Extended Family vs. Immediate Family 馃應 English Vocabulary with Jennifer - YouTube

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Hi. I'm Jennifer from English with Jennifer, and I'd like to share a lesson
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to help you learn English vocabulary and understand American culture a little better.
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Thanksgiving is a time when we gather with family.
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Sadly, my family is so spread out that we can't easily gather for holidays.
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My relatives don't just live in different towns or even different states; they live
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in different countries. Thankfully, I have some things in my home that make me feel
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closer to family. For example, I have serving dishes from my grandmother.
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Like this one and this one. When I see them and use them, I think of all the
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Thanksgiving dinners we had with family around the table. My extended family is quite large.
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Do you know what I mean by extended family? In this lesson, we'll go
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beyond basic family vocabulary and we'll talk about different branches on your
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family tree.
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When you're a kid, your immediate family is your parents and your siblings.
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Some call this the nuclear family. I think sometimes the words are interchangeable.
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Nuclear family. Immediate family. But what I understand is that the nuclear family
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is under one roof. The household of a nuclear family consists of the parents
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and the children. My concept of immediate family is a bit bigger.
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As adults many of us
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get married and have children. You could say that my nuclear family now is
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my husband and our children. But when I think of immediate family,
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I still include my parents and my brothers. Does that make sense?
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But those relatives are not necessarily considered immediate family for my children.
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For them, their immediate family is me, my husband, their father, and each other. Get it?
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You'll hear the term "immediate family" in the context of rules
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and policies. For example, at a hospital, a very sick patient would be allowed to
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receive visits only from immediate family. And at work, you would be allowed
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to take off a certain number of days for a family emergency. That's a kind of
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emergency that concerns immediate family, not some distant cousin.
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Extended family refers to relatives outside the nuclear family: grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins.
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All those more distant branches on your family tree are part of your extended family.
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Did you know your great-grandparents? Maybe you're fortunate enough
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to still have them around today.
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I knew my great-grandmother. She was my grandfather's mother, and she came to the U.S.
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from Hungary. She married my great-grandfather who came from Serbia.
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My great-grandparents on my grandmother's side were from Poland, and they didn't
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live long for me to meet them. Obviously, I didn't
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have the chance to meet my great-great-grandparents.
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I met my paternal grandparents, my father's parents, because they visited us
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from the Philippines when I was a child.
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Note how we can use these phrases to clarify which part of the family tree
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were referring to: on my mother's side, on my father's side, my maternal grandparents,
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my paternal grandparents.
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Now this is where it gets a little confusing. Who is the sister of your grandmother or grandfather?
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That's your great-aunt. Some say grandaunt,
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but I don't hear that too much. I knew at least two of my great-aunts on
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my mother's side. My grandmother's brother needed regular care, so he lived
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with my grandparents. Who was he to me? He was my great-uncle, and I was his grandniece.
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My brothers were his grandnephews. You'll also hear "great-niece" and "great-nephew."
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Same thing. Just remember that we use "great" to indicate that we're one
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generation removed from that person. We add on another "great" for each generation.
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Can you name your great-great grandparents? Do you know how I called my relatives
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in childhood? Forms of address vary from family to family, especially in
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intercultural marriages. I called my grandparents on my mother's side Grandma
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and Grandpap. I called my grandparents on my father's side Lola and Lolo.
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My -uncle was Uncle Jim. My great-aunt was Aunt Kazia. And note how I said "aunt."
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In American English. you can say /忙nt/ or /蓱nt/. I just happened to say /忙nt/. My Aunt Kazia.
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My children call my husband's mother Babushka.
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Their grandmother is in Russia. What do you call your grandparents?
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How do you address aunts and uncles?
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My father immigrated from the Philippines, so I
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didn't get to know his side of the family too well. I did get the chance to
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meet most of his sisters. They were and are my aunts. On my mother's side, I
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didn't have any aunts or uncles because she was an only child. But my grandmother
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came from a very large family, and her siblings had children, so my mother and I
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had lots of cousins growing up.
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A first cousin is the child of an aunt or an uncle.
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Second cousins share great-grandparents. Think about that for a moment.
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My grandmother had one child, my mother. My grandmother's sister, my Aunt Kazia
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also had children. Those children were first cousins to my mother.
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Their children and I share a set of great-grandparents, so we're second cousins.
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At least, that's how I understand it. When it gets really confusing, we just
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call people cousins. I have a lot of cousins back in Pennsylvania, my home state.
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You can get into third cousins when you start talking about children of
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second cousins, but if it gets too confusing, then just call people cousins
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or simply family. You can call relatives family. You're related. They're part of
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your extended family. When we can't remember exactly how we're related, we
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sometimes refer to someone as a distant cousin. You know that you're related by blood.
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Sometimes you'll hear once removed or twice removed. This refers to how far
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apart you are in generations. My mother's first cousin and I became quite close.
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She is my first cousin once removed. For my children, she is
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their first cousin twice removed. They simply think of her as a cousin.
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It's simpler that way. Let's not forget about in-laws. When you get married, you marry into another family.
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My husband's parents are my in-laws. My mother-in-law and
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father-in-law were able to attend our wedding because we got married in Russia.
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My husband has a sister. She is my sister-in-law, and my brothers became my
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husband's brothers-in-law.
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Note these plural forms: mothers-in-law,
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fathers-in-law, sisters-in-law, brothers-in-law.
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But to talk about the mother and father of your spouse, you can simply say "in-laws." For example,
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"We're spending Thanksgiving with my in-laws." Or "My in-laws are visiting this weekend."
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In modern society, we have different kinds of families. Second and third marriages
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are fairly common, so we have blended families. That's when two families become one.
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A couple gets married, and they bring with them children from a previous marriage.
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The ex-husband or ex-wife are no longer
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immediate family to the person who got remarried. In a blended family or in a
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second marriage, we can talk about stepparents and stepchildren, stepmother
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stepfather, stepsister, stepbrother. When you think about parents and siblings and
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cousins of a stepmother or stepfather, it gets a little confusing. You can explain
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that someone isn't a blood relation. They're not a blood relative, but they're
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still family. You can be related by birth or by marriage. The funny thing is that
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we can be very close to someone who isn't a blood relative,
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but they're like family. We say, "She's like a sister to me." "I consider him family."
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Here are a couple more words you need to know. What do we call two
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children who share only one parent?
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They're half-brothers and half-sisters.
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For fun and for practice, talk about your family. See how many people you can name
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on your family tree. Use vocabulary from this lesson.
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Here's a quick quiz you can answer in the comments.
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Who is your mother's new husband?
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Who is your grandmother's brother?
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Who is your aunt's son?
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Who is your wife's sister?
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Who is the son of your father and stepmother?
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Who is your great uncle's granddaughter?
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What's a blended family?
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Name two different ways people can be related.
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That's all for now. I hope you found this lesson useful and interesting.
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Please like and share the video with others learning English.
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As always, thanks for watching and happy studies!
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Follow me and gain more practice on Facebook and Twitter. I also have new
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videos on Instagram. If you haven't already, subscribe to my channel so you
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get notification of every new video I upload to YouTube.