Pratica di Shadowing: [Luyện nghe tiếng Anh] Bài phát biểu của Tổng thống Obama tại Hà Nội, 2016 - (Part 1 of 3) - Impara a parlare inglese con YouTube

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The President's Prime Minister.
⏸ In Pausa
140 frasi
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The President's Prime Minister.
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Xin chào.
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Xin chào Vietnam.
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Thank you so much.
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Thank you.
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Please.
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To the government and the people of Vietnam,
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thank you for this very warm welcome and the hospitality that you've shown me on this visit.
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And thank all of you for being here today.
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We have Vietnamese from across this great country,
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including so many young people who represent the dynamism and the talent and the hope of Vietnam.
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On this visit, my heart has been touched by the kindness for which the Vietnamese people are known,
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And the many people who have been lining the streets,
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smiling and waving, I feel the friendship between our peoples.
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Last night, I visited the old quarter here in Hanoi and enjoyed some outstanding Vietnamese food,
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tried some bun cha, drank some bie hanoi.
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But I have to say,
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the busy streets of this city,
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I've never seen so many motorbikes in my life.
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So I haven't had to try to cross the street so far,
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but maybe when I come back and visit,
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you can tell me how.
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I am not the first American President to come to Vietnam in recent times.
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But I am the first,
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like so many of you,
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who came of age after the war between our countries.
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When the last U.S forces left Vietnam,
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I was just 13 years old.
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So my first exposure to Vietnam and the Vietnamese people came when I was growing up in Hawaii,
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with its proud Vietnamese American community there.
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At the same time, many people in this country are much younger than me.
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Like my two daughters, many of you have lived your whole lives knowing only one thing,
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and that is peace and normalized relations between Vietnam and the United States.
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So I come here mindful of the past,
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mindful of our difficult history,
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but focused on the future,
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the prosperity, security, and human dignity that we can advance together.
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I also come here with a deep respect for Vietnam's ancient heritage.
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For millennia, farmers have tended these lands,
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a history revealed in the Dongshun drums.
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At this bend in the river,
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Hanoi has endured for more than a thousand years.
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The world came to treasure Vietnamese silks and paintings.
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And a great temple of literature stands as a testament to your pursuit of knowledge.
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And yet, over the centuries,
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your fate was too often dictated by others.
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Your beloved land was not always your own.
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But like bamboo, the unbroken spirit of the Vietnamese people was captured by Li Tiong Khet.
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The Southern Emperor rules the Southern Land.
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Our destiny is writ in Heaven's Book.
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So today, we also remember the longer history between Vietnamese and Americans that is too often overlooked.
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More than 200 years ago,
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when our founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson,
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sought rice for his farm,
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he looked to the rice of Vietnam,
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which he said had the reputation of being whitest to the eye,
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best flavored to the taste, and most productive.
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And soon after, American trade ships arrived in your port seeking commerce.
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During the Second World War,
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Americans came here to support your struggle against occupation.
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When American pilots were shot down,
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the Vietnamese people helped rescue them.
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And on the day that Vietnam declared its independence,
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crowds took to the streets of this city,
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and Ho Chi Minh evoked the American Declaration of Independence.
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He said, all people are created equal.
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The Creator has endowed them with inviolable rights.
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these rights are the right to life,
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the right to liberty, and the right to pursuit of happiness.
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In another time, the profession of these shared ideals
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and our common story of throwing off colonialism might have brought us closer together sooner.
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But instead, Cold War rivalries and fears of communism pulled us into conflict.
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Like other conflicts throughout human history,
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we learned once more a bitter truth — that war,
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no matter what our intentions may be, brings suffering and tragedy.
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At your war memorial not far from here,
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and with family altars across this country,
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you remember some 3 million Vietnamese soldiers and civilians on both sides who lost their lives.
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At our memorial wall in Washington,
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we can touch the names of 58,315 Americans who gave their lives in the conflict.
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In both our countries, our veterans and families of the fallen still ache for the friends and loved ones that they lost.
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Just as we learned in America that even if we disagree about a war,
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we must always honor those who serve and welcome them home with the respect they deserve,
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we can join together today,
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Vietnamese and Americans, and acknowledge the pain and the sacrifices on both sides.
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More recently, over the past two decades,
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Vietnam has achieved enormous progress.
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And today, the world can see the strides that you have made.
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With economic reforms and trade agreements,
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including with the United States,
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you have entered the global economy,
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selling your goods around the world.
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More foreign investment is coming in.
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And with one of the fastest-growing economies in Asia,
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Vietnam has moved up to become a middle-income nation.
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We see Vietnam's progress in the skyscrapers and high-rises of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City,
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new shopping malls and urban centers.
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We see it in the satellites Vietnam puts into space,
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and a new generation that is online,
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launching startups and running new ventures.
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You see it in the tens of millions of Vietnamese connected on Facebook and Instagram.
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And you're not just posting selfies,
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although I hear you do that a lot.
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And so far, there have been a number of people who have already asked me for selfies.
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You're also raising your voices for causes that you care about,
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like saving the old trees of Hanoi.
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So all this dynamism has delivered real progress in people's lives.
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Here in Vietnam, you've dramatically reduced extreme poverty,
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you've boosted family incomes, and lifted millions into a fast-growing middle class.
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Hunger, disease, child and maternal mortality are all down.
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The number of people with clean drinking water and electricity,
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the number of boys and girls in school,
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and your literacy rate, these are all up.
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This is extraordinary progress.
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This is what you have been able to achieve in a very short time.
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And as Vietnam has transformed,
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so has the relationship between our two nations.
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We learned a lesson taught by the venerable Thich Nhat Hanh,
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who said, in true dialogue,
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both sides are willing to change.
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In this way, the very war that had divided us became a source for healing.
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It allowed us to account for the missing and finally bring them home.
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It allowed us to help remove landmines and unexploded bombs,
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because no child should ever lose a leg just playing outside.
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Even as we continue to assist Vietnamese with disabilities,
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including children, we are also continuing to help remove Agent Orange,
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dioxins, so that Vietnam can reclaim more of your land.
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We're proud of our work together in Da Nang,
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and we look forward to supporting your efforts in Bien Hoa.
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Let's also not forget that the reconciliation between our countries was led by our veterans who once faced each other in battle.
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Think of Senator John McCain,
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who was held for years here as a prisoner of war,
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meeting General Saat, who said our countries should not be enemies but friends.
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of all the veterans, Vietnamese and American,
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who've helped us heal and build new ties.
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Few have done more in this regard over the years than a former Navy Lieutenant
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and now Secretary of State for the United States,
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John Kerry, who is here today.
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And on behalf of all of us,
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John, we thank you for your extraordinary efforts.

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Contesto e Sfondo

Il discorso del Presidente Obama a Hanoi nel 2016 rappresenta un momento significativo nelle relazioni tra gli Stati Uniti e il Vietnam. In questa visita, Obama ha condiviso la sua gratitudine per l'ospitalità ricevuta e ha messo in evidenza l'importanza di costruire un futuro prospero e pacifico insieme. Il suo approccio rispettoso nei confronti della cultura e della storia vietnamita ha colpito molti, rendendo questo discorso non solo un’importante occasione diplomatica, ma anche un'opportunità per i praticanti di lingua inglese di migliorare la loro comprensione attraverso il "shadowing in inglese". La varietà di espressioni e il tono amichevole del Presidente offrono spunti ideali per praticare la lingua.

Le 5 Frasi Chiave per la Comunicazione Quotidiana

  • “Thank you so much.” – Un modo semplice e efficace per esprimere gratitudine.
  • “I feel the friendship between our peoples.” – Un'affermazione sull'amicizia, fondamentale per comunicare bene.
  • “I am mindful of our difficult history.” – Riconoscere il passato è importante in ogni conversazione.
  • “Your beloved land was not always your own.” – Una frase che parla di appartenenza e identità culturale.
  • “Many of you have lived your whole lives knowing only one thing, and that is peace.” – Riferimenti alla pace possono rafforzare la comunicazione.

Guida Passo-Passo al Shadowing

Per affrontare efficacemente la difficoltà di questo video, segui queste fasi nel tuo "shadowing speech" per migliorare la tua pratica di conversazione in inglese:

  1. Ascolta attentamente: Guarda il video senza fermarti per prendere appunti. Concentrati sulla pronuncia e sull'intonazione di Obama.
  2. Errori da evitare: Non stressarti se non riesci a seguire tutto alla prima. L'obiettivo è migliorare gradualmente.
  3. Ripeti in tempo reale: Mentre ascolti, prova a ripetere le frasi in sincrono. Utilizza "shadowing site" dedicati se necessario.
  4. Fai delle pause: Dopo ogni frase, fermati per ripetere ciò che hai appena ascoltato. Questo aiuta a consolidare la memoria linguistica.
  5. Rivedi il video: Ripeti il processo fino a quando ti senti sicuro. La ripetizione è fondamentale nel processo di apprendimento.

Utilizzando questa guida, gli studenti potranno affinare le loro abilità linguistiche, facendo del "shadowspeaks" una parte integrante della loro routine di studio. Buona pratica!

Cos'è la tecnica dello Shadowing?

Shadowing è una tecnica di apprendimento delle lingue supportata da studi scientifici, originariamente sviluppata per la formazione dei traduttori professionisti e resa popolare dal poliglotta Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Il metodo è semplice ma potente: ascolti un audio in inglese di madrelingua e lo ripeti immediatamente ad alta voce — come un'ombra che segue il parlante con un ritardo di solo 1–2 secondi. A differenza dell'ascolto passivo o degli esercizi di grammatica, lo shadowing costringe il tuo cervello e i muscoli della bocca a elaborare e riprodurre simultaneamente i modelli di discorso reale. La ricerca dimostra che migliora significativamente la precisione della pronuncia, l'intonazione, il ritmo, il discorso connesso, la comprensione dell'ascolto e la fluidità del parlato — rendendolo uno dei metodi più efficaci per la preparazione alla prova di speaking dell'IELTS e per la comunicazione reale in inglese.

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