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Native speakers significantly streamline their speech through the consistent use of contractions, transforming phrases like "she is" to "she's" [] and "they are" to "they're" []. This grammatical condensation makes language sound smoother and faster, as exemplified by the shift from "I am hungry" to "I'm hungry" []. Furthermore, common multi-word expressions are reduced to single, colloquial forms; "going to" becomes "gonna," "want to" becomes "wanna," and "have to" or "got to" are shortened to "gotta" []. This practice of using abbreviations like "gonna watch TV" instead of "going to watch TV" is prevalent in everyday American English [].
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Native speakers significantly streamline their speech through the consistent use of contractions, transforming phrases like "she is" to "she's" [] and "they are" to "they're" []. This grammatical condensation makes language sound smoother and faster, as exemplified by the shift from "I am hungry" to "I'm hungry" []. Furthermore, common multi-word expressions are reduced to single, colloquial forms; "going to" becomes "gonna," "want to" becomes "wanna," and "have to" or "got to" are shortened to "gotta" []. This practice of using abbreviations like "gonna watch TV" instead of "going to watch TV" is prevalent in everyday American English [].