Pratique du Shadowing: How to Remember New Words | 5 Easy Vocabulary Tips | English for Beginners - Apprendre l'anglais à l'oral avec YouTube

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Hello everyone and welcome back to Enjoy English Talks,
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where every conversation helps you learn.
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I'm Judy.
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Hello Judy.
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Hello everyone.
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I'm Jake.
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How are you today, Judy?
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I am great today.
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I read a very nice article this morning and I learned a wonderful new word.
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A new word?
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Tell me.
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The word is magnificent.
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It means very beautiful, very grand.
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Magnificent.
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That is a big word.
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Very nice.
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Can you use it in a sentence?
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Of course.
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The sunset last night was magnificent.
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So beautiful and grand.
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Magnificent sunset.
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I can picture it in my mind.
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Good.
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I love learning new words.
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It makes my day better.
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And you, Jake, how are you?
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I am okay.
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But I have a small problem.
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A problem?
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What happened?
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Yesterday, I also learned a new word.
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A very nice word.
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I was so happy.
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But today, I cannot remember it.
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Oh, no. What was the word about?
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Um, it was a feeling word.
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A happy feeling.
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I know I wrote it somewhere,
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but I cannot find it,
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and my brain is empty.
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Hmm.
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Was it delighted?
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Yes, delighted.
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That was the word.
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How did you know?
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Lucky guess.
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But, Jake, this is very common.
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Many people learn a new word,
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and the next day the word is gone.
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Yes, my brain is like a bag with a hole.
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Words go in, words fall out.
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A bag with a hole.
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That is a very funny picture.
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It is not funny for me, Judy.
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It is my life.
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Well, that is actually our topic today.
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Remembering words?
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Yes.
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Today we are talking about how to remember new words,
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and I have five tips for you.
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Five tips?
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My brain needs all five of them.
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Don't worry.
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These tips are simple and they really work.
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But first, we have a small request.
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Yes.
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If you like our podcast,
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please click the Like button.
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Please subscribe to enjoy English Talks.
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And share this episode with your friends and family.
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Thank you.
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It helps us so much.
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We love our listeners.
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Okay, now let's start.
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So Jake, let me ask you something.
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When you learn a new word, what do you do?
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I hear the word.
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I think, oh, nice word.
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And then I move on.
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You move on?
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You don't do anything else?
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No, I just continue and the next day, gone.
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This is very common.
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Most people do the same thing.
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You hear a word, you understand it,
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but you don't do anything to keep it in your brain.
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To keep it, like keeping food in the fridge.
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Yes.
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If you leave food on the table, it goes bad.
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You need to put it in the fridge.
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Words are the same.
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You need to store them properly.
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Store them in my brain fridge.
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Yes, your brain fridge.
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And today I will show you five ways to do that.
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Five tips ready ready.
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Okay.
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Tip number one.
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The name is picture it picture it What does
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that mean it means when you learn a new word make a picture in your mind?
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See what the word means imagine it see the word like in a book No,
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see the meaning close your eyes create an image an image in my head Yes.
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Let me show you.
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The word is huge.
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Huge means very, very big.
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Now close your eyes.
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What do you see?
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I see a big mountain with snow on top.
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Very tall.
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Perfect.
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Now every time you hear huge,
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your brain sees the mountain.
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The picture and the word are connected.
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Oh, the picture helps me remember.
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Yes.
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Let's try another one.
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The word is tiny.
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Tiny means very, very small.
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Picture it.
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Tiny.
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I see a small ant on a green leaf.
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Beautiful.
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Huge, big mountain, tiny, small ant on a leaf.
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See how easy that is?
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The pictures stay in my brain.
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Yes.
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Our brains are very good at remembering pictures,
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much better than remembering just words on a page.
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So when I learn delicious,
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I should imagine a hot pizza with melting cheese.
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I can almost smell it.
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Perfect example.
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You can imagine the smell,
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the taste, even the sound.
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The more details in your picture, the stronger the memory.
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A movie in my head, not just a word.
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Exactly.
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A movie, not just a word.
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And one more trick.
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The funnier the picture, the better you remember.
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Funnier?
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Yes.
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Imagine a tiny ant carrying a huge pizza.
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That is funny, and you will never forget Tiny or huge?
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A tiny ant with a huge pizza.
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That is a great picture.
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The stranger the picture, the stronger the memory.
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Tip 1.
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Picture it.
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See it in my mind.
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Make it funny.
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You got it.
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Good.
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Tip number 2.
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The name is Say It Out Loud.
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Say it out loud.
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Very clear name.
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Yes.
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When you learn a new word, say it.
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Don't just read it.
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Don't just think it.
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Open your mouth, say the word.
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Why is saying it so important?
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Because when you say a word out loud, three things happen.
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Your ears hear it, your mouth practices it,
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and your brain remembers it better.
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Three things at the same time.
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Yes, and here is the trick.
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Don't say it one time.
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Say it five times or even more.
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Five times?
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Yes, let me show you.
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The word is wonderful wonderful wonderful wonderful wonderful That was fun to watch now you try say delighted five times, okay?
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delighted delighted delighted delighted How does it feel it feels natural now like I own the word it is mine?
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Yes, when you say a word many times it becomes yours your mouth knows it your ears know it
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it is part of you now.
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I like that feeling.
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The word is mine.
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And you can do this anywhere.
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In the shower, on a walk,
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in your car, before bed.
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People will think I'm crazy walking down the street saying, delighted, delighted, delighted.
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Maybe, but you will remember the word forever.
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I choose memory over looking normal.
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Good choice.
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Tip two, say it out loud.
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Say it five times.
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Make it yours.
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Make it mine.
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I like that.
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And one more thing.
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Try saying the word in different ways.
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Say it slowly, then fast.
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Say it loud, then quiet.
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Like a game.
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Delighted.
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De-lighted.
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Delighted.
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Delighted.
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See?
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Now your mouth really knows this word.
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My mouth knows it.
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My ears know it.
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My brain knows it.
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Three friends.
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Excellent.
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Tip number three.
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Are you ready?
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Ready.
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Tip 3 is use it right away.
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Use it right away?
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You mean make a sentence?
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Yes.
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When you learn a new word, use it immediately.
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Don't wait.
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Don't say, I will use it later.
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Use it now.
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Make a sentence.
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Why right away?
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Because using a word is the best way to remember it.
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When you just read a word, you forget it quickly.
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When you use it in a sentence, it stays much longer.
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Okay.
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Let me try right now.
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Good.
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Use the word delighted.
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Um, I was delighted to see my friend at the cafe.
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Perfect.
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That is a beautiful sentence.
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Now try huge.
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The pizza was huge.
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I could not finish it.
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Excellent!
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See?
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You used the words.
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Now they are part of a real story, part of your life.
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A real story from my life.
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That is the key?
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Yes.
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The best sentences use your own life, your own experiences.
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That makes the word personal.
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And personal words are easy to remember.
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Because they are connected to me, to my story.
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Exactly.
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Not just a word in a book,
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a word in your life.
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Let me try one more.
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I was delighted when Judy said my sentence was perfect.
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That is a wonderful sentence,
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and it is 100% true.
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Tip 3.
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Use it right away.
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Make a sentence.
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Use my own life.
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Perfect.
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You are doing so well, Jake.
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Tip number 4.
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Thank you, Judy.
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What is tip 4?
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Tip 4 is write it down.
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Write it down.
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In a notebook?
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Yes.
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Get a small notebook just for English words, your vocabulary notebook.
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Every time you learn a new word, write three things.
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Three things.
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What three things?
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The word, the meaning, and one example sentence.
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Word, meaning, sentence.
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Yes.
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For example, word, delighted, meaning,
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very happy, sentence, I was delighted to get your message.
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That is very simple.
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Simple but powerful.
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Writing helps your brain in a special way.
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When you write with your hand,
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your brain pays more attention.
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More than just reading?
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Yes.
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Your hand, your eyes, and your brain all work together when you write.
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The memory becomes stronger.
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The hand helps the brain.
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Interesting.
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Yes.
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So a small notebook with your words, that is your treasure.
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Judy, I have a confession.
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A confession?
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Tell me.
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I had a vocabulary notebook once.
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A beautiful one.
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Green cover.
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I wrote ten words on page one.
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Very neat.
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Very organized.
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And then?
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And then I never opened it again.
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Page one was beautiful.
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Page two was empty.
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Page one only, Jake.
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Page one was perfect, but page two never happened.
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Well, today is a new start.
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But here is my advice.
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Don't write 20 words at once.
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Just write one or two words every day.
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One or two.
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That is enough.
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One or two every day.
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Very small.
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At the end of one month,
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40 or 50 new words.
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All in your notebook.
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That is real progress.
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50 new words in one month just from writing one or two every day.
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That adds up.
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Yes.
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Small every day, big over time.
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And your page two will be full.
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My page two, finally.
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Tip four.
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Write it down.
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Word, meaning, sentence.
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Every day.
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I will buy a new notebook today.
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A blue one this time.
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And now our last tip.
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Tip number five.
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What is it?
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Tip five is go back.
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Go back?
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Go back where?
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Go back to your old words.
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Review them.
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Look at them again.
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Old words?
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But I want to learn new words.
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I know.
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Everyone wants new words.
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But here here's the problem.
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You learn new words on Monday,
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but you never look at them again.
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And by Friday, gone.
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So I learned five words on Monday,
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but by Friday, Monday's words are gone.
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Exactly.
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You always move forward, but you never look back.
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And the old words disappear.
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That is what happens to me every time.
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So tip 5 is very simple.
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Every day, spend 2 minutes reviewing old words.
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Open your notebook, read the words from last week,
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say them out loud, read your sentences.
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Just 2 minutes?
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Just 2 minutes.
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But very important.
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Your brain needs to see a word many times before it stays forever.
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One time is not enough.
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5, 10, 15 times?
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Then it stays.
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How often should I go back?
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A good plan is this.
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Learn a word today, review it tomorrow,
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review it again after three days,
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then after one week, each time the word gets stronger.
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Hmm, so the space between reviews gets longer.
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Yes.
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At first, you review often.
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Later, you review less because the word is already strong in your brain.
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Like watering a plant.
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At first, every day, water, water, water.
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Later, the roots are strong, you water less.
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That is a beautiful example.
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Yes, exactly like a plant.
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You grow your vocabulary like a garden.
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A word garden.
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I like that.
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And going back is how you keep it alive.
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Without review, the garden dies.
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Two minutes every day to keep my garden alive.
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That is all you need.
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And here's one more idea.
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When you review, use all five tips together.
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Picture the word, say it out loud, make a new sentence.
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Everything together.
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All five tips on old words, too?
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Yes.
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That makes the review very powerful.
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Five tips.
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Old words and new words.
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Together.
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Now you understand the whole system.
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Tip five, go back.
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Review old words.
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Water my word garden.
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Perfect.
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Okay, let's review our five tips.
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Yes, I want to say them all.
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Today we talked about how to remember new words.
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Jake, tip one.
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Tip one, picture it.
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Make a picture in my mind.
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See the word.
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Good.
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Tip two.
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Tip two, say it out loud.
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Say the word five times.
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Make it mine.
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Tip three.
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Tip three, use it right away.
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Make a sentence with the new word.
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Use my own life.
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Tip four.
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Tip four, write it down.
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Word, meaning, sentence.
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In my notebook.
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Every day.
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And tip five.
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Tip five, go back.
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Review old words.
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Water my word garden.
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You remembered everything, Jake.
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Because I used all five tips just now.
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See?
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They work.
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And now you will never forget delighted again.
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Never.
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Delighted is mine forever now.
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Picture it.
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Say it.
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Use it.
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Write it.
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Go back.
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Five tips.
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No more bag with a hole.
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No more bag with a hole.
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Now you have a strong brain fridge.
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The best brain fridge in the world.
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Well, that's all the time we have for today.
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Thank you so much for listening to Enjoy English Talks.
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Yes, thank you everyone.
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This was a very useful episode.
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Please subscribe to Enjoy English Talks.
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Give this episode a like.
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And share it with a friend.
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Now, we have a question for you today.
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Yes, please leave a comment below.
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Tell us which tip will you try first?
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Tip 1, tip 2, tip 3,
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tip 4, or tip 5?
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We would love to read your answers.
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Tell us which tip you like best.
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See you next time.
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Bye everyone.
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Keep practicing your English.

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Context & Background

In the recent episode of Enjoy English Talks, presenters Judy and Jake dive into the delightful world of vocabulary acquisition. They discuss the struggles many learners face in retaining newly learned words and phrases. Judy reflects on her encounter with the word "magnificent," while Jake shares his experience of forgetting the word "delighted." Their lively conversation highlights the need for practical strategies that aid in remembering vocabulary, especially for beginners aiming to enhance their IELTS speaking practice and overall english speaking practice.

Top 5 Phrases for Daily Communication

  • “That is a big word.” - A simple way to acknowledge someone's vocabulary choice.
  • “Can you use it in a sentence?” - Encourages practical application of new vocabulary.
  • “I love learning new words.” - Expresses enthusiasm for language acquisition.
  • “My brain is empty.” - A candid expression of forgetting something important.
  • “That was a lucky guess.” - A light-hearted way to acknowledge a correct assumption.

Step-by-step Shadowing Guide

To effectively tackle the vocabulary challenges presented in this video, consider utilizing a shadowing technique alongside a shadowing app, which can enhance your improve english pronunciation skills. Follow these steps for optimal results:

  1. Watch and Listen: Start by watching the video without pausing. Focus on the speakers’ pronunciation and intonation.
  2. Repeat and Imitate: Play the video again, this time pausing after each phrase. Use the shadow speech technique by repeating what you hear, trying to match the speakers' accents and rhythms.
  3. Write It Out: Jot down new words like "magnificent" and "delighted," and create sentences to reinforce your understanding.
  4. Practice in Context: Use the newly learned phrases in your daily conversations or during your IELTS speaking practice, ensuring you understand their meaning and usage.
  5. Review Regularly: Come back to the video and your notes regularly. Regular exposure will help solidify your memory, making it easier to retrieve these words in the future.

By incorporating these strategies and diligently practicing, you’ll find that recalling new vocabulary becomes much more manageable, enriching your english speaking practice and overall confidence in communication.

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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