Will vs Be going to - English In a Minute – YouTube Dictation Transcript & Vocabulary

Welcome to FluentDictation, your best YouTube dictation website for English practice. Master this B1 level video with our interactive transcript and shadowing practice tools. We've broken down "Will vs Be going to - English In a Minute" into bite-sized segments, perfect for dictation exercises and pronunciation improvement. Read along with our annotated transcript, learn essential vocabulary, and enhance your listening skills. 👉 Start dictation practice

Join thousands of learners using our YouTube dictation tool to improve their English listening and writing skills.

📺 Click to play this educational video. Best viewed with captions enabled for dictation practice.

Interactive Transcript & Highlights for Dictation

1.What are the uses between 'will' and 'be going to'

2.We use 'will' when we make a decision about the future at the moment of speaking

3.'What do I want to

4.I think I will have a coffee.' We use 'be going to' when the decision is made before speaking

5.'I know what I want

💡 Tap the highlighted words to see definitions and examples

Key Vocabulary (CEFR B1)

different

A2

The different ideal.

Example:

"What are the different uses between 'will' and"

drink

A2

To consume (a liquid) through the mouth.

Example:

"'What do I want to drink? I think I will have a coffee.'"

something

A2

An object whose nature is yet to be defined.

Example:

"based on something we expect to happen."

those

A2

(demonstrative) The thing, person, idea, quality, event, action or time indicated or understood from context, especially if more remote geographically, temporally or mentally than one designated as "this", or if expressing distinction.

Example:

"'Look at those black clouds! It is going to rain soon.'"

black

A2

The colour/color perceived in the absence of light, but also when no light is reflected, but rather absorbed.

Example:

"'Look at those black clouds! It is going to rain soon.'"

Want more YouTube dictation drills? Visit our practice hub.

Want to translate multiple languages at once? Visit our Want to translate multiple languages at once? Visit our Multiple Language Translator.

Grammar & Pronunciation Tips for Dictation Practice

1

Chunking

Notice how the speaker pauses after specific phrases to help comprehension.

2

Linking

Listen for connected speech patterns when words flow together.

3

Intonation

Pay attention to how pitch changes to emphasize important information.

Video Difficulty Analysis & Stats

Category
basic
CEFR Level
B1
Duration
44
Total Words
126
Total Sentences
19
Average Sentence Length
7 words

Downloadable Dictation Resources & Materials

Download Study Materials

Download these resources to practice offline. The transcript helps with reading comprehension, SRT subtitles work with video players, and the vocabulary list is perfect for flashcard apps.

Ready to practice?

Start your dictation practice now with this video and improve your English listening skills.