Chatterbox #137 – Meet Suzanne
Episode description
Today’s episode features a very special interview with Andrew’s colleague Suzanne. Tune in to hear all about Suzanne’s fascinating life and stories. She tells us about what it’s like to be an American and describes some of the differences between life in Canada and the USA. Suzanne also talks with Andrew about her work as a voice actor and tells us about how audio books are produced.
Expressions included in the study guide
- Concordia University
- To think on the spot
- The Marriott Marquis
- The Naked Cowboy
- The Founding Fathers of the United States of America
- A melting pot
- A retrievers
- The first person
- The whole kit and caboodle
- A night owl
- The Tilt-A-Whirl
- To name-drop
Informal contractions in this episode
Informal contractions are unofficial short forms of other words, and they’re usually only used in casual conversation. For example, when a native English speaker talks casually, they might say gonna instead of going to, or whaddya instead of what do you. Even though informal contractions are usually only used in spoken English, we include them in the Culips written transcripts to help you get used to how they’re used and what they sound like.
These are the informal contractions used in today’s episode, along with their meanings:
- gonna: going to
- kinda: kind of
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Chatterbox #137 – Meet Suzanne
Episode description
Today’s episode features a very special interview with Andrew’s colleague Suzanne. Tune in to hear all about Suzanne’s fascinating life and stories. She tells us about what it’s like to be an American and describes some of the differences between life in Canada and the USA. Suzanne also talks with Andrew about her work as a voice actor and tells us about how audio books are produced.Expressions included in the study guide
- Concordia University
- To think on the spot
- The Marriott Marquis
- The Naked Cowboy
- The Founding Fathers of the United States of America
- A melting pot
- A retrievers
- The first person
- The whole kit and caboodle
- A night owl
- The Tilt-A-Whirl
- To name-drop
Informal contractions in this episode
Informal contractions are unofficial short forms of other words, and they’re usually only used in casual conversation. For example, when a native English speaker talks casually, they might say gonna instead of going to, or whaddya instead of what do you. Even though informal contractions are usually only used in spoken English, we include them in the Culips written transcripts to help you get used to how they’re used and what they sound like. These are the informal contractions used in today’s episode, along with their meanings:- gonna: going to
- kinda: kind of
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Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions about our English learning platform.
- They are Canadian and American
- Have master’s degrees and work in professions related to English education (Andrew is a university English professor, Suzanne is a pronunciation coach and voice actor, and Morag is a writer).
- Actively study second languages as adults. Our team understands the ups and downs of studying foreign languages as adults who live busy lives.