쉐도잉 연습: 'Don't Waste Your Youth': Trump Offers Life Lessons In University Of Alabama Commencement Address - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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ever, ever, ever before it's going to be.
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ever, ever, ever before it's going to be.
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As you embark on this great adventure,
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let me share some of the biggest lessons I've learned from a lifetime spent building dreams and beating the odds.
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I beat a lot of odds.
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A lot of odds.
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A lot of people said, I don't know.
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But it worked out okay.
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Where are we?
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Oh, gee, I'm President.
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How did that happen?
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Now, you're going to be in the same position,
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but some of the things — would you like to hear some of the ideas,
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or should I just skip over that part, huh?
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That's going to be more interesting than all the other stuff which was slightly political, right?
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I'm going to give it to you,
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though, just as I see it and as I've learned it,
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the hard way and the easy way.
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First, if you're here today and think that you're too young to do something great,
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let me tell you that you are wrong.
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You're not too young and have great success at a very young age.
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You're all very young.
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In America, with drive and ambition,
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young people can do anything.
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I was 28 when I took my first big gamble to develop a hotel in Midtown Manhattan,
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the Grand Hyatt, and it worked out incredibly well.
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But I was very young at the time.
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I was like a very young person in sort of an old person business.
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Steve Jobs was 21 when he founded Apple.
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Walt Disney was 21 when he founded Disney.
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James Madison, James Monroe, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson.
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They were no older than 25 when they began the journeys that etched their names into the history books for all time.
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So to everyone here today, don't waste your youth.
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Go out and fight right from the beginning,
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from the day you leave this incredible university.
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Go out and fight, fight tough, fight fair.
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But go out and fight.
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You're going to be very successful because now is the time to work harder than you have ever worked before.
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Push yourself further than you have ever pushed yourself before.
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Find your limits and then smash through everything.
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Go and smash through.
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You've watched that football team smash through.
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You're going to do the same thing.
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You're at the age when you have the time
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and vitality to do really incredible things
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if you give just give it your all you'll look back
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and a decade from now you'll be astounded by what you've achieved you'll remember this day you remember
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when the guy named trump was giving the commencement address
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and he said i could do it
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and guess what i did i think you're going to remember that very fondly i hope so Second of all,
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and very importantly, you have to love what you do.
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Okay?
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You have to.
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I rarely see somebody that's successful that doesn't love what he or she does.
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That's way really, like, work like work isn't work.
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It's fun.
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I find it fun.
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I work all the time and I find it fun.
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If I didn't find it fun,
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I wouldn't be successful, whether it was real estate or in showbiz.
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I had a lot of different careers,
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but I loved real estate so much and I was very successful in real estate because I loved it.
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I learned a lot from my father because I watched him work.
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He was a workaholic.
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He worked.
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He loved to work.
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He's a good man.
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He was a tough guy.
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Tough as hell, actually.
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Now that I think back,
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I don't know if you could even get away with that nowadays.
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He was tough, but he was a good man, I'll tell you.
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And he worked seven days a week.
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He worked Saturdays, Sundays.
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It didn't matter.
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And I learned by watching him, he loved his life.
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He loved what he was doing.
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He had a great long-term marriage,
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a long, long, many, many, many years.
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He beat me on that one.
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Now, I've minded very successful,
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but they haven't lasted quite as long.
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It was close to 70 years.
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That was a long time.
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I said, Pop, you beat me on that one.
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But you know what I learned from him?
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That he just loved life,
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and all he did was work.
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I see people that don't work hard, and they're miserable.
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So go out and find.
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But he loved what he was doing.
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And you have to find something that you love.
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And you have to follow your own instincts.
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Listen to your parents.
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They're very wise.
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But you have to follow your instincts and your heart, your soul.
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And you want to be the very,
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very best you can be.
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Treat every day like a home game against Auburn.
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Fight like hell and enjoy doing it.
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And your coach can tell you all about that.
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Third thing is to think big.
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You know, you're going to do something,
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you might as well think big.
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Because it's just as tough.
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You can think small.
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I know a lot of people, they thought small.
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They're very smart.
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I know others that weren't nearly as smart,
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but they had a better picture of the big picture,
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because it's just as hard to solve a small problem as a big problem,
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and it's just as much energy and everything else except the result is going to be a smaller one.
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So love what you do,
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but think big if it's possible.
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Now, if it's not possible, that's okay, too.
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You do something, you have to do something that you love.
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You will have all the same headaches and challenges,
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all the same delays and setbacks,
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so you might as well do something that's just amazing.
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America doesn't aim small.
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Alabama doesn't aim small, and neither do you.
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So think big when possible.
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Think big.
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Fourth is work hard.
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Work hard.
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Never, ever stop.
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An example is a great athlete, actually, Gary Player, golfer.
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Great, great golfer.
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He wasn't as big as other men.
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And he was actually on the small side.
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Don't tell him that, friend of mine.
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Don't tell him that because he doesn't understand that.
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But he worked very, very hard.
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He made up for it.
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He never stopped.
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He won 168 golf tournaments.
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Think of that, 100.
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I said, Gary, you're winning like every weekend.
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Do you ever choke or anything?
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I don't know what choke means.
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And he made a statement years ago that I read,
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and I thought it was sort of an incredible statement.
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He said, it's funny, the harder I work, the luckier I get.
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Right?
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Think of that.
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The harder I work, the luckier I get.
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So you really have to work hard,
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and you're going to be successful because you have the talent to get into this school is not easy.
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To get through it is even more difficult.
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You have a lot of talent.
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Fifth is don't lose your momentum.
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You just want to keep it going.
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And you have to know if you are losing it,
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you have to know when you're losing it.
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So maybe you stop and maybe it's time to stop.
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Listen to the feedback.
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Think through your plan very carefully and keep moving fast.
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The word momentum is very important.
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I mean, I'll just tell you a little story about a great real estate developer named William Levitt.
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He built Levittown.
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Some of you might live in a Levittown.
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He was the biggest developer in the whole country in the 1940s and so.
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And he built these jobs.
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He started with one house,
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then two houses, then 20 houses,
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then thousands and thousands of houses.
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And a company, Gulf and Western,
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came along and they said,
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we're going to make you an offer to buy your company.
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And they offered him a lot of money,
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a lot of money, more money than he ever thought he could make.
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And he retired.
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He lost his momentum.
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He retired, and he led a beautiful life.
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He had a wife, I must tell you.
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It was his second wife.
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It was a trophy wife.
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What can I say?
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I don't like telling you everything,
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but we're all friends, right?
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Can we talk?
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We're all friends.
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He had a trophy wife.
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And he lived a different life.
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He moved to the south of France.
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He lived — it was a life of tremendous luxury.
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He had so many millions of dollars,
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he was given a fortune for the company.
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And 10 years went by,
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and then 15 years went by,
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and he got a call from this big conglomerate,
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Gulf and Western, and they said,
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we're not doing well with the purchase,
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because he used to pick up every nail,
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every piece of sawdust, every piece of wood,
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every chip, everything, and he'd sell it.
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He'd make a couple of bucks.
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He'd — everything was perfect.
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They can't do that.
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You know, these big companies, they don't do that.
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You see it a lot when an entrepreneur sells to a big company
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and then he ends up buying the company back for peanuts later on.
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Happens a lot.
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But he was the best at what he did.
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But 15 years went by and he was so excited and they sold him back, his company.
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And he started and he was going to tear apart the world because he got bored with a life of luxury.
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And he started building and building and building.
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And the markets turned on him.
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And he went bad.
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He lost everything.
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And he went bankrupt.
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Absolutely bankrupt.
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And it was a sad story to read.
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It was such an amazing story because he was so rich.
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But he paid them.
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And he bought it for the right price.
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Bought it low.
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But he went wild.
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But he lost his momentum.
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He wasn't good at it anymore.
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And he was at a party on Fifth Avenue, I'll never forget.
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And it was a party of a very,
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very powerful man who was having the party in a magnificent apartment overlooking the park.
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And I walked in, and there were 50 or so people.
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I recognized most of them,
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all the biggest business people in the world, actually.
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Very glamorous.
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I was doing well.
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I was young and I was doing well.
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And I was invited to parties like that.
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And I looked in the corner and there was Mr. William Levitt sitting all by himself on a chair looking very glum.
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Nobody was talking to him.
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Because you'll find that when you're not successful,
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you lose a lot of friends.
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It's not a good situation.
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But there was nobody talking to him.
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But I wanted to talk to him because I was in the real estate business and he was.
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And most of these people were in different businesses.
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And I went over and talked to him and I said,
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how are you, Mr. Lovett?
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He goes, Donald?
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He knew who I was.
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Not well.
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I'm not well.
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I said, so can you come back?
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He said, no, son.
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I lost my momentum.
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I shouldn't have done it.
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I lost my momentum.
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And I never forgot that expression.
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He lost his momentum.
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If he would have kept going,
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instead of selling and relaxing and going into a different life
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he probably would have been three times bigger than he was
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but he lost his momentum and you have to know
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when it's your time i mean there'll be a time
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when you do lose you see it with fighters you see
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it with a lot of people they have a great record
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and they retire and then four years later say i'm going back i can beat
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that guy and they get knocked to hell
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and it's not good it's not good
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so he lost his momentum you have to know when your momentum time is up i call it momentum time
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But follow your momentum.
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It's a very important word.
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You don't hear it from too many, but I've seen it.
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I've seen it a lot.
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Number six, if you want to change the world,
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you have to have the courage to be an outsider.
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In other words, you have to take certain risks and do things a little bit differently.
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Otherwise, if that weren't the case, everybody would be successful.
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It doesn't work that way.
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Progress never comes from those satisfied with the failures of a broken system system.
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It comes from those who want to fix the broken system.
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And you'll make the bigger money,
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you'll make them more success by acting that way.
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The other way may be more secure,
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but if you want to go to the top,
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you're just never going to do it unless you break the system.
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Change is never easy.
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And the closer you get to success,
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the more ferociously those with a vested and interests in the past will resist you.
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They want to resist.
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So I just say, trust me on that,
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because I know you really do.
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You have to break the system a little bit and follow your own instincts.
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But if your vision is right,
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nothing will hold you down.
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Nothing.
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You have to have the right vision.

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이번 수업에서는 도널드 트럼프가 앨라배마 대학교 졸업식에서 전달한 중요한 인생 교훈을 통해 영어 말하기 능력을 향상시킬 수 있습니다. 이 연설에서는 젊음의 중요성과 성공을 향한 도전 정신을 강조하고 있습니다. 이러한 주제를 바탕으로 영어 쉐도잉 연습을 통해 발음과 억양을 개선하며, 실질적인 영어 표현도 배울 수 있습니다. 졸업식 연설의 비슷한 톤과 속도를 따라하면서 자연스러운 말하기 능력을 기르는 것이 목적인 수업입니다.

핵심 어휘 및 표현

  • youth (젊음)
  • success (성공)
  • fight (싸우다, 도전하다)
  • ambition (야망)
  • limits (한계)
  • incredible (믿을 수 없는)
  • dreams (꿈)
  • greatness (위대함)

연습 팁

쉐도잉 연습을 위해 이 영상의 속도와 톤에 맞추어 연습하는 것이 중요합니다. 트럼프의 말은 감정이 풍부하고 힘찬 발음으로 이루어져 있기 때문에, 이를 반복적으로 따라하면서 자연스럽게 억양을 익힐 수 있습니다. 처음에는 느리게 따라해보고, 익숙해지면 점차 원래 속도로 연습해 보세요. 또한, 이 유튜브 영어 공부 방법은 IELTS 스피킹 시험 준비에도 유용합니다. 다양한 표현을 배우고, 자신의 말하기 스타일에 맞추어 연습하면서 더욱 정확하고 자신감 있는 발음을 가질 수 있을 것입니다. 지속적으로 자주 실천하여 shadowspeaks라는 개념을 활용하면, 영어 실력이 눈에 띄게 향상될 것입니다.

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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