Shadowing-Übung: Why Do We Call It AM and PM? The Surprisingly Ancient Reason [ID0801] - Englisch Sprechen Lernen mit YouTube

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If you've spent your entire life checking the time,
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If you've spent your entire life checking the time,
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setting alarms, or arranging schedules,
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then you've probably come across something so normal that you never even questioned it.
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The labels AM and PM.
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They're printed on clocks, digital displays,
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airline tickets, calendars, and phones.
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So familiar that we rarely stop to think about what they actually mean.
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But behind these two simple abbreviations lies a long history of astronomy,
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ancient civilizations, Roman influence,
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and the way humans have always tried to bring order to something as wild and unstoppable as time itself.
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Today, we're diving deep into why we call the first half of the day AM,
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the second half PM, and why the world still uses this system,
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even when there's an alternative 24-hour clock available.
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Let's explore right here on History of Simple Things.
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To understand AM and PM,
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you need to go all the way back to the civilizations that lived and died under the movement of the sun.
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For thousands of years, humans used sunlight as their primary reference for time,
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when the sun rose, when it was at its highest point,
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and when it set.
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The midpoint of the day,
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when the sun is directly overhead,
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was incredibly important for navigation,
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rituals, farming, and even survival.
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Ancient Egyptians used sundials thousands of years ago,
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dividing daylight into 12 hours based purely on the movement of shadows.
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But it wasn't until the ancient Romans
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that the idea of naming the periods before and after the sun's highest point became more formal and linguistic.
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They used Latin not just for religion or literature, but for daily life.
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So naturally, timekeeping terminology evolved in Latin as well.
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This brings us to the actual words.
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AM stands for ante meridiem,
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which literally means before midday or before the meridian,
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with meridium referring to the sun's position at its apex.
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Meanwhile, PM stands for post-meridium, meaning after midday.
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The concept is simple.
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The 12-hour cycle resets every time the sun reaches that midpoint.
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From midnight until just before noon,
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everything is considered ante meridium,
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leading up to the sun's highest point.
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And from noon until just before the next midnight, everything is post meridium.
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What's interesting is
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that these terms refer specifically to the sun's position relative to an imaginary line in the sky called the meridian,
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essentially a vertical arc running from the north pole to the south pole across your location.
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At solar noon, the sun crosses this meridian,
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marking that exact midpoint of the day.
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So a.m and p.m are literally describing the sun's cosmic travel schedule.
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Now here's something that confuses almost everyone at some point.
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Why is 12 p.m actually noon and 12 a.m actually midnight?
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Shouldn't noon be neither before nor after midday?
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You're right.
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By strict definition, noon is neither a.m nor p.m.
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Same with midnight.
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But because the timekeeping system needed labels for schedules,
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clocks, and communication, we applied the terms anyway.
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Historically, there were attempts to fix this.
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Some clocks used the word noon and midnight instead of a.m p.m.
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Some old railways labeled midnight as zero o'clock and noon as 12m.
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But eventually, by widespread convention,
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not by logic, 12 p.m became noon simply
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because it's easier to treat the numbers increasing after 12 o'clock as entering the post-midday cycle.
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Midnight got stuck with 12 a.m because it begins the before-midday hours.
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It's not mathematically elegant, but it's how the world standardized it.
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As you might expect, the 12-hour AM-PM format isn't universal.
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A large portion of the world uses the 24-hour clock,
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also known as military time.
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In that format, the day runs from 0 o'clock to 23.59 without resetting halfway way.
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Midnight is zero o'clock.
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Noon is 12 o'clock.
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And instead of saying 8 PM,
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you simply say 20 o'clock.
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It's logical.
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It reduces confusion.
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And it's used heavily in Europe,
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Asia, science, aviation, and medicine.
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So why does the United States,
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Canada, the Philippines, and several other countries still popularly use AM and PM?
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A lot of it comes down to cultural habit,
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historical practice, and the fact that analog clocks,
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which dominated for centuries, were designed around 12-hour cycles.
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The 12-hour format is also easy to read quickly and matches ancient human rhythms tied to daylight and night cycles.
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Even though digital systems allow for 24-hour displays,
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many cultures simply felt no need to change.
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However, the Latin term stuck because English,
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unlike some other languages, borrowed heavily from Latin in its early scientific,
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religious, and academic development.
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Timekeeping was something the Church and astronomers dealt with extensively,
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and both depended on Latin terms.
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So by the time English clocks and schedules became standardized,
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AM and PM were already the accepted scholarly way of referring to the two halves of the day.
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And because English-speaking nations spread their influence globally through trade,
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colonization, and technology, the system went with them.
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The result is that even in countries that now use the 24-hour clock,
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you can still find AM and PM in old documents,
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historic buildings, and traditional literature.
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In the big picture, AM and PM aren't just labels on your alarm clock.
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They're snapshots of history, history,
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echoes of ancient astronomers, Roman scholars,
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sundial makers, church timekeepers, and early scientists who shaped how the modern world understands time.
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The next time you set an early morning alarm or schedule a late-night meeting,
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remember, you're using a system older than most languages,
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older than modern nations, and older than the technology that now depends on it.
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And that system continues to work centuries later because of two simple Latin phrases,
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ante meridium and post meridium.
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Über diese Lektion

In dieser Lektion werden Sie lernen, mehr über die Begriffe AM und PM zu erfahren und wie diese zeitlichen Abkürzungen ihren Ursprung in der Antike haben. Sie werden die historische Entwicklung, die Bedeutung und den praktischen Gebrauch dieser Begriffe erkunden. Durch diese Erkenntnisse werden Sie nicht nur Ihr Englisch verbessern können, sondern auch Ihr Verständnis für die Zeitmessung, die weltweit verwendet wird, vertiefen. Dabei wird besonders auf die Aussprache und die Verwendung der Begriffe im alltäglichen Englisch eingegangen, was Ihnen helfen kann, Ihre Englische Aussprache zu verbessern.

Wichtige Vokabeln & Phrasen

  • AM - ante meridiem (vor dem Mittag)
  • PM - post meridiem (nach dem Mittag)
  • Meridian - ein imaginärer Linienbogen, der die Position der Sonne markiert
  • Solar noon - die Zeit, wenn die Sonne den höchsten Punkt am Himmel erreicht
  • Sundial - Sonnenuhr, ein Werkzeug zur Zeitmessung
  • Navigation - die Kunst des Sich-Zurechtfindens
  • Rituals - zeremonielle Handlungen, die oft zeitlich organisiert sind
  • Farming - Landwirtschaft, die stark von der Zeitabhängigkeit beeinflusst wird

Übungstipps

Um effektiv mit dem Englisch Shadowing zu üben, verwenden Sie den Inhalt dieses Videos und versuchen Sie, die Sprecher nachzuahmen. Beginnen Sie mit Sätzen, die langsam gesprochen werden, und fokussieren Sie sich auf die Betonung wichtigster Vokabeln, wie AM und PM. Nutzen Sie eine shadowing site, um das Tempo des Sprechers anzupassen, falls nötig. Achten Sie auf die Klarheit der Worte und üben Sie, indem Sie die gleichen Pausen und den gleichen Tonfall nachahmen – dies hilft Ihnen, Ihre shadow speech zu verbessern.

Beachten Sie, dass die Begriffe AM und PM eine spezifische Kultur und Geschichte tragen. Verstehen Sie den Kontext, während Sie üben, damit Sie die Begriffe nicht nur auswendig lernen, sondern auch ihre Verwendung im Alltag anwendbar machen können. Das Üben mit solchen historischen Inhalten kann zudem Ihr Hörverständnis für die englische Sprache enorm steigern.

Nutzen Sie die Informationen aus diesem Video, um in Ihrem eigenen Tempo zu lernen, und genießen Sie das Erforschen der englischen Sprache, während Sie sich vornehmen, Ihre Fähigkeiten weiter zu entwickeln.

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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