シャドーイング練習: What are tech CEOs seeking in China with Trump? | DW News - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

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Now, Trump traveled to China with a delegation of more than a dozen business leaders.
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Now, Trump traveled to China with a delegation of more than a dozen business leaders.
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The technology industry bosses were among the most prominent of the CEOs in Trump's trade and industry entourage.
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The high-profile delegation includes Elon Musk,
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the CEO of Apple, Tim Cook,
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and Jensen Huang, head of the world's most valuable company, NVIDIA.
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Both China and the U.S are vying for the position of world leader in high tech in many areas of technology.
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but especially in AI.
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Especially ahead of their negotiations,
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Trump's Treasury Secretary hailed the meeting saying that the world's two AI superpowers are going to start talking.
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Let's bring in James King.
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He is a senior research fellow on China at the British think tank Chatham House.
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He just published a book on Global Tech Wars, China's Race to Domination.
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Welcome to the program and thank you so much for your time.
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What criteria do you think the Trump administration used to choose these specific CEOs?
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What does it say to you?
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No, I wouldn't want to be too scientific about this.
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My understanding is that this trip and the people on the trip were decided at pretty short notice.
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But if you look down the list of the very powerful US CEOs and other senior executives,
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you can see that they fall into two categories.
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One is the heads of big US companies
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that have massive business in China and are regarded as kind of friends of China.
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You know, they've been going back and forth for years and they have business to do.
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And the other is those US companies that have business in China,
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but are having a really hard time.
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And those guys, I would put in the category of people who have problems to solve.
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So I think that's basically the category.
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But a lot of US business people didn't go.
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You've got most of the Fortune 500 that are American companies have business in China.
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So this is a fairly slim delegation compared to some that we've seen in the past.
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What do you make of the Treasury Secretary's comment
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when he says the world's two AI superpowers are going to
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start talking? well i mean you know it's an interesting comment uh my understanding of the us
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and china's relationship over ai is it's mostly adversarial uh you
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have the us throwing enormous amounts of money uh at ai you've got companies like anthropic
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and open ai making huge progress but using billions
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and billions of dollars to get there and then you've got lean
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and mean chinese competitors
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that appear to be making similar strides in ai with much much less money
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and producing uh large language models these uh these ai companies uh
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that are much cheaper to use and just as efficient running on much less compute.
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So my understanding is that the US's attitude towards Chinese AI is that this is a significant competitor,
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a peer competitor to the big US companies.
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I don't really see much mileage in the idea of cooperation between US and Chinese LLMs.
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Maybe I've missed a beat on that.
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Maybe there's some plan in the works.
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But to me, that seems pie in the sky.
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And where would you say,
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I mean, if you broaden it out beyond AI and look at tech more broadly,
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where do you see China currently standing in the global tech hierarchy and stacking up against Silicon Valley?
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In which domains is it now ahead of the United States?
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Well, you kindly mentioned my book before it came on.
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My view has been for two or three years
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that china has already effectively won the tech rivalry between the us and china
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there are several pieces of evidence
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that we can cite for this one is the website of the aspi the australian think tank
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that shows that china is now ahead in 66 out of 74 critical technologies critical advanced technologies
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that is and there are plenty of other uh readings on this as well
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So I think in all but a few areas, China is ahead.
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The areas where it's not ahead are things like semiconductors.
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Jensen Huang, the head of Nvidia,
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is in China at the moment.
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China, of course, wants to get some of the most advanced semiconductors that it can to power its AI models.
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And there are a few other areas as well.
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I believe that some of the US AI companies are still just ahead of Chinese competitors.
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And there's a few other areas of tech as well where the US is still ahead.
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But in general, China is moving at warp speed,
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climbing the technology ladder very rapidly indeed.
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And U.S companies are losing their position that they've held for decades as the leading tech companies in the world.
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Given that dynamic that you've just highlighted,
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what do you see as the most misunderstood aspects of China's tech strategy in Western discourse right now?
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First of all, I think the West has been extremely slow to understand how quick
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and how pervasive China's ascent up the technology ladder has been.
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Now, I believe that we can see this.
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For instance, the French president,
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Emmanuel Macron, basically said this the other day,
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and some other leaders, including Friedrich Mertz of Germany has paid tribute to China's tech advance recently.
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But the first point is that the West has been very, very slow.
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And I think that comes down to the fact that there hasn't been very much contact,
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especially over the COVID period between the West and China.
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But now I think people are waking up and they're beginning to realize that China is really,
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as Xi Jinping puts it,
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China is undergoing changes unseen in a century.
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And we are seeing a whole new paradigm for the global economy,
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which is going to be based on Chinese leadership in tech and in many other areas.
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So what does that mean then when we're talking about the next frontier in competition?
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If you drill down into the specifics,
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where do you think that the decisive battles are going to be fought?
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I think they'll be fought in all major technologies.
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But if we particularly look at areas like biotechnology,
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pharmaceuticals, China is already moving ahead.
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Of course, we're all familiar with what's happened with electric vehicles.
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China's supremacy is now undoubted,
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but also the batteries that go into electric vehicles.
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China is already number one and gaining market share.
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The issue for companies in Europe
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and in America is Chinese companies are now starting to disrupt some of the biggest companies that we have.
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And so I don't think it's an exaggeration to say that here in Europe,
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many of our largest companies over the next five years will be concerned about their survival,
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literally their survival in the face of Chinese competition.
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And it's not going to.
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Sorry, James, I just wanted to follow up on that on that point that you just made.
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You know, given that, what would be your advice then to to those Europeans and European companies,
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you know, as they navigate this world shaped by U.S.-China tech rivalry and as you've highlighted future Chinese tech dominance?
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Well, this, I think, part of the way forward is shown by what Trump is now doing in Beijing.
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Having spent most of his pre-presidency and most of this term,
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at least at the beginning of it,
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criticizing China, talking about how the US was going to shut down China,
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he's now making nice to China because he realizes that you have to have a hybrid strategy.
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You have to protect your national security interests while at the same time helping your biggest companies address the China market.
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And that's what all of the guys on Trump's plane are trying to do.
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They're trying to sell more to China.
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I think Europe should do the same.
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We need hybrid strategies where we try to help our biggest companies do business in China,
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compete with China outside China,
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and yet also protect our crucial national security interests.
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And that is a balance that I think countries in Europe are only just beginning to get a grips with.
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James King with Chatham House, thank you.
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Thank you very much.

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このビデオで話す練習をする理由

このビデオでは、トランプが中国に向けて出発し、テクノロジー業界のリーダーたちと共に重要な会談を行う様子が紹介されています。英語のスピーキングを練習することは、特にビジネスや国際関係に関するトピックにおいて、自信を持って意見を表現するための大きな助けとなります。スピーキングは、単に言葉を発するだけでなく、適切な文脈で情報を伝える力を育む機会にもなります。shadow speakを通じて、発音やイントネーションを身につけることで、英語の発音を良くすることができ、実際の会話に即したスキルを磨くことが可能です。

文法と表現の文脈

ビデオ内で使用されているいくつかの重要な構造や表現を以下に示します:

  • "What criteria do you think…?" - これは意見を尋ねる際に非常に便利な表現です。リスナーに考えを促し、ディスカッションを進める助けになります。
  • "…as kind of friends of China." - このように相手を分類することで、具体的な関係性を明確にすることができます。このフレーズは、相手の関係性や信頼感を表現するのに役立ちます。
  • "…have problems to solve." - 問題に直面している状況を表す際に使えます。この表現をマスターすることで、より複雑な状況を説明する能力が向上します。

一般的な発音の罠

このビデオでは、特に注意が必要な単語やアクセントがあります:

  • "AI" - 短縮形ですが、正しく発音することでプロフェッショナルに聞こえます。特に「エーアイ」と明確に発音しましょう。
  • "competitor" - 競争相手を表す言葉です。この単語のストレス(アクセント)位置に注意を払い、発音を練習してください。
  • "significant" - 母音と子音の組み合わせが多く、発音が難しい単語です。強調する部分を意識しながら練習すると良いでしょう。

これらの文法や発音のポイントに注意を払うことで、IELTS スピーキング対策にも役立ちます。シンプルなフレーズを繰り返し練習し、正確な発音を習得することが、より自然な英語スピーキングにつながります。

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。

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