シャドーイング練習: Why China Is Building the World’s First $2 Trillion Megacity - YouTubeで英語スピーキングを学ぶ

C1
You're looking at the largest continuous urban area the world has ever seen.
⏸ 一時停止中
173
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
You're looking at the largest continuous urban area the world has ever seen.
2
86 million people fused into a single $2 trillion economic engine.
3
It's known as China's Greater Bay Area.
4
It's a bold, very ambitious attempt by the Chinese government to integrate 11 cities.
5
For China, this is just the start.
6
Its latest five-year plan pivots from individual cities to a focus on mega-regional China,
7
a network of 19 massive clusters with the Greater Bay Area as a primary engine for growth.
8
China is relying a great deal on the Greater Bay Area
9
to provide this kind of a powerhouse innovative economy with a long-term goal.
10
Smaller cities connecting into larger ones goes back millennia.
11
Yet we're no longer talking about a few thousand merchants following a trade route,
12
but instead hundreds of millions of people integrated into a single labor market.
13
Where gaps once took centuries to close,
14
rail lines and relentless paving are swallowing the landscape at a rate of kilometers per day.
15
After 6,000 years of urbanism,
16
cities are becoming larger and larger.
17
Every single city is continuing to draw in more
18
and more people for the kinds of opportunities that they can't get in any other sort of place.
19
Economists believe that unifying the world's massive urban centers can revitalize economies and redefine the rules of growth.
20
What happens here in China could be a blueprint for the future of humanity.
21
This is China's Megalopolis project.
22
For 99% of history, humans lived nomadically in small, scattered groups.
23
Then they began to settle,
24
and 6,000 years ago, humans built the first cities.
25
People came together and then gradually found more and more opportunities for employment,
26
for education, and even for entertainment.
27
And that promise is still true today.
28
Cities offer jobs, drive innovation,
29
and most importantly, they offer choice.
30
They draw people in even though they have some objective disadvantages.
31
Cities can be crowded, polluted.
32
We know that diseases can travel more quickly in a city.
33
And yet, you can't keep people out of them.
34
The 11 cities within China's Greater Bay Area are some of the most productive economic centers in the world.
35
They're among the most crowded,
36
and the region is about to get even more densely packed.
37
An entire metropolis is being built in a rural strip of land in northern Hong Kong that will fill in the gaps,
38
physically connecting Hong Kong to the larger Greater Bay Area.
39
On the north side, the Shenzhen side, you can see skyscrapers.
40
But then on the Hong Kong side,
41
you see fish ponds, farmlands,
42
a lot of green areas.
43
These two territories are just separated by a rather narrow river.
44
That river is the front line of what's branded as Northern Metropolis,
45
a utopian, multi-billion dollar plan to develop the area into a tech hub,
46
housing everything from cutting-edge laboratories to promising startups,
47
while physically bridging the gap with mainland China.
48
Development here used to trigger protests.
49
But later, after the government's imposition of its national security law and crackdown on mass democracy protests,
50
local opposition more broadly has been silenced,
51
removing potential obstacles for developers.
52
I think they're more of a state of resignation or acceptance
53
because they know that development will go ahead All they can do is just accept their fate.
54
I think the biggest loss will be the untouched wildlife areas,
55
but most of all, the local communities.
56
I was born in this village,
57
in a house over there,
58
which was a wooden hut.
59
I was really born in that wooden hut.
60
My mum would bring me here on weekends and all my uncles
61
and their children were around here and they'd teach me farm things like how to build bonfires.
62
It's different looking over a public park than it is looking over a real wildlife hilly area.
63
Everywhere around it is starting lots of buildings and roads changing everyday.
64
And I think we won't be there here for too long.
65
I think if this is a choice,
66
you don't want to ask me.
67
I think most people, if there are a choice,
68
I would also be in a small house in the village.
69
There's a space I don't want to live.
70
Now there's no choice.
71
For the Hong Kong farmers,
72
the northern metropolis will proceed as planned,
73
with the government offering cash and public housing to relocate eligible farmers and villagers.
74
But there is skepticism among local developers,
75
and Shenzhen's tech giants remain separated from Hong Kong by a real-world border and clashing financial systems.
76
I don't think the government can just say,
77
this will become the center of a city and people will move there.
78
We've seen that fail so many times all over the world.
79
In China, that government-driven building led to ghost cities,
80
massive infrastructure projects that lay empty for years.
81
But over time, at least some of those projects did fill up,
82
proving that if done in the right way,
83
the if-you-build-it-they-will-come method can work.
84
So when we think about what makes a planned or new city successful,
85
we often should look right next door and see who its neighbors are.
86
The emergence of a city is something that usually starts out as a village or a small town,
87
between places that are mapped out on the ground.
88
So if we think about Shenzhen,
89
that's right between Hong Kong and Guangzhou.
90
Shenzhen may be the fastest growing planned city in human history.
91
By the year 2000, a million people are expected to live in Shenzhen.
92
By the year 2000, there were actually seven million people living in Shenzhen.
93
It's now a megacity of 18 million people
94
that was essentially willed into existence by the Chinese government due to its strategic proximity to Hong Kong and Guangzhou,
95
the capital city and cultural heart of China's southern Guangdong province.
96
Basically, it seems like overnight China became a technological leader,
97
largely due to Shenzhen and the cities in Guangdong.
98
We are about to start.
99
Please make sure you...
100
AI, robotics, semiconductors, clean tech, and autonomous driving.
101
These are not just industries that the Chinese government is showing off to impress the world.
102
They're actually important drivers for the future.
103
Now, the Chinese government wants to build upon Shenzhen's success.
104
For the 11 cities in the Greater Bay Area,
105
that means utilizing each individual city's strengths to propel China towards a high-tech future driven by innovation.
106
Let's say you're a startup in Shenzhen,
107
you go to Hong Kong,
108
raise money, use that money,
109
create a prototype in Shenzhen,
110
And from there, if it works,
111
you make it in scale in Guangzhou,
112
and then you launch it in Macau.
113
It sounds logical in theory,
114
but getting the region to be a seamless,
115
integrated economy could be much harder in practice.
116
What makes it very interesting is Hong Kong and China got different political systems,
117
common law, you know, socialist market economy,
118
different tax regimes, visa regimes, and all that.
119
So how do you sort of merge these disparate systems?
120
Hong Kong, which China considers one of the four core cities within the 11 strong Greater Bay Area,
121
has its own legal system,
122
currency and passports, and along with Macau,
123
is separated by a border.
124
And that makes integration through the Northern Metropolis project a government priority.
125
Northern Metropolis is the engine for us,
126
not just for growth, but for uplifting as well.
127
Right.
128
But this engine is part of a much larger,
129
high-stakes transition for China, away from things like textiles,
130
cheap electronics, and a relentless boom in real estate.
131
Those engines are faltering.
132
The Growth has slowed significantly as the country hits a wall known as the middle income trap.
133
Moving from middle to high income requires a very steep increase in productivity.
134
This is the ratcheting up of productivity among firms and labor
135
that will move China from a middle income to a high income country over the next 10 years.
136
Cities thrive when they don't have borders.
137
Innovation succeeds through more integration,
138
bringing together the people, the ideas, the customs.
139
Information is exchanged through meetings, luncheons, mobility of labor.
140
And that means you have to be within half an hour,
141
an hour of the location of economic activity,
142
in this case, the location of innovative activities,
143
and that is Sun Sun.
144
So I think it's become much more of what I call an economic political objective,
145
a regional program, and has very many complex dimensions.
146
While Hong Kong's loss of a distinct physical and political frontier is unique,
147
its struggle might be a signal of what's to come.
148
Across the globe, the individual city is being swallowed by something much larger.
149
From the Abidjan-Lagos corridor in Africa to the North East corridor of the US,
150
the world is gravitating towards the mega-regions.
151
But as the fish ponds are filled with concrete and the skyscrapers rise,
152
what will be lost in the pursuit of a hyper-efficient future?
153
You should remember that some people like living like this.
154
You take it for granted and then other people come
155
and they've never picked something and then eaten it or touched a goat or a pig.
156
It's something you won't know that you've got till it's gone.
157
For some, dystopia is simply giving up natural land and old ways of life ways of life for the sake of development,
158
but for others, that same development is a utopia,
159
a necessary leap into a high-tech future.
160
When people say, can we be economically successful and not be a concentrated urban or regional center,
161
the answer is you cannot be.
162
People move to where the jobs are.
163
The same thing is true in the United States.
164
So the Greater Bay Initiative,
165
the concept requires concentration of activities.
166
But you can manage it well or you can manage it poorly.
167
And your success depends upon whether you are able to do so.
168
But a city's success isn't just about the political will to build it.
169
It's about the people's ability to live in it.
170
For China, the reimagining of the urban landscape is an economic priority.
171
And in a world where economic activity is naturally pulling towards massive clusters,
172
China isn't just following the trend,
173
it's attempting to engineer its outcome.

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

このビデオでは、中国の「グレーター・ベイ・エリア」が紹介されています。この地域は、86百万人の人々が一つの巨大な経済エンジンとして融合している世界最大の連続都市地域です。中国政府は11の都市を統合する大胆で野心的な試みを行っています。この計画は、個々の都市からメガリージョンへと焦点を移し、中国経済の新たな成長エンジンとしての役割を果たすことを目指しています。このような文脈を理解することは、日常会話やビジネス英会話を学ぶ上で非常に重要です。

日常コミュニケーションのためのトップ5フレーズ

  • “It's known as China's Greater Bay Area.” - 中国のグレーター・ベイ・エリアとして知られています。
  • “This is just the start.” - これは始まりに過ぎません。
  • “Cities are becoming larger and larger.” - 都市はますます大きくなっています。
  • “They offer jobs, drive innovation, and most importantly, they offer choice.” - 彼らは仕事を提供し、革新を促し、最も重要なのは選択肢を提供します。
  • “This is China's Megalopolis project.” - これは中国のメガロポリスプロジェクトです。

ステップバイステップシャドーイングガイド

このビデオを効果的に活用し、英語力を向上させるためのシャドーイング方法を以下に示します。

  1. ステップ1: ビデオを最初に視聴し、全体の内容を把握します。内容は、都市の成長とそれが経済に与える影響に関するものです。
  2. ステップ2: 各フレーズを一時停止し、繰り返し発音してみましょう。特に、“Cities are becoming larger and larger.” のように、リズムとイントネーションに注目します。
  3. ステップ3: 速さを上げて、実際にそのリズムに合わせて声を出してみます。この練習を通じて、shadowspeak の技術を磨くことができます。
  4. ステップ4: 自分の発音を録音し、オリジナルの発音と比較してください。shadowspeaksを通じて、どの部分が改善が必要かを理解します。
  5. ステップ5: IELTS スピーキング対策としてこのビデオを使用することで、効果的にスピーキングテストの準備ができます。

この方法を繰り返すことで、英語力が向上することを実感できるでしょう。都市が成長するストーリーを通じて、リアルなコミュニケーション能力を磨きましょう。

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