Pratique du Shadowing: GERMANY IS OVER - Apprendre l'anglais à l'oral avec YouTube

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Germany will soon crash into the consequences of a fertility crisis made much worse by the  mismanagement of the boomer generation.
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Germany will soon crash into the consequences of a fertility crisis made much worse by the  mismanagement of the boomer generation.
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The demographic collapse tearing up  the generational contract may soon destroy one of Germany's greatest  achievements: Its welfare state.
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Millennials, GenZ and younger are left  with a huge mess they somehow need to sort, while they’re outvoted by the grey  block making the decisions for them.
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What happened?
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Population Collapse Germany was among the first countries  to industrialize and so its fertility rates dropped early in the 20th century.
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But for 55 years, they have been below replacement, at 1.4 children per woman in 2025.
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Compared to South Korea this sounds almost  amazing but it still means population collapse.
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If fertility stays at 1.4 then 100 Germans will have 70kids.
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When those grow up, they will have 49 kids,  who will then have 34 kids, who will have 24.
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A 76% drop within four generations.
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Many people think there are too many  humans anyways, so what is the big deal?
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Well at the same time people  started living much, much longer.
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So we have a fatal mix of way more  grannies and way fewer babies.
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The real crisis German Millennials,  Gen-Z and younger will have to live through is the massive shift in population  composition and the transition period.
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In 2026 Germany is already  one of the oldest countries in the world with a median age of over 45.
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Almost two in five Germans are over 50,  almost one in four is older than 65.
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Only one in 8 is a child under 14.
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Despite its industrial production declining,  suffocating bureaucracy and little economic growth, Germany's system is still chugging along  and it remains one of the richest countries.
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The country still has a big  population and a big workforce, along with generous social  benefits and pension payouts.
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But soon the reality of demographics and boomer mismanagement will hit  Germany like a freight train.
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Population crash means that a society  and culture loses more than just people.
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The systems and countries we have built can’t  just be downscaled, things stop working.
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Young Germans Are Screwed.
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Old Ones too.
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By 2036, 13 million German Baby boomers  will retire – this big bulge here.
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But because they didn’t have nearly enough kids  way fewer younger people will replace them – in 2030 alone there might be millions of jobs that will be impossible to fill.
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Fewer people working means fewer  taxes and resources for the state.
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Also services will decline,  waiting times will increase for everything from your bags at the  airport to doctor's appointments.
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But the much more urgent issue is retirees.
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Germany has a “pay as you go” pension system, which means that about 20% of today’s  salaries is directly paid out to pensioners.
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This sort of worked in the 1960s when there  were five working Germans for every retiree.
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But in 2024 this ratio is down to about 2.5.
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In the 2030s it will get closer  to 2 workers for one pensioner.
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And about ten years after retirement people tend to get really sick and cause the  vast majority of health care costs.
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The math ain’t mathing and  it actually never really did.
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Already in the 1970s governments began  to subsidize the pension funds with tax revenue – pushing the problem into the future.
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As has more or less every  single government since then.
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Well… The Future is Today In 2025, the German federal government spent  roughly a quarter of its annual tax revenues to fix holes in the pension system — on  top of the working population’s payments.
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Let’s say that again: One in four German  tax euros is used to pay out pensions today.
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More than on education, research,  infrastructure and defense combined!
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The wealth of the nation is redistributed from  the young and the working to the old and retired.
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And as the boomers retire  this will only get worse.
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It’s money that could be spent on things that help  the young and the working part of the population.
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Like incentives to start a family,  lower taxes, free childcare, cheap loans to buy homes, investments in  education, infrastructure or clean energy.
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There are so many things that  would help young Germans.
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But will Millennials and Gen-Z get  to enjoy similar pensions at least?
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Well, it’s not very likely.
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The current system only works for boomers because  their parents had more children and died younger, and because Germany was booming  and the problem escalated slowly.
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Young people today don’t have all of that.
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Ok that is depressing, but at  least the young can take care of their own retirement and save money, right?
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Well many sure would like to but  taxes and contributions are about 40% of salaries for the average worker and  almost 50% in the highest tax brackets.
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One of the highest in the world.
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Together with the rising cost of living and  sluggish wage growth, this makes it especially hard for young and middle aged Germans to  generate savings for their own retirements.
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One of the best investments, wealth generators and places of comfort  and security is owning your own place.
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But due to a mix of NIMBYS  preventing new development, increasing mountains of new regulations making  building more expensive, and millions of people immigrating to Germany in the last few decades,  the housing supply is deeply behind demand.
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Renting and buying real  estate in metropolitan areas, where young people actually want  to live, is so expensive today, that even couples with a dual income and good  jobs have a really hard time affording it.
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The generational contract in Germany is broken.
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And yet, some media voices continue to frame all this as a failure of young  people’s financial habits.
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The reality is complicated, and misleading  narratives permeate the media landscape.
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Thankfully, there is a solution.
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Our partner Ground News is a  website and app built to help you think critically about the information  you consume – a mission we fully support.
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They curate news articles from across the  globe, adding context on political bias, reliability, ownership, and summaries that  highlight what each side is leaving out.
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You can even compare headlines to  see how bias shapes the narrative.
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Take this story about a report on Germany’s  economic decline: some present it as a straightforward warning, while others highlight  it as a serious threat to living standards.
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Ground News also reveals "blind spots" –  stories that only one side is covering, showing you what your usual news feed is hiding.
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As information bubbles are becoming the norm, thinking critically about the  news is no longer optional.
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And Ground News makes it easier to do just that.
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Try it at ground.news/nutshell, or scan the QR code on the screen.
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Using this link gives you 40% off  an unlimited access subscription, and directly supports our channel.
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And now back to the video.
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Young Germans are condemned to  pay off a huge loan on the future that the older generations have  generously granted themselves.
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And they don’t have the power to change this by voting – because German parties just  have no incentive to help young people.
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Demographic decline in a  democracy is a feedback loop: when seniors are the largest group of  voters, politicians make politics for them.
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This leaves young Germans facing a hard time  building wealth or getting their own homes, which makes them even less willing to start  families and have children, even if they want to.
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All of which is making the  demographic crash worse.
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Germany has become a society that works  for the old and relies on the young, making it really hard to create new young people.
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Baby boomers’ lives are affected, too.
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With unsustainable pension funds, inevitably, millions of older Germans will have  to work much longer than they thought.
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A retirement age of 70 or higher  is already being discussed.
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Today about 20% of German pensioners  live in poverty and that rate is all but guaranteed to increase  significantly in the 2030s.
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Still, seniors and boomers, in total, own  the vast majority of Germany's wealth.
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Germans are even arguing about to what extent the  costs of social systems have gotten out of hand.
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Even in a high tax country like Germany  there is plenty of wealth disparity and opportunities to tax the rich and take  pressure off workers – alltough of course the details are fiercely debated so  we’ll not get into this right now.
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But the scale of the gap between what  workers pay and what is needed to cover boomers’ pensions is so enormous that even  raising taxes would only buy a bit of time.
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And beyond pensions, the welfare  and healthcare systems Germans rely upon may become unaffordable in the 2030s.
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The vast majority of health care costs  occur during the last quarter of your life.
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So just as the healthcare workforce  is shrinking due to demographics, the numbers of patients will explode.
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The waiting time for a specialist doctor is  already months in the state health care system.
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Ok, but what about immigration?
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Whatever your opinion on immigration  is, pro or against, please put it in a box and ignore it for a moment, we only  want to look at it from one perspective: Can it solve the population crash?
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Let’s look at the population again.
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If a country's pyramid looks like  this and you want to stabilize it at the bottom, immigration will not do that.
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For one, it doesn’t actually make  your country that much younger.
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In Germany the birthrate of most of its  immigrants isn’t higher than the locals’.
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And if new immigrants have more children, they tend to adjust to the rest of  the population within two generations.
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Sure, immigration over the last few decades  has delayed the coming crash and in the transition period we’ll run into serious worker  shortfalls, especially in health care and nursing.
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So zero immigration doesn’t seem wise or feasible.
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But there’s a problem: If birthrates stay  as low as they are or go down even more, then the German population  will continue to shrink.
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And to keep it stable it would constantly  need to be replenished by new immigrants.
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Until they age and themselves need new  immigrants, to pay for their retirement.
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No matter if you think this is a good idea  or not – it is not actually possible – birth rates are crashing everywhere –  eventually immigration around the world will slow down massively – the  world is running out of young people.
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So immigration can delay the issue a bit  and ease the consequences, but that is it.
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Germany either has to solve  its demographic crash – or its welfare state and pension systems will break.
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Conclusion and Opinion Part  – So How Over is Germany?
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The demographic crisis is the greatest danger  to German living standards, and social cohesion.
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And the same crisis is unfolding  in all western countries.
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Things are about to escalate in Germany, Italy, France and Poland – but the same issues are also  on the horizon in the US, Argentina or Canada.
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The reality nobody wants to talk about is that solving the demographic  crisis will be very painful.
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It will require sacrifices from everyone and politicians seem incapable  of addressing it honestly.
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But to solve the demographic crisis for real,  something no nation has done successfully so far, might mean doing things that are  intensely unpopular with older voters.
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Instead of spending 25% of Germany’s  entire budget on the elderly, especially the wealthiest among them, we  could invest more of it in families — paying for housing and childcare and making it  an amazing deal to have a big family.
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More than anything, our attitude to  kids and families needs to change.
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Demographics move slowly but then unstoppably.
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The next few decades will be  rough – but our societies can decide just how rough – and what kind of  societies will emerge on the other side.
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Making this video was hell.
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We wrote the first draft in the winter of 2023!
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We killed this script again and again  only to be annoyed and start fresh.
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This topic is complex and people angrily disagree  about it, so presenting the information in a way that was nuanced but also not so much  that it lost all bite was incredibly hard.
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Especially as Germans it was a real challenge  stepping outside the narratives we grew up with.
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We had countless discussions inside  our team and with our experts, arguing passionately over individual  sentences, facts to delete or add in.
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We reworked, re-researched, and redrew  large parts of it – again and again.
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What you watched today is only the tip of the iceberg and you need to  judge if we did a good job.
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To be frank, projects like this are  horrible financial decisions but we think it is important that  we do them from time to time.
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And we literally can only afford to do  this because of your direct support!
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So if you think what we are doing is of value and  you want to enable more in the future, the best way of doing so is to get one of our passion  projects or limited editions from our Shop.
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One of our personal favorites are our  science posters, we made over 100 and sold over half a million copies over  the years – each of them created in collaboration with leading experts and  made with lots of attention to detail.
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From a new type of map of evolution, to the  incredible inner life of your cells we have infographics about all sorts of topics –  and just straight up beautiful art pieces.
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There is loads more we are proud of, like Artbooks  and journals and hoodies but you get the gist, if you want to support our human made work and  enable us to do projects that are economically dumb ideas – like this video or all of human  history in an hour – the kurzgesagt shop is open!
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Context & Background

In this video titled "Germany Is Over," the speaker discusses the critical issue of Germany's demographic crisis and its profound implications for younger generations. With fertility rates falling significantly and the population aging, the effects of boomer mismanagement are highlighted, suggesting that Millennials and Gen Z face a challenging future. This crisis underscores the need for younger citizens to find solutions to support both the aging population and themselves. By understanding these realities, English learners can engage meaningfully in conversations on demographic and economic issues.

Top 5 Phrases for Daily Communication

  • “Population collapse means that society loses more than just people.” - This phrase conveys the larger implications of demographic changes.
  • “The math ain’t mathing.” - A colloquial expression indicating that the numbers or logic do not add up.
  • “Fewer people working means fewer taxes and resources for the state.” - A concise way to discuss the economic impacts of a shrinking workforce.
  • “The wealth of the nation is redistributed from the young to the old.” - A statement reflecting socioeconomic dynamics and generational issues.
  • “Will Millennials and Gen Z get to enjoy similar pensions?” - A rhetorical question that sparks discussion about future economic challenges.

Step-by-step Shadowing Guide

To effectively practice English speaking and improve your pronunciation using the shadowing technique, follow these steps with the video:

  1. Play a short segment: Choose a 30-second clip from the video, focusing on a section that contains the phrases listed above.
  2. Listen actively: Pay close attention to the speaker's pronunciation, intonation, and pacing. Repeat the phrases in your mind as you listen.
  3. Shadow speak: Once comfortable, begin to speak aloud, mimicking the speaker's voice immediately after each sentence. This helps with rhythm and flow.
  4. Record yourself: Use your phone or computer to record your attempts. Listening back can help identify areas for improvement.
  5. Repeat regularly: Consistent practice is crucial. Incorporate different segments of the video into your routine to continually refine your skills.

By incorporating shadowspeaks into your learning, you will not only enhance your vocabulary but also gain confidence in English speaking practice. Make the most of these engaging topics to facilitate discussion while perfecting your English pronunciation.

Qu'est-ce que la technique du Shadowing ?

Le Shadowing est une technique d'apprentissage des langues fondée sur la science, développée à l'origine pour la formation des interprètes professionnels. Le principe est simple mais puissant : vous écoutez de l'anglais natif et le répétez immédiatement à voix haute — comme une ombre suivant le locuteur avec un décalage de 1 à 2 secondes. Les recherches montrent une amélioration significative de la précision de la prononciation, de l'intonation, du rythme, des liaisons, de la compréhension orale et de la fluidité.

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