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  • Hey guys! I wanted to make you a video today but I'm just too busy. I'm absolutely swamped.

  • I'm overwhelmed. I'm up to my ears in errands, and kids.

  • Up to my ears. What? Exactly.

  • I'm just very busy today running errands. Isn't that funny? We use the verb 'running' for errands but

  • we're almost never actually running. We're usually either driving or walking. Driving as I am today.

  • But I'm so busy that I don't really have time to sit at my desk today to make a video.

  • So instead, we're gonna make the video while we're driving, and this video is on being busy.

  • Fifteen ways to say you're busy.

  • There are a lot of fun idioms that we'll learn here and it's just nice to know more than one phrase to use for

  • a given situation. First, a quick note on the word 'busy'. It's spelled with the U but that's actually the IH

  • as in sit vowel in the stressed syllable. Some of my students make that tighter, they make it more of a EE.

  • Busy-- bee-- bee-- but it's bih-- busy. A little bit more relaxed. Busy.

  • Another way to say 'I'm busy' is to say: I'm buried.

  • No, I don't actually mean I'm dead buried covered with Earth, but I mean, I'm covered with things to do.

  • I'm absolutely buried. I can't do anything else. Now, depending on where you are in the US,

  • this word will be pronounced differently. The most common pronunciation is the EH as in bed vowel

  • like in the word 'bear', or in the word 'air'. Bear. Buried. I'm absolutely buried.

  • We've got a very tight fit here, folks. Going to have to put a pause on the video while I focus on it,

  • just exactly how wide is the car that I'm driving.

  • Because I'm going to be honest with you, I am NOT a confident driver, and here's a guy with his door out

  • ahead of me so I'm just gonna have to give my horn a little honk so he'll pull it in.

  • And he did, thank you. This is not my best work.

  • Okay I was partially on the curb there, I am no longer on the curb, that is a bonus.

  • That guy really helped me out.

  • I think it just blew out a tire.

  • Let's see.

  • You can also say I'm swamped or I'm slammed. Oh, I'm exhausted. I was so slammed at work today.

  • Or: I'm just so swamped at work right now. I'm working late every night.

  • This is actually an interesting time to think about ED ending words. Now with swamped,

  • the ED ending is a T sound because the sound before was unvoiced. That is the P sound. Ptt-- Swamped.

  • But with slammed, the ED ending is a D sound because the sound before was voiced, the M sound, slammed.

  • So I have a video on how to pronounce ED endings, those rules,

  • you can check it out by the link in the video description below.

  • You could also say: I have a lot on my plate. Now, this phrase has a literal meaning.

  • I've got a lot on my plate.

  • I literally shot that clip three years ago, and i've just been waiting for the chance to use it.

  • I actually use this phrase quite a bit. I used it last week in an email, just to say that I'm very busy in my life

  • with a lot of different things. I've got a lot on my plate right now.

  • You could also use this as an excuse not to do something.

  • You could say: I have too much on my plate right now.

  • Hey guys! I'm working on editing this video right now, and actually, one thing that I thought about was

  • I've been using the phrase, related to the phrase, 'a lot on my plate', quite a bit lately.

  • Here's the deal, a lot of you guys know Tom, he's been on this YouTube channel before,

  • he's a great teacher in Rachel's English Academy. Well, he recently started working full time for Rachel's English.

  • And one thing I've been saying about that as I talk about that, is I'll say:

  • He's taking some things off my plate.

  • Now, if you didn't know this idiom, you might think: Why is this man stealing Rachel's food?

  • But of course, that's not what it means. It means he's taking on some tasks that I used to do,

  • and that's wonderful. So you may find yourself thinking: Hmm... I'm really busy.

  • I wish I could hire an assistant to take some things off my plate.

  • You could also say: I've got a lot going on. Or: I've got too much going on.

  • I'm so stressed. I've got too much going on.

  • You can also say: I'm juggling a lot right now. What does it mean? Again, it's just another way to say: I'm busy.

  • I'm juggling a lot right now, between work and the kids, and we have guests in town.

  • At the beginning of the video, I said: I'm up to my ears. Now this is a phrase that we usually use with 'in'.

  • I'm up to my ears in dirty diapers. Now, that feels very true because I have a nine month old baby.

  • So I am very busy caring for my baby.

  • Yes, that was a blacksmith. We also have another idiom for being busy that comes from blacksmiths.

  • And that is 'to have a lot of irons in the fire'. I'm so sorry I can't pick up another consulting job

  • I have a lot of irons in the fire right now.

  • Now, we have two that begin with 'over'. We have overwhelmed and overloaded.

  • Again, they both just mean 'too busy'. Let's use a sentence.

  • The employees are overloaded, I think we need to hire more staff. I'm overwhelmed by my workload.

  • I'm overwhelmed by having two kids. Now, overwhelmed means not just really busy, but it's too much,

  • it's stressing you out, it's taking an emotional toll.

  • What about when you're busy, and you don't just mean in general, but you mean at a specific time.

  • For example, Rachel do you want to go get a drink tonight? I can't, I'm busy.

  • You could also say: Sorry, I'm unavailable. Hey, do you want to go out to dinner tonight?

  • Sorry, my schedule's full. Or: I can't, I already have plans.

  • You could also say: I'm tied up with other things. Tied up.

  • You could also simply say:

  • I just don't have the time.

  • Hey, Rachel can you work on this project with me?

  • Sorry I don't have the bandwidth.

  • Bandwidth. Now this is a word that we sometimes use with electronics, but we can also use it for ourselves,

  • to mean we don't have the energy, we don't have the mental capacity to take on more tasks

  • because we've already got so much going on, we're already overloaded, we do not have the bandwidth.

  • You know, as I think about it, all of these phrases can be related to saying 'no'.

  • Often when we say 'no' to something, we also want to say that we're busy, we want to say why we're saying 'no'.

  • And there are a lot of ways to say 'no' and I'm thinking this would make a really interesting video.

  • As you know, I'm very busy, too busy to make a regular video for you today, but you know what?

  • I think that video is important enough that I'm going to clear my schedule. I'm gonna prioritize it.

  • I'm gonna make time to make that video. Okay, now we're getting into phrases that we use

  • when we are busy, but we're gonna make ourselves not busy. I'm gonna prioritize that.

  • I'm going to clear my schedule. I'm going to make room in my schedule for that.

  • So please join me here next week, let's make time, let's clear our schedules, and do this together.

  • We'll watch the video on how to say 'no'. The next video I think you might want to watch is this video,

  • it's a phrase video that I made in my kitchen where I go over lots of ways to describe where something is.

  • Now, I know that you're busy and that you've prioritized watching this video, thank you for that.

  • Thank you for your time. Thank you for studying with me.

  • That's it guys and thanks so much for using Rachel's English.

Hey guys! I wanted to make you a video today but I'm just too busy. I'm absolutely swamped.

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A2 初級

I'M BUSYの15の言い方 勉強になる英語のレッスン 勉強になる英語のフレーズ (15 ways to say I’M BUSY ⎢ English Lesson ⎢ English Phrases)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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