with each other on an everyday basis, because guess what, ladies and gentlemen?

  • Grammar, just don't need to study it.

  • Just study this.

  • So, this is a really popular phrase that I hear a lot, it's called: "go-to" plus a noun,

  • and basically this means this would be something that you choose regularly or this is your

  • regular choice.

  • Now, I am very indecisive.

  • "Indecisive" means I have a very difficult time making a decision or choosing something.

  • So, for example, if I have to buy a bottle of wine, there's so many bottles of wine,

  • I have my go-to wine.

  • This is my go-to wine.

  • This means this is the wine that I always choose because I know it's delicious and it's

  • my best choice.

  • It's my...

  • It's my choice.

  • I love it.

  • But let's say that I go to the supermarket and I have to buy yogurt.

  • I don't know about your countries and the yogurt selection, but it is overwhelming at

  • my supermarket.

  • There are probably 42 different types of yogurt, and never mind the flavours, they're just

  • different kinds of yogurt, and I'm pretty...

  • I have no idea what to choose, maybe I'm an hour picking a strawberry yogurt.

  • If you're decisive, you rock in, you go there, and you pick the yogurt and you go.

  • Not Ronnie.

  • Ronnie takes hours just to pick a yogurt.

  • Never go shopping with me.

  • So, when we use this, we use it with a noun, so I can say: "This is my go-to dish."

  • This means this is what I usually cook because I know how to do it and it's easy.

  • "This is my go-to dance move."

  • Do you have one of those?

  • Ones that you just bust out or you use all the time?

  • Because with any song you know it's going to be perfect.

  • Do you have a go-to dance move?

  • I do.

  • "This is my go-to guy" or "man for advice".

  • So maybe you need advice for something, you have one friend who you always can depend

  • on, or who you always choose to go to.

  • It has nothing to do with movement, you're not actually going to a wine.

  • How can I go to a wine?

  • It means that this is the one that you choose, and you know that it's going to be great.

  • We talk about "go-to bag": "Oh, this bag matches everything".

  • Or: "My go-to shoes", it means that these are the shoes that you wear every day because

  • you know they're easy and they match everything.

  • I have shoes.

  • You can't see them, though.

  • I actually don't have feet.

  • Did you know that?

  • I have shoes, but I have no feet.

  • Yeah, so these are my go-to shoes, but I don't have any feet, so that's fine.

  • The next one, one of my favourites, I like this one: "I rocked up."

  • So we have to be careful with the pronunciation of this word, we have to say "rocked", it

  • looks like "rocketed".

  • We don't say: "rocketed", we pronounce it like "t", we say: "rokt up", so this means

  • that you went to a place.

  • Example: "I rocked up to her..."

  • No, sorry.

  • "I rocked up to the bar and got a beer."

  • So this means I went to the bar: "Hello", and I received a delicious beverage.

  • You can rock up to a person, this means you just talk to them.

  • So: "I rocked up to her and asked her for a dollar."

  • This is the past tense, you're telling a story.

  • You can say to your friend: -"What time did you rock up to my house last night?

  • I don't remember."

  • -"Oh, I rocked up at about 8."

  • That means I went to that place.

  • So you're thinking: "Wow, it has nothing to do with a rock, Ronnie."

  • Ronnie wants to rock.

  • So: "rock up" means you go someplace or you talk to a person.

  • "What time are you rocking up tomorrow?"

  • "Hit it" or "hit" plus a place, so if you say...

  • Let's say your friend says: "Oh, do you know what?

  • I really want to travel."

  • And I say: "Hit it."

  • Do it. Make it a dream come true. Do it. "Hit it."

  • We also have an expression that we use with sex, if you're looking at people, be like:

  • "Oh, I'd hit it.

  • I'd hit that."-men usually say this-this means that they would like to have sex with someone.

  • "Oh, I'd hit that." Okay?

  • And if you say: "I'm gonna", which is "I'm going to", but we don't say "going to", we

  • say "gonna": "I'm gonna hit the gym."

  • You think: "Ah, you're going to hit?

  • What? Why are you hitting the gym?

  • That must hurt your hand."

  • If you use it with a place, it means you're going to go to.

  • So: "I'm going to hit the gym" means that I'm going to go to the gym.

  • "I'm going to hit the hay." Hi.

  • This is an expression, it means go to bed, because I guess a long, long time ago we slept in hay.

  • So, if you hear someone: "I'm going to hit the hay", it means they're going to go to bed.

  • "I'm going to hit the liquor store.

  • Can I get you something?"

  • So, if you hit the liquor store, you're not, again, punching it, you're actually going

  • to the liquor store.

  • So, if you want to hit it or if you want to rock up, or if you want to have a go-to something,

  • now you know what these words mean.

  • I hope that you can use them in your everyday vocabulary and I hope that slang isn't that

  • difficult, because it's how we speak.

  • Till next time, I'm rocking out of here.

Hi. How are you? Good. Cool.

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A2 初級

2018年の英語スラングを学ぶ:go-to, hit it, rock up (Learn this English slang for 2018: go-to, hit it, rock up)

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    HQQ に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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