Rules and Patterns of Casual Speech
Rules and Patterns of Casual Speech
Rules and Patterns of Casual Speech
Examples Ill call ya. See ya. I did it cuz I wanted to. Im tired cuz I worked all day. I dont know I dunno I dunno why. I dunno what to do. Lemme do it. Lemme help you. Lemme talk to him. Gimme a call. Gimme a break! Can you gimme a minute? Joo call me? Why joo do it? Joo go out last night Wanna go out? Wanna dance? What do you wanna do? I gotta go. You gotta do it. You shoulda told me. It woulda been nice. We coulda come. You musta seen it. You shouldna done that. I woundna known. It couldna happened. Im gonna go. Its gonna rain. What are you gonna do? Whadda you want? Whadda you doing? Whadda you think? Thats a lotta money. Ive got a lotta friends. Its kinda hot.
because
let me
lemme
give me
gimme
joo
wanna...?
have got to...... shouldve wouldve couldve mustve shouldnt have wouldnt have couldnt have going to
gotta
what do you...?
wadda you...?
a lot of kind of
a lotta kinda
What kinda car is that? out of adda Get adda here. Im adda money. Youre adda your mind. meaning: Youre crazy I go to work. Lets go to a concert. Yeah. Its good. Yup. I did it. Im not going. Nope. Thats not right What are you doin? Nothin much.
go to
goddu
yes
no nope -ing
. .
sounds like thee. When it is followed by a consonant, the final sound is //, like the u in fun.
Reducing Pronouns
When we reduce the pronouns, the first letter is often silent. For example, the letter h is often silent for the words he, him, his, her, and hers when these pronouns are not the first words of a sentence. Also, the th sound is often silent for the word them. This is particularly true in casual speech, but it frequently occurs in formal speech as well.
Contractions
1. The Verb to be
Im happy. Shes American.
2. Auxiliary Verbs
These include be, would, will, and have. Hes working. Hed like to go. Ill call you. Ive been there.
sounds like: casual speech: 1. would have wouldve woulda 2. would not have wouldnve wouldna 3. could have couldve coulda 4. could not have couldnve couldna 5. should not have shouldnve shouldna
Conditional Questions
With questions using have you must add an // sound between the pronoun and the contraction. But for statements, dont do this. For example a question like Would you have been there? would sound like Would you//ve been there? However, a statement would sound like: Youve been there. sounds like: 1. Would you have? Would you//ve? 2. Would you have been? Would you//ve been? 3. Would she have? Would she//ve. ? 4. Would she have wanted? Would she//ve wanted?