쉐도잉 연습: 75 + DAILY LIFE ESSENTIAL PHRASES | C1 C2 ENGLISH LISTENING PRACTICE - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Have you ever, like, experienced this?
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Have you ever, like, experienced this?
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You spend years studying the grammar rules, right?
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Yeah, you memorize all the vocabulary.
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Exactly.
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You pass all the tests and you feel totally prepared.
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And then you land in an English-speaking country, you walk into a normal coffee shop, the barista looks at you and says something incredibly basic, and your brain just completely flatlines.
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Just total panic.
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You realize you actually don't know how to be a normal human being in this language.
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So, welcome to English Learning Podcast for daily life, real conversation, and easy listening practice instead.
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That is a profound shock to the system, but it happens to almost everyone.
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It really does.
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Which is why today we are going to teach you exactly how to navigate everyday interaction.
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Within the next few minutes, we are going to unlock exactly 75 essential everyday phrases that will completely transform how you connect with people.
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Right, 75 phrases.
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And these aren't just vocabulary words.
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This is about bridging that massive gap between structural accuracy, you know, constructing a grammatically perfect sentence, and actual social fluency.
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Yes.
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Navigating the messy, unscripted reality of daily life.
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Whether you are an expat trying to navigate a new office, an international student making friends, or like a professional who wants to sound more natural on Zoom calls, this deep dive is for you.
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Absolutely.
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And the goal today is not rote memorization.
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It is believed by many communication experts that true fluency is actually about psychology.
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Right.
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The subtle social cues.
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Exactly.
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So I highly encourage you as you listen today to actually speak these phrases out loud, practice them with a language partner or even, you know, practice them with an AI conversational partner.
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Oh, that's a great tip.
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Getting the physical muscle memory is what builds true confidence.
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Motivation and consistency are everything here.
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So let's just dive into the life cycle of a daily interaction, starting with the icebreaker.
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The greeting.
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Every single interaction starts here.
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Right.
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But it's widely taught that the classic textbook, Hello, How Are You?, is honestly just too stiff for most daily life.
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It really is.
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It sets the entirely wrong tone.
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Because it implies this level of formality that, well, it can actually create a barrier between you and the other person.
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Yeah, if you want to connect, you have to start by lowering the cognitive load of the interaction.
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When you ask a formal question, you're technically demanding a formal answer.
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You put pressure on the person.
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It's kind of like showing up to a relaxed backyard barbecue wearing a stiff formal tuxedo.
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That is a perfect analogy.
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Like you are technically dressed, but you are making everyone around you feel incredibly awkward and on edge.
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You're overdressed for the conversation.
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This is why it's recommended to use phrases like, how's it going or what's up?
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Dropping a casual what's up is literally like slipping into your favorite comfortable jacket.
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It instantly signals, hey, we can relax.
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The stakes are very low here.
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Exactly.
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But here's the trick with what's up.
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Yeah.
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You aren't actually meant to answer the question, are you?
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No, not at all.
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Like, if someone says, what's up, they don't want a deep philosophical breakdown of my life choices.
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Definitely not.
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It's practically a verbal handshake, not a literal inquiry.
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The expected responses are incredibly brief.
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You just say, not much, pretty good, or, you know, just chilling.
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Imagine you run into a friend at the mall.
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Right, they say, hey, what's up?
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And you reply, not much, just doing some shopping.
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That's it.
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It establishes a friendly baseline without demanding real brainpower.
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And there's another great one for when you already know the person but haven't seen them in a bit.
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Long time no see.
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Yeah, or Let's Catch Up.
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Let's Catch Up is a brilliant social tool.
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It's perfect for reconnecting after a vacation or even just a busy work week.
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Right.
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It's a low-pressure way of saying, you are important to me and I want to hear about your life when we both have the mental bandwidth.
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It bridges the gap of time without forcing a deep conversation right on the spot.
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Okay, real quick, before we move into how to actually make plans with people, if you are finding these insights helpful and you want to master more real-world English, please take a second to like, share, and subscribe to the channel.
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Yes, please do.
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It really helps us keep bringing you these deep dives, and it helps other learners find this community.
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Building that community is just so important.
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It really is.
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So let's say you've broken the ice, the tension is gone, the greeting is out of the way.
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the next natural evolution usually shifts toward soft collaboration.
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Making plans, sharing ideas, figuring out what to do next.
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This is where I feel like true fluency really shines.
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It's all about flexibility and politeness.
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In textbook English, you learn how to state your desires very directly, right?
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Like, we must order pizza.
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I want to watch a movie.
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Right.
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Very rigid.
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But in real life, directness can sometimes trigger a tiny threat response, right?
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It sounds like you're barking orders.
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It absolutely does.
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When you give a direct command, you are asserting dominance, whether you actually mean to or not.
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Wow.
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And human brains naturally crave consensus.
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That's why the phrase, why don't we, is considered a master tool for collaboration.
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Like, why don't we order pizza tonight?
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Exactly.
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Or if it's a rainy afternoon, why don't we watch a movie?
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It's a soft, polite invitation.
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Yeah, it presents your idea as a shared puzzle to solve together rather than a demand.
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It naturally invites the other person to collaborate without them feeling, you know, backed into a corner.
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And the responses to that are designed to build that consensus too, right?
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Like, sounds like a plan or that sounds good.
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Yes, very cooperative.
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But I want to push back on something here.
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Okay, go for it.
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There are phrases for when you're being flexible, like it's up to you or I'm good either way.
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If a friend asks if I prefer tea or coffee and I say, I'm good either way, doesn't that eventually make me sound, I don't know, passive?
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That's their point.
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Like I have no personality or preferences of my own.
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At what point does being flexible cross over into being a pushover?
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Yeah, that is a highly perceptive question.
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Context and frequency are really everything here.
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If you say it's up to you for every major life decision.
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Like where to live.
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Yeah, then yes, you become a passive passenger in your own life.
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Yeah.
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But the micro moments of daily life, choosing a cafe, picking a meeting time, saying I'm good either way, is a strategic demonstration of an easygoing nature.
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Oh, I see.
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It signals to the other person that your priority is the shared experience and their comfort, not your own strict preference.
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It builds social capital.
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That makes total sense.
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It's about choosing your battles.
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But speaking of potential pitfalls, especially at work, what about handling uncertainty?
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Oh, this is a big one.
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Let's say your manager drops by your desk at 2.55 p.m.
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and asks if you can jump into a 3.0 p.m.
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meeting.
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A classic scenario.
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The instinct is to just say yes to please them or no to protect your time.
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But what if you genuinely just don't know?
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The phrases, I'm not sure, and let me think, are vital here.
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But language learners often fear them.
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They think saying, I'm not sure, makes them sound incompetent.
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Right.
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If I tell my boss I'm not sure, I feel like I'm failing a test.
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But you aren't.
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Saying I'm not sure actually makes you sound honest and cooperative.
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But only if it is paired with a proactive follow-up.
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You have to execute the pivot.
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Ah, the pivot.
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What does that actually look like in practice?
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The full response should be, I'm not sure, let me check my calendar and I'll let you know.
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You see, you're handling the uncertainty smoothly.
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If you just say yes when you actually have a conflict, you create a massive scheduling disaster later.
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If you just say no, you sound unhelpful and rigid.
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So I'm not sure.
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Let me check.
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Bridges the gap between your current lack of information and your total willingness to cooperate.
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I love that.
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You are managing expectations in real time.
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But of course, no matter how beautifully you collaborate and manage expectations, things are eventually going to go wrong.
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Inevitably.
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Plans break.
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People make mistakes.
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And this is the crucible of conversational fluency.
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Knowing how to smooth over hiccups, offer empathy, and avoid unnecessary conflict is what truly separates advanced speakers from beginners.
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The phrases used for this are so common, but they carry an immense amount of psychological weight.
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Sorry about that.
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Yes.
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Let's contrast two scenarios.
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Imagine I walk into a routine, casual team meeting three minutes late because I was stuck in elevator traffic.
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Why wouldn't I say, I deeply apologize for my tardiness.
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Please forgive me.
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Because it's completely disproportionate.
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Right.
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What is the subtle emotional difference between a formal apology and just dropping a breezy, sorry about that?
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It is all about calibrating the emotional stakes of the room.
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If you walk into that routine meeting and announce, I deeply apologize, please forgive me, you are suddenly making yourself the absolute center of attention.
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Yeah, that's true.
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You are elevating a minor three-minute infraction into a major moral failing.
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You're forcing everyone to stop what they are doing and deal with your guilt.
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Precisely.
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You create an uncomfortable silence where your colleagues now have to perform the emotional labor of comforting you.
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Oh, that's the worst.
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They have to say, no, really, it's fine.
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You're a good person.
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Right, right.
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But if you just slip into your chair and say, sorry about that, the elevator was stalled, you acknowledge the slip up, you take responsibility, but you diffuse the tension instantly.
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You keep the stakes low so everyone can just move on with the agenda.
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That is such a crucial insight.
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It's about not forcing the other person to comfort you for your own minor mistake.
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And I guess the flip side of that is how we respond to other people's mistakes.
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Like saying, no worries, that happens, it's not a big deal.
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Let's look at a classic cafe mix-up.
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Okay.
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You order an iced coffee, but the server is overwhelmed, distracted, and hands you an iced tea by mistake.
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You notice, but you don't really mind.
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If you take the drink and say, it doesn't matter, I'll drink it, followed by a warm, no worries, you are doing an incredible amount of emotional heavy lifting for that server.
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You are instantly lowering their cortisol level.
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You're telling them, I see you made a mistake.
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The world is not ending and I'm choosing not to penalize you for it.
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It's pure applied empathy.
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It is.
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And empathy extends to hearing bad news, too.
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Phrases like, oh, no, that's a shame.
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And I'm sorry to hear that.
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If a friend calls you in a panic because they just missed their train, your flunked reaction shouldn't be to lecture them on punctuality or offer a 10-step logistical plan.
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It should be, oh, no, that's so frustrating.
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Do you want me to give you a ride?
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You have to match their emotional state first.
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you validate the frustration and then you offer the solution, it is just basic human connection.
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It really is.
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But this empathy leads us to a really fascinating pivot.
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We've talked a lot about softening your language, being accommodating and taking the pressure off.
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But there is absolutely a time and a place in daily conversation where you need to project absolute competence.
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Yes.
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Setting boundaries and showing that you are fully in charge.
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Right.
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This is where you flip the switch.
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If you are too accommodating all the time, people might doubt your capability when the pressure is on.
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The words you choose in a high-stakes moment completely dictate how other people perceive your authority.
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The phrases that jump out here are, I got it, I've got this, and I'm on it.
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Those are incredibly powerful expressions of control and reliability.
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They really are.
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To me, saying, I'm on it, isn't just accepting a task.
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It's almost like installing a firewall against your boss's anxiety.
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I like that analogy.
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Think about it.
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Your boss comes to you at 11 a.m.
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visibly stressed and asks for a critical data report by noon.
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If you just say, yes, I will do that.
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They might still wonder if you understand the urgency.
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They're still worrying.
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Exactly.
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But if you look them in the eye and say, I'm on it, you are instantly quarantining the problem.
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That is the exact mechanism.
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You are shutting down their mental loop of worry.
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you are telling them, consider the problem solved.
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Do not spend another second of your mental bandwidth stressing about this.
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You create a closed loop of trust.
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And the same applies to physical casual situations too.
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Say a coworker drops a stack of papers all over the floor in the hallway.
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You don't ask, would you like some assistance?
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You just kneel down and say, I got it.
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It's immediate action.
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But projecting competence isn't just about doing tasks and putting out fires.
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It's also about proving that you are an active, engaged presence in a conversation.
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Active listening, right.
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Exactly.
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If someone is speaking to you, you can't just stare at them silently.
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Even if you were listening intently, you need verbal nods.
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That's interesting.
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Or exactly.
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Which, by the way, is so important for building rapport.
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It is.
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Imagine your co-worker is telling you about a documentary they just watched where scientists proved that cats actually can recognize their own names.
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They just actively choose to ignore humans.
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A deeply relatable feline trait, by the way.
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Right.
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If my cat is ignoring me, I need to vent about it.
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And if I'm telling you the story and you just stare at me and say, OK, the conversation dies instantly.
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Energy just vanishes.
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But if you reply, that's interesting.
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Really, tell me more.
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You are giving me the conversational floor.
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You are validating my interests.
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You are actively participating in the exchange of energy.
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But, you know, rapport is built on mutual respect, which also means knowing how to protect your own energy.
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Projecting competence includes gentle, firm boundary setting.
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Yes, you can't say yes to everything.
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The phrases, I'd rather not, or that's enough, are crucial here.
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Imagine someone invites you to go see a terrifying horror movie on a Friday night, and you absolutely hate scary movies.
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Saying a blunt, no, I will not go, can feel like a rejection of the person themselves.
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Yeah, a bit too harsh.
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But saying, I'd rather not, horror movies aren't really my thing, softens the decline.
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It centers your preference without attacking their suggestion.
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It's polite, but it leaves no room for debate.
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And the same goes for setting physical limits, saying that's enough when someone is pouring you a cup of coffee or if the music in the car is way too loud.
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It establishes a boundary clearly.
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Right.
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But to balance that firmness, you also want to show when you are totally on board.
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I can't wait, or fingers crossed.
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Enthusiasm is incredibly contagious.
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If a colleague remembers that your vacation starts next week and you say, I know I can't wait.
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You are projecting engagement and hope.
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Yeah.
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It makes people want to be around you.
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OK, so we've successfully broken the ice.
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We've collaborated on plans.
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We survived the spilled iced tea at the cafe.
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And we confidently managed our boundaries.
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A very successful day.
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Very.
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But what happens when you actually need to leave?
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Because a fantastic hour-long conversation can be totally ruined by a sudden awkward goodbye.
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The final impression you leave is often the one that sticks in the other person's memory.
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Mastering graceful exits and keeping the door open for the future is the final piece of the fluency puzzle.
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The most basic functional tool here is, excuse, me.
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It is basically the skeleton key for physically moving through the world without causing offense.
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You are trying to squeeze past someone in a crowded grocery store aisle.
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A gentle, excuse me, handles it perfectly.
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It acts as a polite, temporary interruption.
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Yeah.
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But what about when you aren't leaving the person forever?
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You just need to pause the interaction.
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I'll be right back.
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Or hang on.
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Or my personal favorite for remote work.
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I'm in the middle of something.
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Oh, Well, that's a good one.
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Like, if you are cooking dinner with your family and your phone rings with a call from a friend, you don't just ignore it, but you also shouldn't yell, I'm busy.
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You pick up and say, hey, I'm in the middle of something.
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Can I call you back in an hour?
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By doing that, you acknowledge their attempt to connect.
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You validate them while firmly protecting your current time and space.
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And then there are the phrases that act as a bridge to the very next conversation.
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Let me know and keep me posted.
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I really want to dig into the psychology here.
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Let's do it.
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Think about the last email you sent right before turning on this deep dive.
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If a colleague was working on a project, did you say, keep me posted or did you demand an answer?
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How does saying, let me know, change the underlying dynamic of a relationship?
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It is a brilliant psychological distinction.
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When you demand an immediate answer, you are placing a heavy burden on the other person.
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You are adding to their stress and triggering their threat response.
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Right.
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But when you say, keep me posted or let me know, you are respectfully giving them the gift of autonomy.
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You are shifting the timeline.
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You're basically putting the ball entirely in their court.
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Exactly.
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You are communicating, I care about this outcome and I want the information, but I trust you to provide it when you are fully ready and able.
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That's so respectful.
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It preserves their independence while keeping the connection alive.
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In a world of instant messaging and constant demands, giving someone the space to keep you posted is an incredibly graceful way to leave a conversation open ended.
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It is just amazing how much heavy lifting these tiny little phrases are doing behind the scenes.
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And I think that really brings us to the core takeaway from all of this.
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True English fluency, or fluency in any language really, isn't about memorizing complex, archaic vocabulary from a dusty textbook.
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You don't win awards for using the biggest words at the grocery store.
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No, absolutely not.
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Fluency is entirely about mastering these micro expressions, the no worries, the sounds great, the I'm on it, the let me check.
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They are the social glue that keeps daily life running smoothly.
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Whether you are traveling abroad, navigating the politics of a brand new workplace, or just trying to sound more natural hanging out with English speaking friends, these 75 phrases prove that you aren't just a passive speaker of the language.
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Exactly.
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They prove that you are an active, highly empathetic listener.
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You are engaging with the human being standing right in front of you, not just, you know, translating a dictionary in your head.
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So as we wrap up, I want to leave you with a final, slightly provocative thought to mull over.
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As you go about your day today, pay close attention to the conversations happening around you.
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Ask yourself, how much of our daily communication is actually about transferring hard facts and information versus just managing the emotional state of the people around us?
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That is a profound question.
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We spend so much time just regulating each other's stress levels through language.
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Exactly.
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To take off that stiff, formal tuxedo and hand someone a comfortable jacket, language is about connection, first and foremost.
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Keep paying attention to those little moments.
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Well said.
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Now, I promised you a special bonus phrase at the end of our deep dive today, and here it is.
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Take your time.
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If someone is apologizing for being a bit slow or, you know, fumbling with their wallet at the cash register, just smile and say, take your time.
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It's so disarming.
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It is the ultimate phrase for instantly removing someone else's anxiety and making you look incredibly confident and gracious.
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Add that one to your toolkit today.
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It's a lifesaver.
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It really is.
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Now, if you enjoyed this breakdown and want to keep improving your daily English, please hit like, share this with a friend who is learning and subscribe to the channel.
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We want to hear from you, too.
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Drop down into the comment box right now and write, I am consistent to show you made it to the end and you are dedicated to your learning journey.
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Yes, show us your consistency.
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Also, leave us some feedback.
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What kind of topic do you want for the next video?
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Do you want more workplace phrases?
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Dating vocabulary?
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Let us know.
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Thanks for hanging out with us, and we will catch you in the next Deep Dive.
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  5. 자신감 쌓기: 지속적인 연습을 통해 자신감을 가지세요. shadowspeak 기술을 활용해 신체적 기억을 목표로 하는 것이 가장 좋습니다.

이러한 단계들을 통해 일상적인 영어 대화에서 더욱 능숙하게 소통할 수 있게 될 것입니다. 여러분도 아는 문구들을 통해 자신만의 스타일로 shadow speak 연습을 해보세요!

쉐도잉이란? 영어 실력을 빠르게 키우는 과학적 방법

쉐도잉(Shadowing)은 원래 전문 통역사 훈련을 위해 개발된 언어 학습 기법으로, 다언어 학자인 Dr. Alexander Arguelles에 의해 대중화된 방법입니다. 핵심 원리는 간단하지만 매우 강력합니다: 원어민의 영어를 들으면서 1~2초의 짧은 지연으로 즉시 소리 내어 따라 말하는 것——마치 '그림자(shadow)'처럼 화자를 따라가는 것입니다. 문법 공부나 수동적인 청취와 달리, 쉐도잉은 뇌와 입 근육이 동시에 실시간으로 영어를 처리하고 재현하도록 훈련합니다. 연구에 따르면 이 방법은 발음 정확도, 억양, 리듬, 연음, 청취력, 말하기 유창성을 크게 향상시킵니다. IELTS 스피킹 준비와 자연스러운 영어 소통을 원하는 분들에게 특히 효과적입니다.

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