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Learning English by Watching
Movies Tips
Learning English by watching movies is learning by input. First
you get lots of correct English sentences into your head. Then you can imitate them and you can make your own
sentences. And isn't that why you are learning English — to be able to make
your own sentences? That is why watching movies (just like reading books) is
such a great way to learn English.
Of course, there are important differences between movies and books. With
books, you learn how native speakers write in English.
With movies, you learn how they speak English.
- You learn what words they use. When speaking, native
speakers use words and phrases that you often won't find in a book.
Spoken language is different from "book language". For example:
Book: The price of five dollars was acceptable, and I
decided to purchase it.
Spoken: It was, like, five bucks, so I was like "okay".
In many movies, the dialog is like real spoken English. Movies also
let you learn informal and slang words which are not yet in English
dictionaries. For example, in a movie you might hear Give me the
freaking keys!, but you won't find the word freaking in a
dictionary.
- You learn how they say these words. Movies let you improve
your pronunciation, not only grammar and vocabulary. If you listen to
Americans or Britons speaking English, you can learn to speak like them.
- You learn to understand spoken language. Movies are made
for native speakers, not for learners of English. So the actors talk
fast, just like native speakers talk in real life.
Movie guides
There is a great alternative to subtitles.
ESLnotes.com is a website
which has "guides" to popular movies. A guide is a list of over 100
difficult sentences from a movie with explanations.
Now the most important thing: You first read the explanations;
then you watch the movie. So, when you're watching the film, you
already know the necessary vocabulary!
We think this is the best strategy for watching movies, because:
- It feels great to understand a movie in the original! It's
very, very motivating when you learn a word, and then the knowledge of
the word lets you enjoy the movie. It gives you a lot of pleasure — so
you will want to learn more English vocabulary to understand even more.
- You don't have to stop the movie. (Or you have to stop it
less frequently.) You can simply watch it and enjoy it.
A guide doesn't explain all the difficult sentences in the
movie. But the explanations in the guide should be enough to help you
understand what's happening in the movie.
Movies Watching Resources:
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Apple - Movie Trailers.
Apple's official
Quicktime Movie Trailer page with the newest and preview release
trailers. You need to install the
Quicktime player
in order to view the trailers.
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Lingual.net - Learning English
through Movies is a website where students learn English by watching authentic
English language movies, which belong to a number of kinds.
Features:
• Movie categories: Drama, animation, cine-poetry, home made, documentary,
travel, commercials, home and garden
• Each movie played in a separate window with or without subtitles and
accompanied by a synopsis, a comprehension quiz and a full transcript
• Users can submit their own videos
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English Trailers is a special
website which aims to help learners of English improve their ability to use the
language by watching movie trailers, or commercials.
Features:
• A large database of movie trailers which can be sorted by alphabetical order,
difficulty level or release date
• A variety of movie genres including action, adventure, comedy, documentary,
drama, horror, romance, science fiction, suspense and thriller
• Plot summary, script and various activities for each movie trailer including
warm-up speaking topics, a listening cloze test, a general language quiz and a
web research guide
• Definitions and example sentences of potentially difficult vocabulary words
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Movies at Yahoo Browse new movie
trailers, videos, and clips from Yahoo! Movies. Browse and watch new and popular
trailers and video clips from Yahoo! Movies.
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