シャドーイング練習: Learn English with ZOOTOPIA 2 - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

B2
Hiya!
⏸ 一時停止中
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Hiya!
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Are you ready to learn a ton of useful expressions with the brand new Zootopia movie?
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Well, stick with us because today we'll follow Detective Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde,
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who is now a police officer,
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going on an undercover operation to crack a case in this shady shipyard.
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Now, you should know this lesson comes with its own vocabulary flashcards covering all the different expressions that you learned today,
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like the words undercover and shady
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that you just saw highlighted in blue practicing with these flashcards
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is the easiest way for you to remember these words forever
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if
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that sounds interesting to you just click the link in the
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description below right now it'll take you directly to our app
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the real life app where you'll be able to start your
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vocabulary practice right after the lesson are you sure this will work you're the one
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that said we needed a bust just follow my leave okay
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act casual hey here we go hello this whole area is restricted you can't be here whoa fox
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and bunny okay yes
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but proud parents first mr inspector inspector snootley inspector what do you do ensure
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that nothing illegal gets smuggled here in one of these cargo containers that's a weird way to ask
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that anyway you gotta leave there can't be here oh Wait, wait.
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He's right, gosh darn it.
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You are right, sir.
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I guess we should have thought this through, right, babe?
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Before we decided to come down here to this beautiful industrial shipyard to celebrate the big day of our birthday boy.
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Alright, now let's break down the advanced vocabulary we just saw.
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So in this scene, Nick and Judy are working undercover,
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meaning they're disguising themselves as regular civilians instead of showing their police officers.
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Kinda like a spy will do if you remember the James Bond movies, for example.
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So they're trying to crack a case that involves some criminal activity in a shady shipyard.
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To crack a case is an informed expression that means solving a criminal investigation,
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and shady refers to someone or something that looks suspicious.
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Are you sure this will work?
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You're the one that said we needed a bust.
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Just follow my lead, okay?
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The word bust has multiple meanings in English,
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but in law enforcement, it refers to an arrest,
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the act of catching a criminal.
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Check out this other example.
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Everybody freeze, this is a bust!
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And just so you know,
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a bust can also mean something broke or failed,
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like, my phone is busted,
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or the plan was a bust.
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Now, what do you think this other expression Nicky used mean?
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Are you sure this will work?
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You're the one that said we needed a bust.
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Just follow my lead, okay?
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If someone tells you to follow your lead,
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they want you to do exactly what they are doing.
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It's like saying, let me guide this situation and you copy my actions.
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See this example.
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Hands on your hips, now follow my lead.
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You fool.
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Go ahead.
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Okay, just follow my lead.
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Act naturally.
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So Nick follows with another everyday expression natives use
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that you would definitely expect to hear in a movie with detectives being undercover.
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Act casual.
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Hey!
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Here we go.
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Act casual means to behave in a relaxed,
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natural way, trying to appear like everything is normal.
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Well, just act casual.
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Casual.
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Casual.
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Right.
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Okay.
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Totally.
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Uh oh, can't I?
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Don't panic.
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Just act uh, act real casual.
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Yeah, just act casual.
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Mr...
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Inspector!
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Inspector Snootley!
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Inspector!
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What do you do?
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Ensure that nothing illegal gets smuggled here in one of these cargo containers?
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To smuggle means to illegally transport products across borders or into restricted areas,
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usually to avoid taxes or laws.
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Smugglers hide contraband items like drugs,
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weapons, or stolen goods to sneak them past authorities.
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And a cargo container is a large metal box like this,
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used to transport goods on ships, trains, or trucks.
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That's a weird way to ask that.
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Anyway, you gotta leave, you can't be a hit!
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Wait, wait.
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He's right, gosh darn it.
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You are right, sir.
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Gosh and darn it are euphemisms,
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that is like softer versions of stronger words that people use when they want to avoid cursing.
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Gosh is a lighter version of God,
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as in, oh my God,
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and Darnit is a lighter version of Dammit.
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People use these when they're frustrated but want to keep their language clean,
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especially around children or in polite company.
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I guess we should've thought this through, right babe?
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Nick is pretending they didn't plan properly,
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acting like a regular parent who made a silly mistake.
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That's what he means by,
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we should've thought this through.
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If you think something through,
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you carefully consider all aspects of a plan or decision before acting on it.
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Like you analyze the consequences in details instead of acting impulsively.
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Let's find your dad!
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No, no!
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No, not yet.
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They'll kill Toothless.
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No, Astrid, we have to think this through carefully.
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By the way, let me just take a moment to tell you
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that if you don't review the expressions that we're learning today,
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you might forget them pretty quickly.
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I mean, most learners don't really think this through.
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It's almost impossible for you to retain so much knowledge without revisiting it and putting it into practice.
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So to help you with that,
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we've created a set of flashcards that is a really fantastic tool for internalizing what you learn from all of our lessons.
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And today you can get the ones from this lesson with Zootopia 2 for free on our app.
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So the reason why this works is because we put science and the right technology behind it.
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Basically, the app knows the exact words you've learned from all lessons,
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and just when you're about to forget a particular expression,
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we bring it back to you for review and practice.
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It's that easy.
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And using it for just 10 to 15 minutes a day,
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wherever you are, will help you start speaking English naturally and have all these words at the tip of your tongue.
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So click the link in the description below to try the RealLife app right now for free
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and start getting a bit more fluent every day.
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Alright, now let's take a moment to practice some pronunciation.
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I noticed here a really simple but actually quite advanced pattern Nick used,
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which if you learn will help you sound a lot more fluent.
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Check it out.
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Before we decided to come down here to this beautiful industrial shipyard.
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This is a beautiful example of connected speech,
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which refers to the way that natives cut and link words together when you speak.
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And this is happening in a pattern that really you could expect to hear from any native.
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We decided to come down here to this, here to this.
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Notice how he didn't say come down here to this,
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but rather here to this with a fast D sound.
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So basically all those words get linked and the T sound in two becomes a fast D sound.
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Listen to Nick saying it again and try to repeat.
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We decided to come down here to this, here to this.
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Now let's continue watching with subtitles the second part of the scene.
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A customs inspector would be even better.
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Really?
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Alright, for the kid.
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For the kid.
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Oh, you're a saint.
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Well, thank you so much.
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Here you go.
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Either leg.
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Or both.
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I don't care.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Doesn't need to be perfect.
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He's also legally blind.
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Oh, look at you go.
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AHHHHH!
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I put a little train there because I know you like trains.
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Come on, come on, come on.
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Just jiggle, yes, I know.
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Hurry, I got this.
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Jiggle it, jiggle it, jiggle it.
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Hobson, whoa!
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You are not authorized.
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Stand down and wait for backup.
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Toot, toot.
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Here's the fuzz!
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Stop!
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Stop in the name of the law!
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Everybody run!
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Well, you can't win them all.
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Get out of the road, you dumb bunny!
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Agree to disagree.
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My hog rod!
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This is a snail breed!
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Pops and Wild in pursuit of suspect and a stolen catering van heading east.
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Heading east through Shitshire.
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And you know the one thing this little stinker wished for,
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aside from one day getting his tail reattached,
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was to see a choo-choo.
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Stinker is an affectionate, playful term for someone,
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usually a child or a pet,
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who's troublesome or adorable in an impish way.
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It's not actually about smelling bad,
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it's a term of endearment.
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Aside from one day getting his tail reattached,
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was to see a choo-choo.
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To reattach means to attach something again that was previously separated or removed.
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Nick is creating an elaborate emotional backstory about his fake son losing his tail in an accident,
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making Spectre's newly feel sympathetic so he let his guard down.
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And to maybe get a toot-toot conductor to sign his cast.
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A cast is this type of hard protective covering,
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usually made of plaster or fiberglass that doctors put around broken bones to keep them immobilized while they heal.
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If you break your arm or leg,
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you'll likely wear a cast for several weeks.
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And signing a cast is a common tradition where friends,
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family, and even kind strangers write messages,
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draw pictures, or leave their signatures on someone's cast as a gesture of support and well wishes.
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But I'm betting a customs inspector would be even better.
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Customs refers to the government agency that regulates what goods enter or leave a country.
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When you travel internationally, you go through customs,
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where officers check your luggage and documents.
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A customs inspector is an official who works for customs.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Doesn't need to be perfect.
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He's also legally blind.
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A doodle is a simple casual drawing,
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often something you draw without paying so much attention,
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without much planning or skill required, like an informal sketch.
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And by the way, here we have another opportunity to practice some connected speech.
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Listen to how he said this.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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That's another case of a T sound turning into a fast D sound in put a becoming put a.
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Then he keeps going and connects all the following words like this.
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Put a doodle on it.
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Put a doodle on it.
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Fun, right?
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Let's try to repeat.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Anyway, so Nick is keeping the Spectre focused on the Flaycast,
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asking him to draw something simple,
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all while Judy investigates the cargo containers behind him.
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Mmmmm.
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Toot toot.
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It's the fuzz!
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Stop!
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Stop in the name of the law!
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And the name of the law is a formal,
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dramatic phrase used by law enforcement when commanding someone to stop or submit to authority.
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It means, by the authority granted to me by the law,
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or I'm ordering you to stop because that represent the law.
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I'll cut you now!
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Stop!
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No!
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Got you!
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Well, you can't win them all.
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Get out of the road, you dumb bunny!
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Agree to disagree.
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Agree to disagree is a polite phrase used when two people have different opinions and neither will change their mind,
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so they decide to accept that they simply see things differently and move on.
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It's a way to end an argument respectfully.
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For example, you could say,
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I think the movie was great,
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you think it was terrible,
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let's just agree to disagree.
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My hog rod!
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This is a funny play on words.
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So a hot rod is slang for a customized car,
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usually an older model, that's been modified for speed and performance.
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But the civilian yells, my hog rod,
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instead of hot rod, because he's a pig character in Zootopia.
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It's a pun combining hog,
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a word for pig, with hot rod.
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The movie is full of these animal based puns and wordplay.
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Alright guys, now here comes the most important part of the lesson.
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We're gonna test your comprehension by watching everything again,
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the whole scene, without any subtitles this time,
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and I'm gonna ask you some quiz questions to check how well you've understood everything.
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Are you ready?
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Let's go!
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Are you sure this will work?
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You're the one that said we needed a bust.
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Just follow my lead, okay?
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Act casual!
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Hey!
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What is Nick asking Judy to do?
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behind him in a line,
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trust his plan and copy his actions, lead the investigation herself.
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Nothing illegal gets smuggled here in one of these cargo containers?
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That's a weird way to ask that.
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Anyway, you gotta leave.
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You can't be a hit.
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Wait, wait.
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He's right, gosh darn it.
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You are right, sir.
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I guess we should have thought this through.
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Right, babe?
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What does it mean to think something through?
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To think something through means to carefully consider all aspects of a plan before acting on it.
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Before we decided to come down here to this beautiful industrial shipyard to celebrate the big day of our birthday boy.
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It's his birthday?
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Yeah, first one since the accident.
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And you know, the one thing this little stinker wished for,
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aside from one day getting his tail reattached,
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was to see a choo-choo and to maybe get a toot-toot conductor to sign his cast.
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But I'm Betting a customs inspector would be even better.
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What is the role of a customs inspector like Snootley supposed to be?
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To design and build cargo containers?
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To check goods entering and leaving?
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To drive ships in and out of the shipyard?
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Really?
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All right, for the kid.
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For the kid.
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Oh, you're a saint.
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We thank you so much.
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Here you go.
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Either leg.
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Or both.
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I don't care.
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Maybe put a doodle on it.
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Doesn't need to be perfect.
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He's also legally blind.
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Oh, look at you go.
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I put a little train there because I know you like trains.
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Come on, come on, come on.
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Just jiggle, yes, I know.
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Hurry!
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I got this!
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Jiggle it, jiggle it, jiggle it!
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Hops and walls!
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You are not authorized!
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Stand down and wait for backup!
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Toot toot.
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It's the fuzz!
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Stop!
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Stop in the name of the law!
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Everybody run!
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Well, can't win them all.
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Get out of the road, you dumb bunny!
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Agree to disagree.
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My hog rod!
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This is a snail breed!
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Cubs and Wilde in pursuit of suspect and a stolen catering van heading east.
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Stop it! heading east through Sheetshire.
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Aw yeah guys, great job.
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Now if you are new to our YouTube channel,
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you should know
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that every single week we make new lessons just like this one to help you understand fast speaking natives without getting lost,
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without missing the jokes, and without subtitles.
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So if that sounds like something that you want to be able to do,
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just hit the subscribe button and the bell down below so you never miss any of our new lessons.
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Okay, not what I had in mind.
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All right, just a few more blocks.
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We're almost to our new house.
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Step on it, Daddy.
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Why don't we just live in this smelly car?
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We've already been in it forever.
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Well, it actually was really lucky,
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because that gave us plenty of time to think about what our new house is going to look like.
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What?
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Let's review the top five daydreams.

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人気動画

このレッスンについて

このレッスンでは、新しい映画「ズートピア 2」を通じて、役立つ表現をたくさん学ぶことができます。デテクティブのジュディ・ホップスとニック・ワイルドが、潜入捜査を行い、シェイディな船積み場での事件を解決しようと奮闘する様子を一緒に追いかけます。このレッスンには、学んださまざまな表現をカバーする語彙フラッシュカードも付いています。英語スピーキング練習に役立つ表現をマスターするために、しっかりと準備をしましょう。

重要な語彙とフレーズ

  • undercover - 潜入して活動すること(通常、警察官が不正を調査する際に使う)
  • shady - あやしい、信用できない
  • crack a case - 事件を解決すること
  • bust - 逮捕する行為、または失敗を意味することも
  • follow my lead - 自分の指示に従って行動すること

練習のヒント

このビデオのスピードやトーンに合わせて、英語シャドーイングを試みることで、リスニングとスピーキングの両方を強化しましょう。特に、映画のキャラクターになりきって、音声を真似ることがポイントです。例えば、ニックやジュディのセリフを聞いた後、そのまま声に出して繰り返してみてください。これにより、重要な表現を自然と体得することができます。また、shadow speakのテクニックを使うと、単語の発音やイントネーションを正確に学べます。自分の速さで練習した後、ビデオのスピードに合わせてみると、より効果的です。「YouTubeで英語学習」をしながら、楽しく英語スピーキング練習を習得しましょう。特に、IELTS スピーキング対策としても役立ちますので、積極的に声に出して練習を行ってください。

シャドーイングとは?英語上達に効果的な理由

シャドーイング(Shadowing)は、もともとプロの通訳者養成プログラムで開発された言語学習法で、多言語習得者として知られるDr. Alexander Arguelles によって広く普及されました。方法はシンプルですが非常に効果的:ネイティブスピーカーの英語を聞きながら、1〜2秒の遅延で声に出してすぐに繰り返す——まるで「影(shadow)」のように話者を追いかけます。文法ドリルや受動的なリスニングと異なり、シャドーイングは脳と口の筋肉が同時にリアルタイムで英語を処理・再現することを強制します。研究により、発音精度、抑揚、リズム、連音、リスニング力、そして会話の流暢さが大幅に向上することが確認されています。IELTSスピーキング対策や自然な英語コミュニケーションを目指す方に特におすすめです。

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