쉐도잉 연습: Band 9.0 IELTS Practice Speaking Exam - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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We're going to start off by talking about art and photography.
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We're going to start off by talking about art and photography.
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Do you like art?
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That's interesting.
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Depends on what.
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I like cinema, for instance, movies, music, but I don't know too much about paintings or modern art.
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I'm not too familiar with.
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So it depends on what kind of art.
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Do you like to take photographs?
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Yes.
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I wouldn't say the photographs are good, but I do enjoy taking pictures.
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Yeah.
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Do you prefer to take photos of yourself or other things?
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Of other things.
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It's kind of hard to take pictures of yourself unless it's a selfie and that's limited.
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So pictures of other things mostly.
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Now let's talk about animals.
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Do you like animals?
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I love animals.
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Land animals, friendly, so to speak, animals.
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not insects and not anything from the ocean.
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What is your favorite animal?
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Probably a dog.
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Dogs, for obvious reasons you can keep them as pets.
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In terms of like non-domesticated animals, probably jaguars.
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Do you have any animals in your home as pets?
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Yes, I have two dogs.
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They're both from the shelter, the animal shelter, the rescues.
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Yeah, I've always had pets.
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Our family really likes keeping animals around.
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Now let's talk about bags.
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What type of bags do you like?
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I prefer purses that are a little bit on the larger side, just because I like to put everything of my life in my purse.
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So it ends up weighing maybe 20 kilos.
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Yeah, larger bags, probably structured, larger bags.
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How often do you carry a bag when you go out?
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Every day.
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I think that's the case for most women.
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I think they carry a bag every even if you go down to the grocery or the supermarket, you take your bag with you usually, right?
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What sort of bags do women like to buy?
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It depends.
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It depends on your outfit.
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It depends on where you're going.
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For the day, if you're going to the office, you probably want something bigger that can fit your laptop, your phone, paperwork, everything that you might need during the day.
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If it's nighttime, you'd want something smaller, like a clutch, something more sleek, elegant.
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So it depends.
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If you're traveling, you'd want a much bigger bag that's able to fit.
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Not just you, but all of your family's stuff as well.
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So everything.
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Women like all kinds of bags.
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That's why we have so many of them.
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Now let's talk about birthdays.
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What did you usually do on your birthday when you were a child?
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So when I was a kid, when I was a child in school, we had a uniform.
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Everybody wore a uniform to school.
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So when it was your birthday, it was the one day of the year that you were allowed to wear whatever you wanted.
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So it was a big deal.
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I mean, at least I would pick out my outfit like two months in advance.
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It would be like a little dress, like a princessy frock, matching shoes, matching accessories for your hair.
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And then you would take some kind of chocolate or candy to school.
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And then you could take like a period off and go and give the candy out to other teachers and other kids in the school.
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And we looked forward to it every year.
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It was the highlight to get to not have to wear the uniform, to wear whatever you wanted, and to basically be able to skip class and go out and hand out chocolates because it's your birthday.
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How do you normally celebrate your birthday now?
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Very differently.
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Everyone's allowed to wear whatever they want now.
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So it's kind of not, doesn't have the same charm.
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It depends.
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I like to do a little dinner with my friends, something low key.
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I'm not a very big party person.
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So dinner is usually good.
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Followed by probably like a games night or a movie night at home or at the cinema.
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Something low key.
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Do you think it's important to give someone a card on their birthday?
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Like a handwritten, like a birthday card?
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I think so, yes, because I'm quite sentimental and emotional.
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So I prefer more emotional, sentimental gifts.
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So I think if someone takes the time to write something by hand for you, I think that, I mean I hold on to stuff like that so I think it's a very nice thoughtful present to give someone on their birthday.
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The first time I met a new friend, so I'm gonna go way back, it was my first day of school, kindergarten, and I met a girl named Amanpreet Kaj.
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She, we were about, I think we just turned four years old.
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We met obviously in kindergarten, first year of school.
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What I liked about her when I first saw her, I mean, we were sitting together with the teacher made us sit next to each other.
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And she had this long hair and it was like sectioned into two parts and it was just braided all the way down.
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And she had the cutest face I've ever seen.
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She had this little fluffy marshmallow like face.
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I guess that's all it takes when you're a kid to want to be friends with somebody.
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And then I tried to.
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So there's like this little thing that kids do where they put their thumb out to show other kids that I want to be your friend.
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And then if you don't want to be friends with them, you do this.
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It's like a silly little thing.
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So I did this to her.
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I put my thumb out to say, hey, do you want to be friends?
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And she was like this.
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And I was heartbroken.
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I was like, how can she know who want to be my friend?
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And then I saw her again the next day and the day the next day after that and the day after that.
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And then eventually we ended up becoming best friends.
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She did it back to me, obviously, at some point.
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She was my first best friend that I ever had in life.
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She was from Punjab, which is a part of India.
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And her mom used to make the most amazing, it's called paratha.
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It's like this stuffed bread.
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It's like they put potato and spices into a flatbread.
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And my mom used to make something called seera, which is sweet semolina situation.
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That's the end of the two minutes.
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Okay.
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We've been talking about a friend that you met and we're going to now talk about friends at school.
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How important is it for children to have lots of friends at school?
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To thank you for watching this video, I want to give you a free course that has helped thousands of students improve their IELTS speaking score.
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What it's going to do is take you through every single part of the test and give you strategies for part one, part two and part three and also allow you to practice at home for free and get feedback.
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To sign up for that for free, all you have to do is just click the link in the description.
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Thanks very much and let's get back to the video.
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It depends, I would say.
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I would perhaps think that quality is more important than quantity.
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So I wouldn't say that the objective should be to make as many friends as you can or to be popular.
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as much as the objective should be to build meaningful friendships with people.
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That could be one person, that could be five people, that could be ten people.
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Situational, I would say.
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Yeah, so it's not so much how many friends you have.
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It's not as important to have a lot of friends as it might be to have people that you can trust, that you can kind of take with you in life for a longer term.
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Do you think it is wrong for parents to choose which friends their children have?
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Again, that's a tricky one.
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Now, when I answer these questions, I'm thinking back to real-life situations.
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And in some cases, I have seen parents interfering and trying to make those decisions for their children where they were right to do so because the child was in bad company and they were too naive or too I mean I guess they were just too naive to see that that situation was not right for them but the parent obviously was able to identify that my child's in bad company so in those cases I would say that your parents are able to read a dangerous situation better but there's also the flip side where everybody kind of does make bad decisions.
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Your parents made bad decisions, you made bad decisions.
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And the way that you learn from them is to have a negative experience and then find your way out of it.
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So I would say that I can see certain situations, whether it's bad relationships, bad friendships, when you're younger, not relationships when you're younger, friendships when you're younger.
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Sometimes it's necessary to have that experience so that you know firsthand how to deal with that situation.
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And you may not be able to get that experience if your parents always shield you from every single thing that can go wrong.
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So I can kind of see, depends on the situation, I would say.
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Now let's talk about making new friends.
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Can you think of any disadvantages of making new friends online?
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Disadvantages of making new friends online?
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I think there's more disadvantages to making new friends.
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I mean, there was a show recently that came out on Netflix called Tinder Swindler.
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The thing is with most of what we see online isn't real, whether it's social media or even news for that matter.
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Everything is kind of edited and monitored to present a certain kind of image.
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So if you meet somebody online and you know nothing about them, they can really present any version of reality or a completely curated, sometimes dishonest form of their reality to you.
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So it's a very dangerous game to play.
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Friendships or relationships?
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Both.
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Friendships.
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Friendships.
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Friendships.
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Yeah.
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It's somebody you know nothing about is a very, everything can go wrong there, right?
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Would you say it is harder for people to make new friends as they get older?
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Yes.
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I think it becomes harder for people to make friends as they get older.
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I think adults are perhaps a little bit more structured.
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I mean, the older that you get, the more set you get in your ways, your routine, where you work, your family, your gym.
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For children, it's very easy for children to interact with other children.
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Like if you put two kids in a room and three seconds are talking to each other without any restrictions are talking about all of their family secrets and everything, you know, they're comfortable.
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But with adults, obviously, people tend to be more filtered when they interact with other adults.
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Also, I think if you've been friends from the time that you were a child with somebody, you've lived through so many life events together that that kind of bond is hard to build with someone that you meet in your mid thirties because you've just lost so much time that you're learning something.
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You're learning about them from scratch, where they went to school, about their family, about their relationships, about their siblings.
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So, yeah, I think it's a it's not impossible.
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You can make a lot of incredible friendships later in life, but it's probably harder to come by than if you were a kid in play school.
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So what I'm going to do now is give you feedback on each part, because each part is a little bit different, give you some tips on how to perform as well or even better next time.
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And then there are four marking criteria, fluency and coherence, grammar, pronunciation and vocabulary.
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And I will give you a band for each of those and tell you what band.
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The top is band nine.
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So let's see if you can get right at the top.
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So thank you for making it this far in the video.
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I want to give you 10% off our VIP course.
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So part one, it's just normal everyday questions and you answered those very, very naturally.
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Again, it was like talking to a friend or a colleague and the length of your answers was also quite good.
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This is not a criticism and it's just kind of who you are as a person.
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You're a very friendly, chatty person who wants the other person to interact.
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So you're often like, girls like buying bags, right?
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That is fine in normal conversation.
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If you were to do the test for real, the examiner could be quite stone faced because they're doing their job.
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They're not being unfriendly.
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They just have a job to do.
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And they're trying to think about your grammar and your vocabulary and your pronunciation and your fluency.
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And there's a lot going on there.
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And for them, they cannot start to interact with you.
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And on test day, you might not get a very friendly examiner like me.
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I don't know whether I was friendly or not.
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But they might be like, you know, don't do that.
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Or some of them could be having a bad day and they just like, don't ask questions.
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Now I have experienced with, not myself, but other students have said when they did that, thought the examiner was criticizing them or being rude, they took that to heart and thought, oh my god, I've failed my test.
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And they went from doing very, very well to everything fell apart.
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Because if you feel nervous, if you're uncomfortable with someone, then it really affects your fluency.
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You can climb up.
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You don't want to really show your language and who you are.
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You don't want to, because one of the great advantages or great strengths that you have is you're very open about who you are as a person.
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And that's great because it allows you to speak in a very fluent way.
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If you go and do the test for real, probably don't interact with the examiner as much.
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Part two, you did a great job because you just picked a real event, a real person from your life.
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And it's much easier to talk about that.
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Some students try to pick something high level or impressive to impress the examiner.
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There's no such thing.
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The best thing to do is pick something from your real life because that's easy to talk about.
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Part three, you did very, very well because you really extended your answers.
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Again, you use real situations from your own life.
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You don't have to do that, but it really did help you develop your answers.
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In terms of the scores, pronunciation is pretty much perfect.
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The examiner will be thinking about, can I understand every word this person is saying?
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100% I can understand every syllable.
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Then the examiner will be thinking about high level pronunciation features, such as your intonation.
17:00.40 17:06.16 (5.8s)
209
So our voices go up, our voices go down.
17:05.94 17:08.74 (2.8s)
210
You speak like a native English speaker in that respect.
17:08.52 17:12.16 (3.6s)
211
Sentence stress is when we emphasize certain words.
17:12.44 17:16.28 (3.8s)
212
This is my phone, not your phone.
17:16.04 17:18.80 (2.8s)
213
So you emphasize certain words at times.
17:19.06 17:20.90 (1.8s)
214
Again, you do that 100% naturally.
17:20.52 17:23.24 (2.7s)
215
And then you use connected speech.
17:22.72 17:24.86 (2.1s)
216
The way native English speakers talk, we wouldn't say, I want to talk about my friend.
17:25.22 17:31.74 (6.5s)
217
You'd say, I want to talk about my friend.
17:31.36 17:33.56 (2.2s)
218
The flow of the language.
17:33.16 17:34.88 (1.7s)
219
So absolutely perfect, no problems there.
17:34.28 17:36.88 (2.6s)
220
Coherence and fluency.
17:36.60 17:38.38 (1.8s)
221
Coherence is did you answer the questions?
17:37.84 17:40.34 (2.5s)
222
Did you develop them enough?
17:40.20 17:41.92 (1.7s)
223
You did that 100% of the time.
17:41.92 17:44.54 (2.6s)
224
And then fluency is, did you speak without any Unnatural pausing.
17:44.20 17:49.96 (5.8s)
225
You did pause at times, but the reason why you paused is important.
17:49.96 17:54.64 (4.7s)
226
So in the last, I think it was the second last question, you were talking about adults and you were saying their lives are more structured.
17:54.94 18:03.20 (8.3s)
227
So you weren't trying to think of the correct vocabulary because your English isn't good enough.
18:03.20 18:08.84 (5.6s)
228
You were trying to just formulate your thoughts and come up with the appropriate precise word, which you did.
18:08.84 18:15.08 (6.2s)
229
So that demonstrates to the examiner that you have a very high level of vocabulary.
18:15.08 18:19.10 (4.0s)
230
Because if you were, because you're trying to think of the word, what's the word, so when people don't really know the language, then they would stop.
18:19.52 18:27.80 (8.3s)
231
And also because you approach this not as a test, but more as a conversation, and you are very open and talk about your life in a very open way, that really helps with fluency.
18:28.02 18:40.54 (12.5s)
232
So again, top marks for fluency and coherence.
18:40.06 18:43.74 (3.7s)
233
Grammar, I didn't hear a single grammar mistake.
18:44.14 18:47.02 (2.9s)
234
The examiner will be thinking about the accuracy of your grammar, did you make any mistakes, and the range of your grammar.
18:47.06 18:52.82 (5.8s)
235
So if I talk to you about a birthday party in the past, did you use the appropriate past tenses?
18:52.82 18:57.74 (4.9s)
236
And then I ask you about, well, what do you do today?
18:58.32 19:00.48 (2.2s)
237
Did you switch tenses?
19:01.04 19:02.06 (1.0s)
238
Did you use the appropriate grammatical structures and tenses to talk about each situation?
19:02.30 19:07.20 (4.9s)
239
And again, you did that perfectly.
19:08.18 19:09.48 (1.3s)
240
Vocabulary, very natural.
19:10.24 19:12.74 (2.5s)
241
You use a nice mixture of just normal, everyday words, which everybody uses, and you also use idiomatic language very, very well.
19:11.76 19:21.32 (9.6s)
242
So as you can see, you're using very natural English.
19:20.72 19:24.76 (4.0s)
243
And overall, you would get a perfect band line, which is very rare.
19:25.26 19:30.32 (5.1s)
244
Oh, wow.
19:31.20 19:31.68 (0.5s)
245
Very, very rare.
19:31.94 19:32.76 (0.8s)
246
Okay.
19:33.46 19:33.72 (0.3s)
247
Well done.
19:34.44 19:35.32 (0.9s)
248
Thank you.
19:35.22 19:35.66 (0.4s)

이 레슨에 대해

이번 레슨에서는 "Band 9.0 IELTS Practice Speaking Exam"라는 YouTube 동영상을 기반으로 영어 말하기 연습을 진행합니다. 이 동영상은 다양한 주제를 다루며, 학습자는 영어 말하기 능력을 향상시킬 수 있는 기회를 가집니다. 특히 예술, 동물, 가방, 생일과 같은 주제에 대해 대화하는 컨텍스트에서 언어를 연습하게 됩니다. 또한, 어휘와 문법 패턴을 연습하는 것이 가능합니다. 영어 유창성을 기르기 위해 실제 시험 맥락에서 리스닝 능력과 함께 사고하는 것이 중요합니다.

주요 어휘 및 표현

  • art (예술): 창의적인 작업이나 작품을 의미하며, 영화나 음악 등 다양한 형태로 존재함.
  • photography (사진 촬영): 이미지를 찍거나 기록하는 예술 및 기술.
  • animal shelter (동물 보호소): 유기동물을 구조하고 보호하는 장소.
  • sentimental (감정적인): 감정과 관련된 것, 느끼기 쉬운.
  • uniform (교복): 특정 그룹이나 기관에 속하는 사람들에게 요구되는 의복.
  • clutch (클러치): 작은 핸드백으로, 주로 밤 외출 시 사용됨.
  • celebrate (축하하다): 특별한 사건이나 날에 대한 기념.

이 동영상 연습 팁

영어 말하기 연습을 위해 이 동영상을 활용하는 방법 중 하나는 쉐도잉 기법를 사용하는 것입니다. 동영상을 시청할 때, 화자의 말하기 속도를 주의 깊게 관찰하며 그들의 억양과 발음을 따라 해 보세요. 다음은 효과적인 쉐도잉을 위한 구체적인 팁입니다:

  • 말하기 속도: 화자의 속도가 비교적 자연스럽기 때문에 약간 느린 속도로 따라 말하며 발음을 정확히 익힙니다.
  • 억양: 감정이 담긴 억양에 주목하여, 질문 형과 긍정적인 응답의 뉘앙스를 연습합니다.
  • 주제 난이도: 동영상에서 다루는 다양한 주제는 실생활에서도 접할 수 있는 내용이므로, 각 주제에 대해 깊이 있는 대화를 시도해 보세요. 예를 들어, 자신이 선호하는 동물이나 사물에 대해 이야기하는 연습을 합니다.

이러한 연습 방법을 통해 발음 연습 뿐만 아니라, IELTS 스피킹 시험 준비에 필요한 다양한 어휘와 표현을 자연스럽게 익힐 수 있습니다.

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.

ShadowingEnglish에서 효과적으로 학습하는 방법

  1. 영상 선택: 자연스럽고 명확한 영어가 사용된 YouTube 영상을 선택하세요. TED Talks, BBC 뉴스, 영화 장면, 팟캐스트, IELTS 모범 답변 영상이 좋습니다. URL을 복사해서 검색창에 붙여넣으세요. 짧은 영상(5분 이내)과 실제로 관심 있는 주제부터 시작하는 것이 동기 유지에 효과적입니다.
  2. 먼저 듣고 내용 이해하기: 처음에는 1배속으로 그냥 듣기만 하세요. 아직 따라 말할 필요는 없습니다. 문장의 의미를 파악하고, 화자가 어떻게 단어를 강조하고, 소리를 연결하고, 쉬어 가는지 주목하세요. 내용을 이해한 후 쉐도잉 연습을 하면 효과가 훨씬 좋아집니다.
  3. 쉐도잉 모드 설정:
    • Wait Mode (대기 모드): +3s 또는 +5s를 선택하면 한 문장이 재생된 후 자동으로 잠시 멈춰서 따라 말할 시간을 줍니다. 직접 컨트롤하고 싶다면 Manual을 선택해서 Next를 눌러 진행하세요.
    • Sub Sync (자막 동기화): YouTube 자막이 오디오와 맞지 않을 수 있습니다. ±100ms로 조정해서 정확한 타이밍에 따라갈 수 있도록 맞추세요.
  4. 소리 내어 쉐도잉하기 (핵심 연습): 이것이 연습의 핵심입니다. 문장이 재생되는 순간——또는 일시정지 중에——크고 자신감 있게 소리 내어 따라 하세요. 단순히 단어를 읽는 것이 아니라, 화자의 리듬, 강세, 음의 높낮이, 연음 방식을 그대로 흉내 내는 것이 중요합니다. 목표는 화자의 '그림자'처럼 들리는 것입니다. Repeat 기능으로 같은 문장을 여러 번 반복해서 자연스럽게 입에 붙을 때까지 연습하세요.
  5. 난이도 높이며 꾸준히 연습: 한 구절이 편해지면 더 도전적인 수준으로 올리세요. 속도를 <code>1.25x</code> 또는 <code>1.5x</code>로 높여 빠른 언어 반사 신경을 훈련하세요. Wait Mode를 <code>Off</code>로 설정해서 연속 쉐도잉을 하는 것이 가장 고급스럽고 효과적인 모드입니다. 매일 15~30분씩 꾸준히 연습하면 몇 주 안에 눈에 띄는 변화를 느낄 수 있습니다.

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