Shadowing-Übung: Visiting the COLDEST CITY in the World (-71°C, -96°F) YAKUTSK / YAKUTIA - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

B2
The Air Temperature The Air Temperature The Air Temperature What is the temperature?
⏸ Pausiert
251 Sätze
Wenn Sätze zu kurz oder zu lang sind, klicke auf Edit, um sie anzupassen.
1
The Air Temperature The Air Temperature The Air Temperature What is the temperature?
2
It's minus 47 degrees outside.
3
Air temperature in Antarctica is negative 14.8 degrees Fahrenheit or negative 20 degrees Celsius.
4
Here it is negative 58 degrees Fahrenheit or negative 47 degrees Celsius.
5
Our lungs are not used yet,
6
that's why we are coughing.
7
The weather here is very cold and dry.
8
There is a large population here, approximately 300,000 inhabitants.
9
Yakusk is the capital of Saha Republic,
10
an autonomous region that is allied with Russia,
11
280 miles away from the North Pole.
12
This place is the most northeastern point of Siberia.
13
It is very much isolated from the rest of the world.
14
Outside temperature is around negative 58 degrees Fahrenheit.
15
The boiling water is about 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
16
As you see it instantly turns into ice crystal.
17
The lowest air temperature ever measured in this region is negative 96.16 degrees Fahrenheit.
18
It is as if it belongs to another planet.
19
A banana left outside can turn into a hammer in minutes.
20
People cannot wear metal frame glasses here because the metal could stick to their skin.
21
And if they wanted to take off their glasses,
22
their flesh might be treated out.
23
This is a piece of meat that looks very much like human flesh.
24
Let's just put it in contact with metal.
25
As you can see, these are natural gas pipes
26
and they have to be laid above the ground because the underground is frozen with ice.
27
There is actually a 100 foot thick mass of ice under the city.
28
Look, this river is completely frozen.
29
During the Soviet era, people who contradicted Stalin's ideas were exiled to Sahar Republic region.
30
They were politicians, businessmen, etc. As a matter of fact,
31
some of these people who live in Yakutsk right now are their grandchildren.
32
So this place used to be land of exile.
33
Today there is a city life going on.
34
But we could call this life an ice hell.
35
It pushes the limits of human nature.
36
No matter how much we bundle up,
37
nothing is enough to keep our bodies warm.
38
If you have a car here,
39
you have a big problem.
40
Winter lasts for 6-7 months here and in that time you can never drive your car.
41
If you insist on driving it,
42
you can never stop your vehicle's engine.
43
For example, the car with a running engine you can see here is empty.
44
There is nobody inside.
45
There are hundreds of cars like this.
46
The reason why the engine is running,
47
if it stops, it can be completely covered with ice and the engine oil will freeze.
48
As you can see the owner of this vehicle must have decided not to run this
49
or her car for a while Just after 20 minutes of the engine being off,
50
it is common to give up hope Another frozen car here waiting to be reused next summer This car is running right?
51
Let's see if there is anybody inside Yeah,
52
nobody Can you imagine what a huge waste of energy this actually is?
53
Unfortunately, Russia is a country that is quite rich in oil and natural gas resources.
54
Even the exhaust smoke freezes,
55
that's how cold it is.
56
There are special covers for protection.
57
Sometimes this is not enough too.
58
People who can afford it keep their vehicles in a heated garage.
59
Because these vehicles are constantly running,
60
there is a constant layer of exhaust smoke over the city.
61
Range of visibility is often below 200 feet due to the smoke.
62
The houses here have completely different architecture.
63
The reason why the buildings are built on pillars is
64
that the ground is covered with ice and there is a possibility of ice shift.
65
Old houses start to lean over after a decade or so because the amount of ice either increases or decreases.
66
It feels like pins and needles.
67
The worst thing that could happen is to get frostbite.
68
Considering a refrigerator operates at about 40 degrees Fahrenheit,
69
a freezer operates at about negative 4 degrees Fahrenheit.
70
Since the temperature here is negative 58 degrees Fahrenheit Everywhere you can see here could function as a very high-tech freezer
71
That's why some people are able to store their fruits
72
or their meats Just by hanging them outside their windows Can I make a sled out of this?
73
I just took off my gloves for just a minute for filming.
74
Now it hurts terribly.
75
My eyelashes are frozen too.
76
I'm trying to break the ice.
77
Move.
78
Move.
79
If you would stay outside for more than 15 minutes,
80
you would experience problems such as skin burns and difficulty in breathing.
81
Chill that starts with a needle prick like pain.
82
Frostbite followed by sensational bugs.
83
And then it could result in death.
84
She took off her gloves for just 5 minutes to film it.
85
Her fingertips instantly turned white.
86
Our microphone is giving a red warning.
87
It is not working properly.
88
The camera is also not working as it should.
89
Its cover is frozen.
90
Our phones don't work as well work as well.
91
Her battery was about 10% a couple of minutes ago and then it suddenly died whereas it was actually full.
92
What you see behind me is a cemetery.
93
The thickness of the ice under my shoes is about 100 foot
94
and this ice mass under the city does not melt even in the summer.
95
So how do people bury the dead?
96
They gather pieces of coal and burn them for two to three days.
97
Once the coal is burned the blocks of ice fall and it can be easily removed using shovels.
98
Finally, the area can be excavated to a depth of 6 to 7 point.
99
The body of a person who died 100 or 200 years ago can be found very robust even today.
100
20% of the world's total diamond resource are in Yakutsk.
101
In addition to that, there are also all the elements in the periodic table.
102
There are many mammoth and dinosaur fossils under the Yakutia territories.
103
In these areas where mammoths once were alive,
104
their intact corpses still show up as the ice melts today.
105
In this land where people cannot engage in agriculture or farming, people eat fish.
106
One of the most important features of this market is that they display the fish in public stalls rather than in refrigerators.
107
Outside is much colder than any refrigerator.
108
A piece of meat left outside, once boiled for months.
109
There are also frozen rabbits here.
110
They are consumed a lot, including with the ducks.
111
Horse meat is also very common.
112
It is about 45 pounds.
113
They take this fish as a whole,
114
put it outside and consume it for days.
115
This one is also on sale.
116
It never spoils of course.
117
Its ears are not moving at all.
118
How many hours do you work here for a day?
119
How many layers of floating on the upper body?
120
They stand on such furs,
121
they do not feel the cold coming to their feet more people
122
Yakutians who make up the majority of the population are Turkish in origin 38% of the population are Russian in origin
123
There are only such dogs here Unfortunately cats cannot survive only
124
mammals with a really thick fur There are two layers of glass inside the cars cars.
125
So when the air conditioner warms the interior,
126
it doesn't lose its temperature immediately.
127
The scariest thing about being on the road is
128
that people whose cars break down have a risk of dying if they cannot fix it within 30 minutes.
129
Otherwise engine oil under the hood freezes in minutes.
130
If people get stranded in these rural areas with no phone signal,
131
they have no choice but to freeze to death within a couple of hours.
132
That's why every driver carries a toolbox in his or her car.
133
Our journey to the village was completed with a dog sled ride.
134
During our time on the dog sled,
135
I nearly lost an ear that was exposed to the wind and the cold.
136
The pain was unbearable.
137
Maria just accepted us to her village house.
138
We're gonna know more about these mysterious Yakut people.
139
Can you see it?
140
As thick as my finger.
141
I cannot feel it.
142
It's quite numb.
143
Look, my other ear is much thinner.
144
Horses here are much shorter than the usual horses.
145
Their bodies are conditioned to be short.
146
That's how they can keep themselves warmer.
147
Less surface area to worry about.
148
They gave us their own clothes.
149
They bundled up.
150
You can tell by looking at the frozen boat that we are walking on a frozen lake.
151
We try to hit it at a 90 degree angle.
152
We just drill it 20 to 25 inch diameter hole.
153
Cows will come and meet their water needs.
154
We are constantly removing the ice.
155
How long it takes for this water to again completely covered with ice?
156
In one hour.
157
The valves in this lich are always kept in the barns in winter.
158
They don't ever feel cold?
159
They do of course.
160
That's why they don't have much time.
161
What's exactly?
162
Your ear got first bitten.
163
If it lasted longer, it would be very dangerous.
164
They would have to cut it, right?
165
They cannot save it, they can cut it because the cells are dead.
166
For your ear it's a traditional Yakut medicine, fat of bear.
167
Yeah, my father took it from hunters.
168
This will help for spitting and also if you burn it.
169
If you look at it from behind,
170
you'll see it more clearly.
171
It is seriously swollen and they call it frostbite.
172
I will probably have risked my entire ear if I had been in the cold for more than 15 minutes.
173
The nature has no joke here.
174
What is the coldest temperature you have ever witnessed?
175
The coldest temperature is negative 71 Celsius.
176
What is cold for you?
177
If I have good clothes,
178
if I have enough clothes.
179
Before negative 40, it's not like real winter temperature for me.
180
Negative 41, negative 48, it's like fine.
181
Below negative 48, it's cold.
182
And below negative 52, it's very cold very cold
183
and every degree feels the funny thing is like cold weather
184
feels like fire like burning yeah that's true now my ear is burning yeah I feel it's
185
so hot sometimes people drink too much and they fall asleep somewhere outside
186
and one night outside some people didn't have proper clothes and and they went to the woods and their car broke down.
187
They couldn't call someone because no phone service.
188
Yeah, and it ended.
189
What do you think about nature?
190
The whole lifestyle of Yakut people,
191
of Saha people, is taking care of nature, respecting it.
192
Early childhood, me and my family,
193
we used to go to the woods to fish, to hunt.
194
It's just a part of our life.
195
And we always remember that we are not the owners of this land.
196
We are just guests.
197
For example, we always make a ritual.
198
When we go to pick some berries,
199
we always take a little food with us.
200
We leave it on the ground and say,
201
Nature, please share with us.
202
Please give us some food.
203
It's for the master of that land, for the spirit.
204
You believe nature has a spirit? spirits.
205
For example when we go to the forest you shouldn't speak loud because you can't disturb the spirits.
206
You shouldn't drink there, have fun there, throw the garbage.
207
Don't bother, don't disturb, don't destroy.
208
Yakut religion is not something which is written in a book or there is a church.
209
There is one center of our religion but it's not something
210
that like in other religions that we do every day we should pray.
211
We don't do something like that.
212
But it's in our mind, in our lifestyle.
213
And it's all related to nature.
214
For what you have, you thank nature instead of God.
215
The gods are nature.
216
Our gods are like part of the nature.
217
Now I understand.
218
Why don't you migrate to south where it's warmer?
219
Because living in these temperatures is like torture.
220
It's a torture for you, but not for us.
221
The first reason is my family.
222
My family is here and for me the best is to be close to my parents,
223
to my brothers.
224
And secondly, I like the nature here, it's very pure.
225
The ecology is very pure and for me and for my future children,
226
breathing fresh air is very important.
227
Third, because of our culture,
228
I want to preserve our language,
229
our traditions and give them to the next generations.
230
Yakutsk has summers as well.
231
In July, the average daily temperature is about 67 degrees Fahrenheit.
232
Due to global warming, ice masks of our world is melting and mammoth corpses are coming up.
233
But also viruses fighting for thousands of years,
234
which modern humans have never met before, can come to light.
235
When Europeans migrated to North America,
236
the flu they took the Kunsa to the continent,
237
killed most of the Native Americans who had been isolated for centuries.
238
The flu didn't kill us because our immune system was strong.
239
Similarly, ancient diseases to
240
which we are not immune can come to light with the
241
melting of the ice in these regions of the world and have devastating consequences.
242
Thank you for watching.
243
This video was the first episode of a tribal documentary series called Rediscovery.
244
I go to unique places which are not known to many and make a documentary about them with a comprehensive approach.
245
The next coming video on this channel will be second episode of Rediscovery.
246
I went inside of this huge ice mass and discovered the permafrost.
247
During the whole documentary series we got to know more about incredible daily life in negative 67 degrees Fahrenheit,
248
these mysterious Yakut people and their surprising culture.
249
If you don't want to miss that video and to watch all of our videos definitely subscribe.
250
I would also like to thank my team for creating this project with me.
251
Goodbye now, Ruhi CNET was here.

App herunterladen

KI-Bewertung für jeden gesprochenen Satz

TRENDING

Beliebt

Kontext & Hintergrund

Im Video „Besuch der kältesten Stadt der Welt“ erfahren wir mehr über die extremen Wetterbedingungen in Jakutsk, der Hauptstadt der Sacha-Republik in Russland. Während des gesamten Videos wird das frigid kalte Klima betont, in dem die Temperaturen regelmäßig unter -47 °C fallen. Der Sprecher teilt seine Erfahrungen und beschreibt, wie das Leben in solch extremen klimatischen Bedingungen aussieht, was eine spannende Möglichkeit für Englischlerner darstellt, nicht nur die Sprache zu verbessern, sondern auch kulturelle Einblicke in eine der extremsten Lebensrealitäten der Welt zu gewinnen.

Top 5 Phrasen für die tägliche Kommunikation

  • „Die Außentemperatur beträgt minus 58 Grad Fahrenheit.“ – Eine nützliche Art, um über Wetterbedingungen zu sprechen.
  • „Ich bin erkältet.“ – Ein Ausdruck, den man verwenden kann, wenn das kalte Wetter einen betrifft.
  • „Hier hinterlassen Autos bei diesem Wetter oft einen Motor, der läuft.“ – Diese Aussage hilft, alltägliche Probleme in extremer Kälte zu diskutieren.
  • „Es sieht aus, als ob wir auf einem anderen Planeten sind.“ – Eine metaphorische Beschreibung der Umgebung.
  • „Die Leute hier tragen keine Metallbrillen.“ – Dies eröffnet Diskussionen über ungewöhnliche lokale Gepflogenheiten.

Schritt-für-Schritt Shadowing Anleitung

Um das „Shadow Speech“ aus diesem Video effektiv zu nutzen und Ihre Englische Aussprache zu verbessern, folgen Sie diesen Schritten:

  1. Vorbereitung: Sehen Sie sich das Video in Abschnitten an, um den Kontext und die Inhalte zu verstehen.
  2. Wiederholung: Spielen Sie kurze Abschnitte eines Satzes ab und wiederholen Sie ihn laut. Konzentrieren Sie sich auf die Aussprache und den Rhythmus.
  3. Shadow Speak: Versuchen Sie, den Sprecher zeitgleich zu imitieren, während er spricht. Achten Sie darauf, Töne und Betonungen nachzuahmen.
  4. Analyse: Hören Sie sich die Passagen mehrmals an und achten Sie auf Wörter oder Phrasen, die Ihnen schwerfallen. Üben Sie besonders diese für mehr Klarheit.
  5. Wiederholung mit Variationen: Versuchen Sie, die neuen Phrasen in eigenen Sätzen zu verwenden, um Ihre Flexibilität im Sprechen zu erhöhen.

Durch das Englisch lernen mit YouTube und gezielte Übungen wie Shadowing können Sie Ihre Fähigkeiten kontinuierlich verbessern. Indem Sie realistische Gespräche nachahmen, wird nicht nur Ihr Hörverständnis, sondern auch Ihre Fähigkeit, in verschiedenen Situationen zu kommunizieren, gestärkt.

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.

Kauf uns einen Kaffee