シャドーイング練習: The English words you don't learn unless you go to England. - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

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There are certain British words that every British person uses every day.
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There are certain British words that every British person uses every day.
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But what are they?
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In this video, I'm going to show you seven proper British words that you don't learn unless you go to England.
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I'm also going to show you the world around me and teach you English using it.
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For example, this is a cat.
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I'm stroking the cat.
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On top of that, I'm going to hide a secret British word within this video and it's going to appear in many different contexts so see if you can spot it before I tell you at the end.
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Whoops!
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Dropped my tea.
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Speaking of tea, another very common British thing is a cup of tea which we would commonly call a cuppa.
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Now a cuppa can be coffee or tea but it's more common that it's tea and it comes from a cup of tea which got shortened to cup a tea which now got shortened even more to cuppa.
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A cuppa.
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A proper British cuppa.
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Now let's make one but first I need to ask my friends because it's good to be polite in England.
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All right, Tree.
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All right, Jay.
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Fancy a cuppa?
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Two sugars, no three.
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Actually, I'm a tree, I don't care.
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Hey up, Tree.
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Hey up, Jay.
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Shall I pop the kettle on?
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Do birds live in my branches?
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Yes, pop that kettle on.
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Pop.
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Now, I'm going to brew the tea, which is to pour the boiling water from the kettle into the mug and to brew is to let that tea bag infuse inside the mug for the flavors to develop.
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Now I'll tell you what I fancy while I wait for this tea to brew I fancy a cheeky biscuit.
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Bickeys.
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These are McVitie's digestive biscuits and they are very British.
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McVitie's were invented in 1892 because apparently they help with digestion.
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Turns out that they don't help with digestion but the name stuck and now nobody cares.
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The next step when having a cup of tea in England is to dunk your biscuit.
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A cheeky dunk.
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Now I've been using the word cheeky a lot.
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What does it mean?
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Cheeky means doing something slightly indulgent that maybe you shouldn't do.
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Perhaps you would use it with food, a cheeky biscuit, you might use it with a drink, a cheeky coke, or you might use it with a spontaneous decision, a cheeky detour.
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I might say to my friend, fancy a cheeky pint?
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And my friend might say, go on then, just a cheeky one.
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Now guys, later on in about one hour I'm going on a boat ride to the place where King Kong the movie was filmed and I need to book my tickets so...
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Sugar!
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Gutted man!
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My screen is just cracked you can see the crack across the screen Gutted.
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Oh, gutted.
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Gutted means deeply disappointed, devastated.
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It's that gut feeling you get when something goes wrong.
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Oh man, Tree, I am gutted.
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Don't worry, Jay.
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Every cloud has a silver lining.
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Yeah, I suppose you're right.
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In every bad situation, there's a positive side.
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That's a nice way of looking at it.
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Speaking of that, let's look for some new words.
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She's licking her kittens.
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She's licking them to clean them.
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And we have here a cat and two kittens.
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Kittens are baby cats.
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Early this morning, these two kittens were playing with each other.
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They were play fighting, pouncing on one another.
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It was very funny, very cute, and a very good way to start the morning.
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I'm not gutted anymore.
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Now I've played with this kitten, I'm sweaty, but I'm feeling much better.
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In fact, I'm starting to feel tingly.
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I'm starting to feel excited.
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I'm very excited.
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I am buzzing.
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Why am I buzzing?
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Because later, I'm going on a boat ride.
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In fact, very soon, I'm going on a boat ride.
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I'm buzzing, I'm excited.
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All right, we're ready.
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Take off the tote bag, that's a tote bag, and put on my very fashionable life jacket.
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This is neon orange.
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Neon is like a bright version of a colour, and this is going to help me stay afloat if I fall in the water, which hopefully I don't because Chang behind the camera is holding a very expensive camera.
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These are the straps or the buckles and I'm clipping them.
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It's very hot, it's very sweaty, but I'm buzzing.
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Say hello.
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It's Uncle Lee from London.
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Remember me?
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This is very peaceful.
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So we're travelling again through the rivers, the rice fields, the mountains in Ninh Binh in Vietnam, northern Vietnam.
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And this is where they filmed King Kong, the film with the big gorilla, Peter Jackson's film.
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They filmed that here, or at least a part of that.
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And you can see why, because it looks otherworldly.
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Otherworldly meaning of another world.
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It looks alien.
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It looks like a landscape that could be on another planet.
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Now, I have a question for you.
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Have you ever seen any landscapes like this?
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What is the most phenomenal, spectacular, otherworldly landscape that you have witnessed in your lives?
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Let me know in the comments.
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So we are moving forward on the water.
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We are rowing on the water.
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and this is an oar.
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She is using the oar to row and the texture of this rock is a bit sharp, we might say jagged or rugged.
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There is a lady wearing a non-lar riding a bicycle along the edge of the river.
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Around me there are giant limestone mountains with trees on the edge of them.
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It's beautiful innit, it's gorgeous innit, it's hot innit.
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I just use the words innit, which you might hear British people use all the time.
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And innit is a combination of isn't it, innit.
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And we use it as like a tag question.
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So it's nice innit means it's nice, wouldn't you agree?
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I would also use innit to agree with someone.
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someone.
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If someone says this is gorgeous, I would say in it.
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Like, isn't it?
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Yes, it is, basically.
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I agree with you.
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That is proper British, innit?
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Okay, now we are heading into a cave.
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Right, guys, it's about to get dark.
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Now we're going into a cave.
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Flip you around so you can see.
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Have you ever been in a cave before?
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Nice, innit?
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Nice, innit?
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That was good.
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So inside this cave, there is a cool breeze.
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A breeze is a light wind, and cool is the opposite of warm.
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So cool can also mean good, nice, but in the context of weather and temperature, cool means quite cold, nicely cold.
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It feels like a pleasant adjective.
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It's a cool breeze.
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Now I need to watch.
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I don't bang my head.
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Right, now we're getting out of the boat and going on to the land.
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We've just taken a short rest, a five minute break before we get back on the boat and we're walking around these gardens.
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There are flowers either side of the path and giant mountains surrounding us.
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I actually feel very small in this landscape.
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It's pretty colossal, pretty huge, pretty giant.
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So now we're walking over a creaky bridge.
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Can you hear the creek?
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That sound is called creaking and it's associated with horror films.
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A creaking wooden bridge.
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Hopefully it doesn't collapse and fall.
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Oh my goodness.
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I'm lost for words honestly.
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So the final English word of of the day is cheers.
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Now normally you might know cheers as the word that you use when you clink the glasses together.
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That's one use.
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Another use is to say thank you.
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Cheers mate means thanks my friend.
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And the final lesser known use is saying goodbye.
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Cheers.
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Cheers.
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you later.
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Now it's not goodbye, it's just cheers see you later.
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I'm gonna get back on this boat, we're gonna get back to land and after that I'm gonna reveal the hidden word that I've been sprinkling throughout this video.
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So stick around.
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Oh, proper British day.
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Proper good that innit?
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That is the secret word that I've been sprinkling sprinkle in throughout this video the word proper and it's an intensifier it can be substituted with very really or incredibly that is proper British now if you want to practice with all the words you learned in this video then you can do that on Sprout language.com you can practice speaking with J.I.
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which is an AI version of me and he understands all of the context in this video so you can speak with him to put what you learned into practice.
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That is proper good.
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I'll see you there.
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Nice, isn't it?

このレッスンについて

このレッスンでは、イギリスに行かなければ学べない独特の英単語やフレーズについて学びます。特に、日常生活で使われる「イギリス英語」に焦点をあて、動画を通じてその言葉の使い方を理解します。ビスケットカッパなどの言葉を使いながら、実生活の文脈の中で英語を学ぶことができます。これにより、IELTS スピーキング対策英語スピーキング練習に役立つ実用的な表現力が身につきます。

重要な語彙とフレーズ

  • カッパ (cuppa) - お茶やコーヒーを指すカジュアルな言い方
  • ビスケット (biscuit) - お菓子の一種で、特に紅茶と一緒に食べる
  • チーキー (cheeky) - 少し背徳的な、あるいは思い切った行動を指す
  • ダンク (dunk) - ビスケットを茶に浸すこと
  • ガット (gutted) - 深い失望を表す言葉
  • ポップ (pop) - 何かを手短にする時の表現(例:ケトルを沸かす)

練習のヒント

この動画のスピードとトーンに合わせて、シャドーイングを行うことをお勧めします。音声を聴きながら、その後ろに続いて声を出してみましょう。特に、イギリスのアクセントやイントネーションに注目し、繰り返し発声することで、自然なリズムを身につけます。自分の声を録音して再生し、改善点を見つけるのも効果的です。また、練習する際にはYouTubeで英語学習を活用し、他のビデオと併せて視聴することで、語彙をさらに広げることができます。

このレッスンを通して、イギリスならではのフィーリングを味わいながら、新しい単語を覚え、自分の英語力を一段と高めましょう。  shadowing siteや他のリソースも参考にしながら、体験的に英語を学ぶことが大切です。

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。

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