On February 14, we celebrate Valentine's Day.
In honor of this holiday, I thought we'd have a lesson
Those are words like "honey"..."baby"...
and we use them to address the people we're closest to:
Every language has its terms of endearment.
and others are a little unusual
They're used just between two people.
We have a lot of terms of endearment in English.
- So many that I can't possibly tell you all of them.
But I do plan to share many of them,
and I have some notes to help me remember.
We'll start with a very common one:
It can be written two different ways
as a term of endearment.
We use "honey" with adults and children.
As in, "Hi, honey. How was your day?"
"Good job, honey. I'm so proud of you."
Like, "Hon', do yo have a second?"
Variations? - There are a lot of them.
Sometimes, especially in the case of honey,
in a situation where people are not close,
but the situation is informal.
For example, a friendly waitress might say,
"Hon', want some more coffee?"
or "Can I get you some more coffee, 'hon?"
and it can be appropriate in certain situations.
My advice is not to use terms of endearment
with people you are not familiar with or close to.
Because then it could be taken as a form of disrespect.
We can use it with adults or children.
A very common term of endearment: sweetheart.
"Sweetheart, it's time for breakfast."
Again, like "honey," there are a lot of variations.
"Sweet pea" - usually for children.
"Darling."
Darling dear. My darling dear.
In some accents, in some situations - songs, for example -
you'll hear people drop the "g."
And instead of "darling," you'll hear something like "darlin'."
"Dear."
You see this word also in messages and letters,
"Dear Mr. Smith"..."Dear Mrs. Jones."
As a form of address, as a greeting in a letter,
it has nothing to do with affection.
It's actually just a formal, polite way
of starting out a letter or a message.
But variations for terms of endearment would be:
and that could be spelled different ways,
but when I think of "dearie," I think of
some elderly...kind, elderly woman
who is maybe thanking a young person for helping her
"Oh, dearie. Thank you so much."
"Cutie."
"Cutie patootie" - definitely for children.
"Sunshine." This is one that I use.
"Hey, sunshine."..."Good morning, sunshine."
"Angel." - Adults and children.
Most of these are for adults or children.
Okay. This one is probably more so for a romantic relationship.
We have some silly sounding terms of endearment.
"Snookums" would be one of them.
It could be for kids, but I usually think of that in a love relationship.
Not like "Boo!" to scare you, but
So terms of endearment can sound silly
because they're affectionate...
We have many terms of endearment based on the names of animals.
Usually cute little ones, like:
Although bears are big, we might say:
For a girl, you might call her "princess."
We have terms of endearment based on good looks.
We might use this for our children, for example.
"Handsome."
I sometimes say, "Where's my handsome boy?"
He's getting older, so I have to be careful
I can't be too cute calling my nine-year-old a "cutie patootie"
or "my handsome boy." That's not cool anymore.
We have other terms of endearment that end with "-kin."
It sounds cute: munchkin, pumpkin...
Those are the ones I can recall right now.
Also, just like we have terms of endearment based on cute little animals,
we have terms of endearment based on sweet things to eat, like:
Gosh, there are so many. I think I'll have to end there.
But now you get a sense of how many terms of endearment are possible.
You'll hear them in films, in TV shows, in songs...
Maybe you'll hear them said to you.
Now I'd like you to take a very short true-false quiz
to check your understanding of how terms of endearment are used.
However, in general we're very wary of strangers
I believe there's still one term of endearment I didn't share with you yet.
"Sugar."
We can use this for adults for for children.
Personally, I don't use it. Or I don't use it much.
The only example that comes to mind
is again that friendly waitress,
All right. We're going to end by taking the word "sugar"
I want to share a very common poem.
In fact, it's so common, it's probably the first
love poem that children learn in English.
People love to play around with this poem
We usually keep the first two lines
The variations can be funny. They can be cute. They can be romantic.
So you get the idea of how creative you can be.
I thought you might like to try this.
If you want to create your own poem,
try using the "Roses are red" poem.
Keep the first two lines and change the last two.