Shadowing-Übung: Anne of Green Gables 7 | Anne & Gilbert | Stories for Kids | Bedtime Stories - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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Little Fox Anne of Green Gables Chapter 7 Trouble at School
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Little Fox Anne of Green Gables Chapter 7 Trouble at School
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In September, when Anne started school, Marilla was worried.
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Anne was a strange girl.
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How would she make friends?
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How would she stay quiet in the classroom?
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But after her first day,
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Anne came home excited and happy.
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I like school, Anne declared.
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I don't like the teacher, Mr. Phillips, though.
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He said my spelling was terrible and held it up for everybody to see.
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Anne, don't say that about your teacher.
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I hope you were a good girl, said Marilla.
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I was, answered Anne.
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I sit with Diana near the window,
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and we can see the lake of shining waters.
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I am in a lower class than Diana, though.
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She is on the fifth book,
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and I am on the fourth book.
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There are many nice girls in school,
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and we had fun playing at lunchtime.
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And Jane Andrews told Ruby Gillis she heard Minnie McPherson say that I had a pretty nose.
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That is the first compliment I have ever had in my life, Marilla.
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Do I have a pretty nose?
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I know you'll tell me the truth.
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Your nose is all right, Marilla said.
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Secretly, she thought that Anne's nose was remarkably pretty,
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but Marilla had no intention of telling her so.
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Three weeks passed, and Anne and Diana were walking to school one morning.
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Gilbert Blythe will be in school today, said Diana.
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He's been away at his cousin's.
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He's so handsome, Anne, and he teases the girls terribly.
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From Diana's voice, it was clear that Diana liked being teased by Gilbert Blythe.
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Gilbert's in your class, Diana went on.
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He's on the fourth book because he missed school when his father was sick.
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He's usually at the top of the class, though.
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You're at the top of the class now, Anne.
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I'm glad Gilbert is coming back, said Anne.
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I don't feel proud about being at the top of a class with little boys
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and girls who are only nine years old.
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The girls went into the classroom.
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That's Gilbert Blythe sitting across from you, Anne, said Diana.
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Isn't he handsome?
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Anne looked.
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She had lots of time to look because Gilbert was busy tying Ruby Gillis' long golden braid to her chair.
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Gilbert was a tall boy with curly brown hair and a cheeky smile.
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When Ruby Gillis tried to stand up,
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she fell back screaming, thinking that her hair was being pulled out.
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Everybody stared at her, and she started to cry.
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Gilbert read his book and looked very serious.
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But when everyone was quiet again,
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he looked at Anne and winked at her.
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I think your Gilbert Blythe is handsome, whispered Anne to Diana.
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But he's very bold.
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It isn't polite to wink at a girl he doesn't know.
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In the afternoon, Gilbert tried to get Anne's attention again.
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Mr. Phillips, the teacher, was in the back of the room explaining math to an older girl.
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The other students were drawing pictures on their slates,
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eating apples, whispering, or playing with some crickets.
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Gilbert Blythe tried to make Anne look at him without success.
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Anne stared out the window at the Lake of Shining Waters,
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lost in her own world.
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Usually, girls did look at Gilbert.
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He thought, That redheaded Shirley girl should look at me.
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He reached across the aisle and grabbed the end of Anne's long red braid.
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He held it out and said in a loud whisper, Carrots!
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Carrots!
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This time Anne did look at him,
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and she did more than look.
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She jumped up and stared fiercely at Gilbert.
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You mean, hateful boy!
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She shouted.
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How dare you!
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And then, whack!
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Anne cracked her slate on Gilbert's head.
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The students at Avonlea School always enjoyed a scene,
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and this was an especially good one.
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Diana gasped.
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Ruby Gillis began to cry again.
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Mr. Phillips stalked to the front of the classroom.
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And surely what happened just now?
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He said angrily.
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Anne did not answer.
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It was too embarrassing to tell everybody that Gilbert had called her carrots.
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Gilbert spoke.
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It was my fault.
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I teased her.
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He admitted.
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Mr. Phillips ignored Gilbert.
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Anne, stand in front of the board for the rest of the afternoon.
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He told her.
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With a pale, stony face, Anne obeyed.
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Mr. Phillips wrote on the board above her head,
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Anne Shirley has a very bad temper.
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Anne Shirley must control her temper.
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Then the teacher read the words aloud so that everybody,
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even the youngest children who could not read, understood.
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Anne stood there all afternoon.
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She didn't cry because she was still angry.
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Anne thought, I'll never speak to Gilbert Blythe again.
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When school finally ended, Anne marched out and waited for Diana on the porch.
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Gilbert approached her.
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Sorry I teased you, Anne, he whispered.
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I'm really sorry.
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Anne ignored him.
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Gilbert put a candy that said,
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You are Sweet, on the ledge near Anne.
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Anne picked it up carefully,
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dropped it on the floor,
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and ground it into a fine powder under her shoe.
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Then she started walking.
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Oh, Anne, said Diana.
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How could you ignore his apology?
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I will never forgive Gilbert Blythe, Anne retorted furiously.
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And Mr. Phillips spelled my name without an E.
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Gilbert teases all the girls, Anne, Diana said.
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He laughs at my hair because it's so black and calls me Crow.
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He's never said sorry to any girl before today.
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There's a big difference between Crow and Carrots,
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Diana, Anne said with a sniff.
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The next day at school,
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Mr. Phillips' mood had not improved.
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He spotted Anne talking to Charlie Sloan.
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Anne, surely, since you like boys so much,
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you will sit with Gilbert Blythe, said Mr. Phillips.
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The other boys laughed.
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Anne did not move.
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Anne, obey me at once, the teacher said.
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For a moment, it seemed Anne would never move.
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But at last, she got up,
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sat down beside Gilbert, and buried her face in her arms on the desk.
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To sit next to a boy was bad enough,
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but to sit next to Gilbert Blythe was unbearable.
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When school ended, Anne picked up everything from her desk,
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all her books, her pen and ink,
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and piled them onto her cracked slate.
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Why are you taking everything home, Anne?
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Diana asked.
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I'm not coming to school anymore, said Anne.
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When Anne got home, she told Marilla she had finished school forever.
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Nonsense, said Marilla.
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Marilla, I've been insulted.
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You'll go tomorrow, was Marilla's answer.
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Oh no, said Anne.
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I'm not going back.
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I'll study at home.
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Marilla knew Anne was stubborn,
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and so she let Anne study at home, for the time being.
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She hoped that Anne would miss her schoolmates and return to school soon.
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But it is Anne, Marilla acknowledged with a sigh.
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So anything could happen.

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Über diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie durch das Kapitel 7 von "Anne of Green Gables" lernen, wie Anne ihre ersten Erfahrungen in der Schule macht. Sie werden die Herausforderungen, die sie beim Freundeschließen und im Unterricht hat, besser verstehen. Diese Lektion hilft Ihnen außerdem, Ihr Englisch sprechen üben zu verbessern, insbesondere in einem schulischen Kontext.

Wichtige Vokabeln & Phrasen

  • excited – aufgeregt
  • terrible – schrecklich
  • compliment – Kompliment
  • handsome – gutaussehend
  • tease – ärgern
  • class – Klasse
  • proud – stolz
  • shining waters – schimmernde Gewässer

Übungstipps

Beim Englisch Shadowing des Videos sollten Sie dem Erzähltempo aufmerksam folgen. Achten Sie besonders auf die Betonung und den Ausdruck, um den Charakteren Leben einzuhauchen. Versuchen Sie, die Sätze laut nachzusprechen, während Sie die ursprünglichen Stimmen hören. Nutzen Sie die shadow speech Technik, indem Sie direkt nachsprechen, was Anne und die anderen Charaktere sagen. Dies verbessert nicht nur Ihre Aussprache, sondern auch Ihr Hörverständnis und Ihre Fähigkeit, im Gespräch flüssig zu sein. Durch diese Übung werden Sie schneller reagieren können, wenn es darum geht, im Englischen zu kommunizieren, insbesondere in sozialen Interaktionen wie im Schulkontext.

Eine zusätzliche Strategie ist, die Szenen mehrmals anzuhören. Konzentrieren Sie sich dabei darauf, wie Emotionen wie Aufregung oder Unbehagen vermittelt werden. Dies wird Ihnen helfen, Ihre eigenen Emotionen in Gesprächen besser auszudrücken. Versuchen Sie außerdem, in Ihren eigenen Worten zu beschreiben, was in den Szenen passiert, während Sie die Charaktere nachahmen – dies hilft Ihnen, das shadowspeaks Konzept noch tiefer zu verstehen. Mit diesen Methoden können Sie Ihr shadow speak erheblich verbessern und Ihr Selbstbewusstsein im Sprechen aufbauen.

Was ist die Shadowing-Technik?

Shadowing ist eine wissenschaftlich fundierte Sprachlerntechnik, die ursprünglich für die professionelle Dolmetscherausbildung entwickelt und durch den Polyglotten Dr. Alexander Arguelles populär gemacht wurde. Die Methode ist einfach aber wirkungsvoll: Du hörst englisches Audio von Muttersprachlern und wiederholst es sofort laut — wie ein Schatten, der dem Sprecher mit nur 1–2 Sekunden Verzögerung folgt. Anders als passives Hören oder Grammatikübungen zwingt Shadowing dein Gehirn und deine Mundmuskulatur, gleichzeitig echte Sprachmuster zu verarbeiten und zu reproduzieren. Studien zeigen, dass es Aussprachegenauigkeit, Intonation, Rhythmus, verbundene Sprache, Hörverständnis und Sprechflüssigkeit signifikant verbessert — was es zu einer der effektivsten Methoden für die IELTS Speaking-Vorbereitung und reale englische Kommunikation macht.

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