Shadowing-Übung: No more magic numbers for your breakpoints - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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Hello my friend and friend.
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Hello my friend and friend.
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I'm back from Amsterdam.
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I was there for Smashing Conf where I had an absolute wonderful time.
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I want to say a really big thank you to Smashing for having me and yeah it was really fun.
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Met a lot of amazing people, had a really good time and I'm going to be back in Amsterdam in June.
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So if you're going to be there around June, CSS day, super excited for that and I'll put a link to
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that in the description in case you want to check it out.
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There is CSS day which is happening and the prices are going up in like a month.
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So if you're going to convince your boss to send you, now would be a good time to do it.
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And there's also the Web We Want conference.
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It's a free conference happening either the day before or after CSS day.
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I always forget which one it is, but I'll put a link to that just in case because I know conferences can be expensive.
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They're putting on an amazing event.
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So if you are in the Amsterdam area, I'd recommend you check that out as well.
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But you're not here for that.
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You're here to learn about breakpoints.
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And I talked all about some of this stuff at the conference.
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My talk is about container queries being amazing.
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We're going to see why, or this is at least one example of them.
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And don't, if you're like, oh, container queries, I'm here for media query stuff.
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Container queries have fantastic support now.
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So please don't just run away.
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They are baseline widely available and support numbers in general are quite good for it.
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So stick around and see why they are amazing, or one of the reasons why they're amazing, where you can see I have my flex column set up right here.
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And when I change, you know, This looks fine, and I'm doing this at 50 rem, which is kind of a random number, but I'm doing this with a media query to start with.
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And the reason I'm doing that is because I want to show that if you change the HTML font size, it will not change the breakpoint.
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Because even though this is set to rem, when you're using a media query, media queries are an at rule that are like the global scope.
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So they can't actually see what's happening inside of selectors.
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And that means you can see here, I've actually like broken my layout, right?
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I have horizontal scrolling because the three columns are so narrow with such a big font size.
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It's exaggerated for demo purposes, but that's fine.
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If we come down here, and I actually, or not down to here, if I come and take a look in my HTML, all of this is inside of my article, or even main.
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Let's use our main this time.
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I used the article when I did this on stage, but we're going to switch this over to a main, and we're going to say that this is a container type of inline size,
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because if you are using container queries, you do have to define a container somewhere.
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This is one of the limitations of using container queries.
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And what that means now is the browser can see not only the size of my main, but the font size of the main as well.
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So if I come down and I switch this media for an at container, the breakpoint is going to update.
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And now we see it's all the way out here instead
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because it's gotten as the rem has gotten bigger on my project.
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And I'm doing this on my HTML.
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I could be doing this on the main or other elements as well, and it's going to see the font size.
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It's just inheriting down into the main, so it's working fine.
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But yeah, it's updated and it's moved the breakpoint all the way out to here.
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And you came here going, well, Kevin, you said no more magic numbers.
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And this is a magic number.
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It's just not in pixels.
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It's in rem instead.
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And you would definitely be right.
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It is a magic number.
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But we can change this to use a smarter unit or one that is a content first unit, which I would say is the CH.
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And I'm going to say 90 CH.
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You may go, why would you do 90 CH, Kevin?
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That seems just as magic of a number, but it's not.
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The ch character, if you don't know it, is the width of a character of your font and all of that.
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So right now it's at this 1.5 rem size based on the font that I'm using.
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It's going 90 characters wide.
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And the reason this is a content first breakpoint now, let's just see where it's at, is it's going to happen when we have about 90 characters long.
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This is an approximation.
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So if you actually take the time to count this, it probably won't be exactly 90 but it's an approximation and
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that reason this is a cool break point to have is
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that means this is happening
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when I'm about 30 for each one of these 30 characters wide for each column
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and that's a really smart break point to have because
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that means we're hitting this like smallish area where things are getting too squished
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because minimum line lengths 25 to 30 characters is getting pretty narrow
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and that's about as small as you can get unless you're just on a mobile device
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and you don't have a choice and you have to go narrower.
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But if you do have a choice, you probably don't want to get smaller than that.
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So instead of guessing at a random number, you can use something like the 90 CH.
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And then if I come up to here
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and I change this back down to a one rem or whatever size you need for your project, it's going to adapt.
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And now that breakpoints over here instead.
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And it's always going to be when we're hitting about 30 characters size for each one.
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Plus we have like the padding on stuff.
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So it's a general approximation, but we're doing this, not just based on some random magic number that a media query breakpoint uses,
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where you're maybe getting it from the tailwind breakpoints or the bootstrap breakpoints, or you're just coming up with something, making it bigger, smaller, figuring out where it works,
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you can actually make informed decisions based on the content, which I love.
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This is such a fun way to work, in my opinion.
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And I really like this pattern.
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It's one of my favorite ways of using container barriers right now, though there's other really cool things we can do with it, such as wrap detection, which is really exciting,
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knowing when something is wrapping based on an intrinsic breakpoint that you might have.
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And I looked at that last week.
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That video is right here for your viewing pleasure or link down in the description if you need it over there.
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And if you like this pattern
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and you want to dive deeper into the world of container queries and see more of the things they can do, my course CSS Demystified has a bunch of lessons where it's covering container queries from the basics of how they work,
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some of the limitations they have, the gotchas, and other issues that you can run into with them, and awesome patterns and good ways of using them as well.
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So if you'd like more information on that, the link is down in the description for you to check out.
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And with that, I'd like to thank my enabler of awesome, Johnny, as well as all my other patrons and channel members for their continued support.
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And with that, thank you very much for listening.
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And of course, until next time, don't forget to make your corner of the internet just a little bit more awesome.

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Warum das Sprechen mit diesem Video üben?

Das Üben des Sprechens mit Videos wie diesem bietet eine hervorragende Möglichkeit, die eigene Englischkenntnisse zu verbessern. Der Sprecher berichtet von seiner Erfahrung auf einer Konferenz in Amsterdam, was nicht nur informativ ist, sondern auch eine natürliche Gesprächssituation schafft. Durch das Nachahmen der Sprechweise und Intonation des Sprechers können Lernende nicht nur ihre Englische Aussprache verbessern, sondern auch ihren Wortschatz erweitern und mehr über alltägliche Themen lernen. Die Verwendung von Video-Inhalten fördert zudem das Verstehen von Nuancen in der Sprache, die in Schulsituationen oft fehlen.

Grammatik & Ausdrücke im Kontext

  • „Ich war dort für die Smashing Conf“ – Die Verwendung des past simple „war“ ist eine einfache, aber effektive Möglichkeit, Ereignisse in der Vergangenheit zu beschreiben.
  • „Ich wollte ein großes Dankeschön sagen“ – Die Strukturen, die zur Dankbarkeit geäußert werden, sind im Englischen oft sehr formell, was in dieser alltäglichen Rede den Lernenden helfen kann, sich angemessen auszudrücken.
  • „Wenn du überzeugt bist, deinen Chef zu bitten, dich zu senden“ – Hier zeigt der Sprecher, wie man indirekte Fragen und Situationen spricht, was für das Englisch sprechen üben wichtig ist.
  • „Das ist eine der Einschränkungen“ – Die Verwendung von „one of the limitations“ ist eine nützliche Struktur, um spezifische Punkte zu begründen und zu erläutern.

Häufige Aussprachefallen

Einige Wörter im Video könnten für Lernende schwierig auszusprechen sein. Zum Beispiel:

  • „Amsterdam“ – Die richtige Betonung liegt auf der zweiten Silbe „dam“.
  • „CSS“ – Dieses Akronym wird oft anders ausgesprochen, als es geschrieben wird, daher ist es wichtig, die richtige Aussprache zu üben.
  • „Konferenz“ – Achten Sie darauf, dass die Betonung auf der zweiten Silbe liegt, besonders wenn man das Wort in einem Satz verwendet.

Durch das regelmäßige Üben mit Materialien wie diesem Video können Sie die Herausforderungen der Englische Aussprache verbessern und Ihr shadow speaking weiterentwickeln. Nutzen Sie die Gelegenheit, sich mit der Sprache zu beschäftigen und Ihre Fähigkeiten im Sprechen zu erweitern. Besuchen Sie auch Schatten-Speaking-Seiten, um Ihr Lernen zu vertiefen.

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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