シャドーイング練習: 🎧 Luyện Nghe Tiếng Anh Level C1- UFO & NGƯỜI HÀNH TINH - | Listening English Podcast |🎯 - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

C1
Welcome to my channel, let's practice your listening skill.
⏸ 一時停止中
268
文が短すぎたり長すぎる場合は、Editをタップして調整してください。
1
Welcome to my channel, let's practice your listening skill.
2
With video level C1, and the topic is UFO and alien.
3
Now listen carefully.
4
Tom, did you actually read all 162 declassified UFO files last night?
5
Unfortunately, yes, and I genuinely regret starting at midnight.
6
By the third document, I had already stood up and closed every curtain in my apartment.
7
You're exaggerating.
8
I wish I were.
9
The disturbing part is not that the files confirm extraterrestrial life.
10
It's the fact that highly trained military analysts,
11
astronauts, FBI agents, and aerospace engineers repeatedly encountered phenomena they could not explain.
12
And for the first time,
13
the government openly admitted it.
14
That phrase kept appearing throughout the reports, didn't it?
15
Unresolved anomaly, unknown origin, insufficient explanatory data?
16
Exactly.
17
Those phrases are more unsettling than a direct answer.
18
Human beings are psychologically uncomfortable with ambiguity.
19
We would almost rather hear yes or no than we genuinely have no idea.
20
The most recent footage from the Middle East fascinated me.
21
The one recorded above the United Arab Emirates in 2024.
22
The inverted pear-shaped object?
23
Yes.
24
Hovering motionless in the sky with no visible propulsion system,
25
no exhaust plume, no aerodynamic control surfaces,
26
nothing consistent with conventional aircraft design.
27
According to the report, military intelligence cross-referenced it against classified drone databases,
28
allied aircraft registries, and experimental aerospace programs.
29
No match whatsoever.
30
Which immediately triggered public speculation about alien technology.
31
That's where people become irrational.
32
Unidentified does not automatically mean extraterrestrial.
33
It simply means the available evidence is insufficient to establish a definitive conclusion.
34
True.
35
Scientifically speaking, uncertainty is not evidence of aliens.
36
However, some of these incidents are undeniably difficult to dismiss.
37
Especially the Apollo material.
38
Exactly.
39
The Apollo 17 transcripts gave me chills.
40
Imagine floating in lunar orbit in 1972 and suddenly observing luminous objects outside the spacecraft's window.
41
One astronaut described them as brighter than Independence Day fireworks.
42
Another mentioned angular structures rotating in formation.
43
And what makes the situation even stranger is the physical context.
44
The moon has no atmosphere.
45
Under normal optical conditions, certain light scattering effects simply should not occur there.
46
Which is why those blue luminous streaks photographed near the lunar horizon remain controversial even today.
47
For decades, NASA explained the phenomenon as ice particles,
48
detached insulation fragments, or camera artifacts.
49
Yet the newly revised analysis now states that there is no scientific consensus regarding the phenomenon's origin.
50
That subtle change in wording is incredibly significant.
51
Absolutely.
52
Governments are extremely careful with language.
53
When a defense agency shifts from explained to currently unresolved,
54
it means internal certainty has weakened considerably.
55
The part that disturbed me most was the phrase potentially corresponding to a physical object.
56
Same here, especially regarding the triangular luminous formation photographed during Apollo 17.
57
The Pentagon almost never uses terminology implying material existence unless analysts believe the data deserves serious consideration.
58
And then there was the infrared footage over Greece.
59
The object making repeated 90-degree turns at high velocity?
60
Exactly.
61
According to classical aerodynamics, a maneuver like that should generate catastrophic G-forces.
62
Any known aircraft attempting such motion would either disintegrate structurally or kill the pilot instantly.
63
Yet the object appeared to pivot effortlessly,
64
almost as if inertia itself did not apply.
65
Which sounds physically absurd.
66
Unless the observation itself is misleading.
67
Skeptics like Mick West argue that many military videos are affected by parallax distortion,
68
sensor limitations, and optical misinterpretation.
69
That's why I appreciate scientific skepticism.
70
It prevents humanity from turning every anomaly into mythology.
71
Yet skepticism should not become arrogance either.
72
Dismissing every unexplained observation simply because it sounds impossible is equally unscientific.
73
Agreed.
74
Science progresses precisely because people investigate anomalies instead of ignoring them.
75
Speaking of anomalies, the Roswell documents caused chaos online.
76
The partially unredacted FBI memo from 1947?
77
Yes.
78
For decades, people treated Roswell as a conspiracy theory.
79
Then suddenly, an official FBI communication referencing the recovery of a disc-shaped object becomes publicly accessible.
80
Even though that still does not prove extraterrestrial involvement.
81
Correct.
82
It merely proves that government officials themselves were uncertain about what had been recovered.
83
Which may honestly be the central theme of this entire disclosure.
84
What do you mean?
85
Human civilization desperately wants certainty.
86
Yet these files repeatedly force humanity to confront something uncomfortable.
87
There are phenomena beyond our current explanatory framework.
88
That may actually be more profound than aliens themselves.
89
Exactly.
90
People are obsessed with the question,
91
are we alone in the universe?
92
But perhaps the more important question is,
93
how much of reality are we still incapable of understanding?
94
That reminds me of the Kepler telescope data from NASA.
95
Statistically speaking, the Milky Way alone may contain billions of potentially habitable planets.
96
Which means the existence of extraterrestrial life is scientifically plausible, perhaps even probable.
97
But the leap from life probably exists somewhere to alien spacecraft are visiting Earth is enormous.
98
Interstellar distances are almost unimaginably vast.
99
Even light itself requires years to cross relatively small cosmic distances.
100
Exactly.
101
People underestimate how incomprehensibly large the universe actually is.
102
Still, there's something haunting about astronauts describing objects outside their spacecraft that even NASA cannot confidently identify half a century later.
103
What unsettles me most isn't the idea of extraterrestrials.
104
It's the realization that humanity's understanding of the cosmos may still be primitive.
105
We have existed technologically barely a century.
106
Cosmically speaking, we are infants attempting to interpret an infinite structure.
107
And perhaps that is why these disclosures resonate so deeply with the public.
108
They transform the universe from something comfortably explainable into something mysterious again.
109
You know what I found strangely beautiful?
110
What?
111
The fact that trained astronauts,
112
military pilots, and intelligence officers,
113
people conditioned their entire lives to remain rational or humble enough to admit we do not know what we witnessed.
114
That level of intellectual honesty is rare.
115
Very rare.
116
In modern society, people pretend certainty constantly,
117
yet genuine science begins with admitting uncertainty.
118
Which may explain why these documents feel historically important even without proving extraterrestrial life.
119
Because for the first time,
120
powerful institutions openly acknowledge the limits of their own knowledge.
121
Exactly.
122
So after reading all those files,
123
what do you personally believe?
124
I believe most sightings probably have ordinary explanations.
125
Classified military technology, atmospheric distortion, sensor error, psychological bias.
126
But not all of them?
127
No. A few genuinely disturb me not because they necessarily imply aliens,
128
but because they expose cracks in our confidence about reality itself.
129
That's an unsettling thought.
130
Maybe humanity has been chasing UFOs for 79 years,
131
not because we expect little green creatures to descend from the sky.
132
But because we are terrified that we might truly be alone.
133
Or perhaps equally terrified that we are not.
134
That might be the most frightening possibility of all.
135
And the most fascinating one, too.
136
Tom, did you actually read all 162 declassified UFO files last night?
137
Unfortunately, yes, and I genuinely regret starting at midnight.
138
By the third document, I had already stood up and closed every curtain in my apartment.
139
You're exaggerating.
140
I wish I were.
141
The disturbing part is not that the files confirm extraterrestrial life.
142
It's the fact that highly trained military analysts,
143
astronauts, FBI agents, and aerospace engineers repeatedly encountered phenomena they could not explain.
144
And for the first time,
145
the government openly admitted it.
146
That phrase kept appearing throughout the reports, didn't it?
147
Unresolved anomaly, unknown origin, insufficient explanatory data?
148
Exactly.
149
Those phrases are more unsettling than a direct answer.
150
Human beings are psychologically uncomfortable with ambiguity.
151
We would almost rather hear yes or no than we genuinely have no idea.
152
The most recent footage from the Middle East fascinated me.
153
The one recorded above the United Arab Emirates in 2024.
154
The inverted pear-shaped object?
155
Yes.
156
Hovering motionless in the sky with no visible propulsion system,
157
no exhaust plume, no aerodynamic control surfaces,
158
nothing consistent with conventional aircraft design.
159
According to the report, military intelligence cross-referenced it against classified drone databases,
160
allied aircraft registries, and experimental aerospace programs.
161
No match whatsoever.
162
Which immediately triggered public speculation about alien technology.
163
That's where people become irrational.
164
Unidentified does not automatically mean extraterrestrial.
165
It simply means the available evidence is insufficient to establish a definitive conclusion.
166
True.
167
Scientifically speaking, uncertainty is not evidence of aliens.
168
However, some of these incidents are undeniably difficult to dismiss.
169
Especially the Apollo material.
170
Exactly.
171
The Apollo 17 transcripts gave me chills.
172
Imagine floating in lunar orbit in 1972 and suddenly observing luminous objects outside the spacecraft's window.
173
One astronaut described them as brighter than Independence Day fireworks.
174
Another mentioned angular structures rotating in formation.
175
And what makes the situation even stranger is the physical context.
176
The moon has no atmosphere.
177
Under normal optical conditions, certain light scattering effects simply should not occur there.
178
Which is why those blue luminous streaks photographed near the lunar horizon remain controversial even today.
179
For decades, NASA explained the phenomenon as ice particles,
180
detached insulation fragments, or camera artifacts facts.
181
Yet the newly revised analysis now states that there is no scientific consensus regarding the phenomenon's origin.
182
That subtle change in wording is incredibly significant.
183
Absolutely.
184
Governments are extremely careful with language.
185
When a defense agency shifts from explained to currently unresolved,
186
it means internal certainty has weakened considerably.
187
The part that disturbed me most was the phrase potentially corresponding to a physical object.
188
Same here, especially regarding the triangular luminous formation photographed during Apollo 17.
189
The Pentagon almost never uses terminology implying material existence unless analysts believe the data deserves serious consideration.
190
And then there was the infrared footage over Greece.
191
The object making repeated 90-degree turns at high velocity?
192
Exactly.
193
According to classical aerodynamics, a maneuver like that should generate catastrophic g-forces.
194
Any known aircraft attempting such motion would either disintegrate structurally or kill the pilot instantly.
195
Yet the object appeared to pivot effortlessly,
196
almost as if inertia itself did not apply.
197
Which sounds physically absurd.
198
Unless the observation itself is misleading.
199
Skeptics like Mick West argue that many military videos are affected by parallax distortion,
200
sensor limitations, and optical misinterpretation.
201
That's why I appreciate scientific skepticism.
202
It prevents humanity from turning every anomaly into mythology.
203
Yet skepticism should not become arrogance either.
204
Dismissing every unexplained observation simply because it sounds impossible is equally unscientific.
205
Agreed.
206
Science progresses precisely because people investigate anomalies instead of ignoring them.
207
Speaking of anomalies, the Roswell documents caused chaos online.
208
The partially unredacted FBI memo from 1947?
209
Yes.
210
For decades, people treated Roswell as a conspiracy theory.
211
Then suddenly, an official FBI communication referencing the recovery of a disc-shaped object becomes publicly accessible.
212
Even though that still does not prove extraterrestrial involvement.
213
Correct.
214
It merely proves that government officials themselves were uncertain about what had been recovered.
215
Which may honestly be the central theme of this entire disclosure.
216
What do you mean?
217
Human civilization desperately wants certainty.
218
Yet these files repeatedly force humanity to confront something uncomfortable.
219
There are phenomena beyond our current explanatory framework.
220
That may actually be more profound than aliens themselves.
221
Exactly.
222
People are obsessed with the question,
223
are we alone in the universe?
224
But perhaps the more important question is,
225
how much of reality are we still incapable of understanding?
226
That reminds me of the Kepler telescope data from NASA.
227
Statistically speaking, the Milky Way alone may contain billions of potentially habitable planets.
228
Which means the existence of extraterrestrial life is scientifically plausible, perhaps even probable.
229
But the leap from life probably exists somewhere to alien spacecraft are visiting Earth is enormous.
230
Interstellar distances are almost unimaginably vast.
231
Even light itself requires years to cross relatively small cosmic distances.
232
Exactly.
233
People underestimate how incomprehensibly large the universe actually is.
234
Still, there's something haunting about astronauts describing objects outside their spacecraft that even NASA cannot confidently identify half a century later.
235
What unsettles me most isn't the idea of extraterrestrials.
236
Perhaps the realization that humanity's understanding of the cosmos may still be primitive.
237
We have existed technologically barely a century.
238
Cosmically speaking, we are infants attempting to interpret an infinite structure.
239
And perhaps that is why these disclosures resonate so deeply with the public.
240
They transform the universe from something comfortably explainable into something mysterious again.
241
You know what I found strangely beautiful?
242
What?
243
that trained astronauts, military pilots,
244
and intelligence officers, people conditioned their entire lives to remain rational or humble enough to admit,
245
we do not know what we witnessed.
246
That level of intellectual honesty is rare.
247
Very rare.
248
In modern society, people pretend certainty constantly,
249
yet genuine science begins with admitting uncertainty.
250
Which may explain why these documents feel historically important even without proving extraterrestrial life.
251
Because for the first time,
252
powerful institutions openly acknowledge the limits of their own knowledge.
253
Exactly.
254
So after reading all those files,
255
what do you personally believe?
256
I believe most sightings probably have ordinary explanations,
257
classified military technology, atmospheric distortion, sensor error, psychological bias.
258
But not all of them?
259
No, a few genuinely disturb me not because they necessarily imply aliens,
260
but because they expose cracks in our confidence about reality itself.
261
That's an unsettling thought.
262
Maybe humanity has been chasing UFOs for 79 years,
263
not because we expect little green creatures to descend from the sky.
264
But because we are terrified that we might truly be alone.
265
Or perhaps equally terrified that we are not.
266
That might be the most frightening possibility of all.
267
And the most fascinating one, too.
268
Thank you.

アプリをダウンロード

話したすべての文をAIが採点

スキャンしてダウンロード
スキャンしてダウンロード
TRENDING

人気動画

文脈と背景

本動画では、C1レベルの英語リスニングの練習を行います。話題はUFOや異星人に関するもので、非常に興味深い内容が含まれています。特に、公開されたUFOファイルについての会話が繰り広げられ、信頼できる情報源からの見解が交わされます。このような時事的なテーマは、英語を学ぶうえで語彙やリスニングスキルを向上させるのに役立ちます。また、信じられない事実や不可解な現象ついて話すことで、深い理解を促す機会も提供しています。

日常コミュニケーションのためのトップ5フレーズ

  • UFO - 未確認飛行物体として話題になることが多い言葉です。
  • 解決できない異常 - 現象を説明できないことを示す重要なフレーズです。
  • 不明な起源 - 物事がどこから来たのか分からない場合に使われます。
  • 十分な説明データがない - 理解が不十分なことを指摘する際に便利です。
  • 科学的合意がない - 複雑なテーマについての議論を始める時によく使われます。

段階的シャドーイングガイド

この動画の難易度を克服するために、以下のステップを参考にしてください。特定のフレーズを使った英語スピーキング練習として、シャドースピーキングの手法を利用することが効果的です。

  1. 動画を視聴して、全体の内容をつかみます。最初は内容の理解に集中しましょう。
  2. フレーズを繰り返す - 特に重要だと感じたフレーズを選び、耳コピーをしましょう。こうすることで、自然な発音を身につけられます。
  3. リピート練習 - 聞こえてきたフレーズをすぐに繰り返すことで、発音とイントネーションを鍛えます。
  4. 音声を止めて考える - 難しい部分があったら、そこで止めて何度も聞き直し、意味を確認します。
  5. 一人で練習 - 最後に、自分で声に出してそのフレーズを使ってみてください。「YouTubeで英語学習」をすることにより、更に効果的にスキルを向上できます。

これらのステップを繰り返し実践することで、あなたのリスニングスキルやスピーキング力を大きく向上させることができるでしょう。特に、shadow speakを意識しながら実践することをお勧めします。

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。

コーヒーをおごる