쉐도잉 연습: ENGLISH SPEECH | R. MADHAVAN: India in 2030 (English Subtitles) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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So, first of all, thank you very much for having me here at the Inspire Series.
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So, first of all, thank you very much for having me here at the Inspire Series.
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It’s worked dramatically, I’m already inspired to be addressing this really August intellectual gathering of people from Harvard, a place that my mother thought I will never reach.
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But you know what, lot of people have spoken before me and eloquently and described their dreams for India and given figures and facts that either are skeptical and like, Mr. Omar says, aspirational.
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But I’m just an actor and I’m going to just give you my dream shamelessly, because that’s the thing that I can do best.
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And by that, I mean when we talk of dreams we have one of our greatest scientists and philanthropists Dr. Abdul Kalam, and he said something which is very interesting.
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He said, “Dreams are not what you have when you sleep.
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The true dreams are the ones that don’t let you sleep”.
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He said, “When you have that dream once it’s a dream; when you have it twice it becomes a desire.
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And when you see it for the third time consecutively, it becomes a passion, an aim and a goal”, and that is the passion with which I want to see this fantasy that I have for India 2030.
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And Abraham Lincoln also was a dreamer and you know, but he said one thing that makes most sense in trying to achieve this goal that I have dreamed for my nation.
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He said, “If I have six hours to cut down a tree, then I would spend the first four hours sharpening the axe.” There’s a great philosophy in that.
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In this era of instant gratification we just keep thinking we can achieve all these goals by just tweaking this, tweaking that, it’s not true.
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I really believe that a missionary zeal is required to make that quantum change, that can make 2030 of what I’m dreaming about right now.
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And just let’s look at India as a country, what a unique nation!
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Seriously. Thousands of years old of culture and tradition, many many invasions, being ruled for many years and we still somehow managed to maintain our identity.
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We still somehow have managed to maintain our Indian-ness — our beliefs, our faith and you know, yeah, there has been — we have our drawbacks — there is corruption, there is violence, there is differences between the different religions and sects and caste and everything.
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But I can’t help but think looking at India at the geography that we’re not doing really that bad.
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Look at all the other nations around in the world.
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Look at our neighbors, compared to that there is somebody in India who’s doing something right for us to be called a growing economy and being projected as the third largest economy in 2026 and the most educated and young nation in the world, it’s still functional democracy.
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So let’s first accept the fact that there is somebody, some people in India with the right ideas and the ability to lead the nation to where we are today.
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Under that assumption — under that assumption we are also very capable of finding very unique solutions to the problems that generally the world faces.
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And one of them, of course, is the fact that we found freedom through non-violence and non-cooperation; who would’ve thought that was possible?
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We have some other – no, seriously I mean it was as radical of thought then as it is today, and one man in a loincloth would believe in faith and complete conviction was able to do that for us — you know, Mahatma Gandhi, and it’s an amazing country of people like Mahavir, Gautam Buddha and Mahatma Gandhi and then Bhagat Singh who also had a dream.
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He dreamed then 85 years ago, that I dream of an India where no infant cries for the want of milk, no youngster is deprived of relevant education, and no youth goes door to door finding a job.
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Sadly, it’s still a dream today.
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And I dream of a 2030 when this dream becomes irrelevant.
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I dream of a 2030 when everybody is so equally satisfied with what they’re doing, that they’re able to actually devote about more time back to art and culture which is another great important aspect of our country.
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Now we need to be – for that to happen we need to be a healthy nation.
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And when I say healthy, I remember preparing for a film of mine which was released recently where I had to look like a boxer and I had this biceps and triceps that had to be there.
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So I decided just to work on the parts that is seen outside my clothes.
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So I was just working out of my biceps and my triceps and my shoulders but you know what I suddenly realized, the strengths that I had in my arms and biceps was not actually enough for me to look even fit because it is disproportionate growth.
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It is the kind of growth that will not make you fit or strong but actually make you look inadequate.
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And that is what is happening to India today.
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Everybody says we are the largest economy — we’re going to be the most populated country in the years to come and you know with economic superpower and supremacy in rocket and space technology which I am privy to and then the IT giants and smarter cities.
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But ladies and gentlemen, I really believe that more than smarter cities we require smart villages.
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And this is going to be primarily what I talk about today.
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You know, a nation is only as strong as its weakest link and rural India is our weakest link.
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See, it’s important that growth and progress goes hand-in-hand with villages also getting onto the same train towards economic freedom, super-powerdom, all terms that has been coined for a successful country but that is not happening, the reason being we’re beginning to ignore them, we’re beginning to actually believe that — This is a very interesting line that I have found, where they say that everybody believes that they know what is required for getting the underprivileged and the poor up to speed with the rest of the country.
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OK, and we always start assuming that this is what they want; this is how we can help the poor and the villages and this is what they need.
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And we can’t be more wrong, because when you assume, and as the spelling goes you make an ass of you and me, let me tell you how that happened to a friend of mine.
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His name was — he’s a very profound doctor, a gastroenterologist, and he got a call from his patient Mr. Abdul, who said, “Doctor Saab, my wife is really really ill and she’s got a big stomach ache and she can’t sit and she can’t sleep and she’s in big pain, can I come and visit you?” And he said, ‘Yes, by all means’.
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And like all patients today he’s done his research, he’s gone into the internet and he said, “usko yeh ho sakta hain, wo sakta hain, and the doctor said, ‘Don’t worry let me handle it’.
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And he checked her out and he said “She has an infected appendix, so I have to do a surgery and she’ll be fine.” The surgery was done, she was fine and Abdul was a happy man.
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One year later, he calls back to doctor and says, “Sir, my wife has got a stomach ache, please do the appendix operation, she’ll be fine.” And so doctor said — the doctor Manu said, “Listen, I am the doctor, let me diagnose, Abdul, please bring her to the clinic and we’ll fix it up.” But he said, ‘No, no, sir fix up that operation date, we’ll do it in half an hour and we’ll be back — just she needs that appendix removed’.
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So now he’s losing his patience, he says “Let me do the diagnosis, Abdul, bring her to the clinic.” And he’s still insisting and finally the doctor lost it, and he said, “Listen, I am the doctor and let me tell you that every human being has only one appendix, and I have already taken out the appendix.
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So please don’t tell me how to do my job.” Abdul waited very patiently for the doctor to finish with his assumptions and then he shot back very meekly, he says, “Sir, I agree with you, every human being can have one appendix but a man can have two wives, right?” So when we start assuming what the rural India needs, we do what I think is most dangerous.
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In my vast experiences of shooting in really rural India’s, and villages and small [cook-gramins] like they call it in Tamil, really small places, I realized shockingly that the biggest financial burden for a person of this particular village, would you all be able to guess what his biggest financial burden is — five minutes!
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Hey so I’m going to speak for 20 today, I am going to reduce the number of questions, I’m prepared, is that OK?
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OK, so can you all tell me, anybody, quick answers — anybody know which is the biggest financial burden for a man in one of these small villages?
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Sorry, tap, health, OK.
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Not health, not the marriage of a daughter, not education, not – liquor, thank you for reminding me, no.
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Say it again, dowry, no, no, no, no.
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Let me put you out of your misery.
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I’m saying why does he need financial assistance for — the answer is the untimely death of one relative of a senior in their family, that is the one occasion he can’t prepare for, that is one occasion where the ceremony demands that he spend a certain amount of money, feed a certain amount of people, use the funeral expenditures and that’s where he takes the loan and that’s where he gets indebted and that’s where, to escape that particular embarrassment and humility of not having the ability to perform the function every year as a specter of the Indian tradition that he decides to leave the village, because he’s made to feel inadequate.
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Lord Macaulay in 1735 had spoken in the British Parliament and said, “The only way to rule India is to make the men there feel inadequate”, he said and truly so, that unless he feels that what he has is lesser than what others have, you will not be able to rule him.
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And within a very short period they proved themselves right.
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The rural India today is feeling inadequate, they are feeling like they’re not even part of our country.
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And what happens with that is they start then looking at opportunities in villages and saying better education, better health, better lifestyle and no humility for not having performed the funeral properly, they decide to give up who they are and move to the cities.
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And who they are is what is more important for us to understand.
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Who they are, are actually the timekeepers and the bookkeepers of our deep-rooted traditional culture and stories.
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You know, you should see how tradition and culture flourishes in a happy village in India.
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We don’t have psychiatrist as a big fashion thing in India and they still manage to maintain a great level of sanity.
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You know, there’s a great phrase from the poem, ‘If’ by Rudyard Kipling where it says, ‘Dream but not make dreams your master; think but not make thoughts your aim; meet with triumph and disaster and treat those two Impostors just the same.’ It’s very easy to say it but how do you treat those two Impostors just the same?
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The answer lies in the tradition and the culture and the books and the epics that are so prominent and predominant in our country – The Bhagavad Gita, the Koran, the interpretation of that in the subcontinent, the Bible, the Guru Granth Sahib, the Granny stories, and you know how to handle the diversities and the setbacks and you’re able to sit back, assemble — reassemble yourself, come back and fight with the same glory again.
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And we don’t give him — when you don’t give a villager that, you’re depriving him, we’re depriving ourselves of what I think is one of the most important survival tools in today’s world, which is the culture and tradition.
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So I dream of a 2030 where rural India is as developed as the rest of the world, is as aspirational as the rest of India and where the villager is providedg with the same opportunities as it is available in the cities.
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And after a hard day’s work, a villager is actually able to come back, sit down, have a drink, put his feet up and start thinking about art and culture and poetry.
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That would be a dream that I have for 2030 — a practical dream that I have for 2030.
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And the dreams that your parents and my parents had when we were in college — urban middle class – where everything revolved around the boy, studying hard, getting into a technical college of a repute and then getting into a reputed managements college and finally the green card.
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And if it was the girl, then it was a spouse with a green card.
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I dream of a 2030 where students the world over will dream of a blue card, will dream of having once actually come to India and study and imbibe the knowledge that we have as a nation.
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It used to be true: we were the first university in the world – Nalanda was the university where people came in from far and wide.
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So it’s not a pipe dream, it’s a practical dream that I have, and I think that’s easily, easily attainable.
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And finally, before I wind up, I think, I’ll dream of a 2030 where we have a meritocratic electoral base which selects its leaders and whose leaders believe that it is more important to serve — with a missionary zeal to serve the nation rather than rule it.
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You know, there is another stanza from the same poem which says that, if they have the ability to talk to the crowds yet keep your virtue, walk with Kings – nor lose the common touch, if neither good friends nor foes can hurt you, yet all men count with you but none too much — if only the politicians understood the gist of that line, we would have a progressive country by 2030 where we’ll all be proud of not just the way the country is running but also proud about our politicians.
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And finally, you know, I’m an actor and the dream that I have for myself is that in 2030 I’m as relevant and as handsome hopefully but if age was to catch up, then they probably would have mapped my face by then and use technology to make me look as young or old, as the role desired me to look, and I’m still able to romance the pretty young things that would be part of the industry in 2030.
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I see that’s got many guys going ham.
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And finally as an actor, I’m used and prone to dialogues, I love to speak dialogues, and I recently found a line that blew me apart and I thought it was a phenomenal Hindi film dialogue, where this great gentleman has said, “That whatever I am today and all the achievements that have been – that has been possible by me and what will eventually also be possible by me in the near future are all because of my angel mother.” Do you know who said that?
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You know who said that?
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Shockingly Abraham Lincoln!
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So I dream of a 2030 where every Indian says the exact same thing about his mother and not just about his mother but also about his motherland – and also for the sake of posterity about his mother-in-law.
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But hey, ladies and gentlemen, what do I know?
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I am an actor.
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Thank you very much for your patient hearing.
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이 수업에 대하여

이 수업에서는 R. 마다반의 "인도 2030" 연설을 통해 영어 회화 연습에 대해 심도 있게 다루게 됩니다. 이 연설에서는 인도의 미래에 대한 비전과 꿈을 공유하며, 각 개인이 어떠한 방식으로 자신의 목표를 이루고 더 나은 사회를 만들 수 있는지를 설명합니다. 연설을 통해 영어 발음 교정과 함께 다양한 표현과 어휘를 익히며, 실제 대화 상황에서 사용할 수 있는 말하기 능력을 향상시키게 됩니다.

주요 어휘 및 문구

  • Dream - 꿈
  • Aspirational - 열망하는
  • Passion - 열정
  • Philosophy - 철학
  • Identity - 정체성
  • Rural India - 농촌 인도
  • Economic Freedom - 경제적 자유
  • Diagnosis - 진단

연습 팁

이 영상은 다소 빠른 속도로 진행되지만, 쉐도잉 연습에 매우 유용합니다. 발음과 억양을 정확하게 따라하며, 영어 쉐도잉 을 통해 자연스러운 언어 사용을 체득할 수 있습니다. 특히 마다반의 열정적인 톤과 감정을 살려서 따라 해보세요. 처음에는 느리게 따라하고, 익숙해지면 속도를 늘려보세요. shadow speech 기법을 통해 연설의 주요 포인트를 이해하고, 자신의 의사표현 능력을 향상시킬 수 있습니다. 또한, 연설에서 사용된 주요 어휘를 강조하면서 반복 연습하면, IELTS 스피킹과 같은 시험에서도 도움이 될 것입니다. 매일 10분씩 시간을 내어 이 연설을 반복하다 보면 점진적으로 영어 회화 능력이 향상되는 것을 느낄 수 있을 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.

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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