쉐도잉 연습: How I got my American Accent in English - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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In this video, I want to share exactly how I got my American accent.
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In this video, I want to share exactly how I got my American accent.
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My full story, including all of the turning points,
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the systems, and the mindset shifts that changed everything for me.
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If you're working on your accent in English right now,
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I really hope my story will inspire you and give you actionable tips to make progress faster.
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Hey friends, and welcome to my channel.
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I'm Veronica, and here I share my language learning journey to help you become more fluent
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and confident in your target language not through pressure or perfection,
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but with real practical habits that actually fit into your life.
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I was inspired to make this video after watching another amazing YouTube creator share her own American accent journey,
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and her video reminded me how powerful it is to hear someone else's story.
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So that is exactly what I'm doing today.
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If you are on your own English journey and want some support,
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I have created a few resources you might love.
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You can check out my language learning notion template to organize your study routine
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and if you're ready to take things deeper i also have a full language master program on my website
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which is a self-paced video course about the science behind language
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learning everything is going to be linked in my description below all right let's dive into my story
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and start with my english beginnings in russia i'm originally from russia i was born
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and raised in a small town to the south of moscow and this is where my english journey began.
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I have to mention something really important here because in Russia in general,
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in a regular school, we are taught British English, not American English.
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And so I started learning British English when I was around seven years old,
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but obviously as a kid I did not like English.
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When I was a kid in elementary school and middle school,
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I really liked math, but then math became too complicated in high school and I stopped liking it.
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I think one of the reasons why I didn't like English when I was younger,
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but I loved French when I was younger,
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French just felt way more natural to me because of my amazing teacher.
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She really embodied the personality of a classy French woman,
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even though she was obviously Russian,
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but she would travel to France,
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she would tell me stories,
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and just by looking at her,
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I really wanted to study French.
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I honestly remember when I was in middle school,
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I was like 12, 13,
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I would tell everyone that I would move to France.
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You know this question, who do you want to be when you grow up?
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My answer was, I don't know,
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but I know that I would live in France.
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And look at me now,
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I live in Mexico City,
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really, really far away from France,
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and I don't really speak French anymore,
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like I don't remember anything.
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But also look at my English,
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like a person who hated English,
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who actually studied British English at school,
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my accent is completely different i'm really passionate about english
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and yeah that's crazy that's just life obviously
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because i went to a regular school our teachers didn't really have this native like pronunciation
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and
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so at the beginning my pronunciation was just a mix of
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my russian accent then maybe some of the british pronunciation rules i learned somewhere
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and then maybe some American rules I decided to learn.
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Basically a mix of everything,
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but mostly it was my traditional Russian accent.
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So I think the biggest takeaway from my early experience with English is that it wasn't immersive,
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it wasn't inspiring.
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It was just these traditional classes that I had at my school probably twice a week.
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I had to do my homework.
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We were doing a lot of grammar drills.
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We were learning how to spell correctly we were reading lots of texts,
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but obviously there was no listening,
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almost no listening, and also pretty much no speaking.
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At that time, English wasn't really an exciting subject for me because I hated learning grammar,
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I hated memorizing words that I knew I would never use.
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What I really needed at that time was to understand the feel of English,
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the melody, the natural expressions, how people actually talked.
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That's exactly why I love FluentU,
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and I'm really excited that they're sponsoring this portion of today's video.
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I know there are a lot of language apps out there,
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but I think FluentU really stands out because it gives me tools for real comprehension.
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And yes, it's sponsored, but I always share tools that I find extremely helpful.
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FluentU turns real videos like YouTube clips,
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movie scenes, and interviews into language lessons.
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So instead of cramming boring vocabulary,
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I can see it used in context by native speakers.
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They also have a Chrome extension which lets me learn with any Netflix or YouTube video that has subtitles.
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And here is what makes it really special.
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When I come across a new word,
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I don't just see a translation.
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I get an image, tips,
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example sentences, and this is my favorite part,
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links to other videos that use the same word.
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This helps the word actually stick because your brain remembers meaningful moments, not isolated definitions.
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FluentU also has a built-in review system that we can use to start with single words,
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then move on to phrases and full sentences.
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So we're actively building the skill of speaking, not just memorizing.
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And we can also use FluentU to look up words and see how they're used in real life.
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I find this feature super helpful.
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If you want to give it a try,
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I have linked a free trial
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and a 40% discount code for you guys in the description below so that you can check everything out later.
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Okay, so now let's talk about my main turning point in English
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when I actually fell in love with the language and it happened in a very interesting way.
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I think I was around 14 or 15 years old and one evening YouTube recommended me a video in English.
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I mean, I was already using YouTube a lot.
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I was just watching videos in Russian
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and for some reason YouTube decided to recommend me a video in English by an American YouTuber
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and I was like why not?
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You know I don't really speak English well.
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My listening skills were absolutely horrible at that time
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but I still decided to click and I got hooked in
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and I think after that I just realized
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that I wanted to focus on my English because I really wanted to understand that YouTuber.
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I really liked her videos,
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the way she was showing her life.
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I still remember she had this like huge American fridge.
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It's not something that my family had.
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We just had like a regular size fridge.
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But in her house, they had this like two-door fridge.
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And I thought that was absolutely amazing.
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I talk about this a lot on my YouTube channel.
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I think that time was when my journey of comprehensible input in English actually began.
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Because before I was a teenager,
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all of my learning was happening in school.
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I hated doing my English homework.
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I hated my English classes.
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It was not the subject that I enjoyed.
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And so once I discovered YouTube,
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you know, videos in English,
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those old school American YouTubers,
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I really connected with their content and I started wanting to understand everything they were talking about.
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But also because it was a video and they were mainly sharing things about their lives,
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like vlogs, they were showing a lot of things.
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I was learning through visuals,
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through context, and it really helped me improve my English skills really fast.
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But also because I still lived in my small town,
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I still went to the same school,
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even though my English skills were improving,
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I didn't really receive support in my classroom.
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My teacher would tell me that I was moving too fast,
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I should just calm down and follow everyone else,
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and all of my classmates,
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they would laugh at me because they thought I was crazy,
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they thought I became obsessed with English,
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and I wanted to be better than everyone else,
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and so I think what started happening is I started becoming more culturally disconnected from my own peers,
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my own environment, because I stopped consuming all the content that wasn't in English.
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I only wanted to watch videos in English,
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movies in English, absolutely everything had to be in English.
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And so I would miss out on a lot of things,
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you know, memes and some jokes.
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Like sometimes my classmates will share memes with each other and I was like,
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I have absolutely no idea what you guys are talking about.
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Because culturally, I was so immersed into this world of American YouTube.
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But okay, let's actually move to high school and my college struggles.
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Again, in high school, it was exactly the same.
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All of my textbooks, absolutely everything was in British English.
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My English teacher at school would tell me that I had to learn British English.
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I had to be focused on the British accent.
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And I think because of that, I was confused.
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And also because I was a teenager.
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And you know, if you tell a teenager that they can't do something and they have to do something else,
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they're going to want to do something that they can't do
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and for me that was my American English the fact
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that I couldn't really work on my accent in school
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and try to make my accent sound more American made me even more passionate about English outside of school
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and everything else I was doing to support myself and to help me on my own English learning journey.
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But something really exciting happened when I went to college because I really wanted to get into this college in Moscow.
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It was my absolute dream and I did.
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I got in for free because I studied very hard.
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I was so excited about my journey.
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I thought that now I could finally start working on my American English
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and you know ask my professors for advice and that is actually exactly what I got fortunately.
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My English professor in college was absolutely amazing.
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I could tell that she was extremely passionate about her subject,
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about English, and her support,
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like that phrase that if I wanted to,
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I could go deeper into my American accent,
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and she would support me,
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she would help me if I needed her to help me,
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that meant so much to me,
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because still, I was in college,
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and obviously all of our materials,
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they were still in British English.
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I remember my English professor always supported me if I wanted to discuss books with her,
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if I had questions when it came to some rules of the American accent.
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Moving on my timeline, let's now actually talk about the first time I went to the United States.
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It was in 2020, right before COVID,
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and I actually got stuck in New York City.
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I couldn't fly back to Russia because my flight got cancelled.
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It was a whole experience.
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But I remember when I came to New York city in 2020 on a tourist visa
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and i went to a supermarket i started crying
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because i just got so overwhelmed i obviously always wanted to visit the states
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and i wanted to practice my english and talk to native speakers
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but i felt very scared i felt scared to go to
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a supermarket by myself to talk to native speakers i thought
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i was going to say something stupid people would laugh at me or they would be just like, what?
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Like, what are you saying?
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We can't understand.
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I was just so anxious and so scared.
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And you know what I can tell you guys?
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I think my English is slowly improving day by day.
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Like even right now.
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I started my YouTube channel in 2020.
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Actually, at the end of 2020.
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This is just something that I love doing.
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I love recording YouTube videos.
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This passion started when I was 14,
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15 with me watching American YouTubers.
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And now I'm creating my own YouTube videos too.
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If you go to my channel and you sort by the oldest videos,
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you will see how much my accent has changed over the years,
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how much my English has improved.
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I deeply believe in this concept of continuous improvement.
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If you're working on something,
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you will always be slowly, gradually improving.
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And sometimes we just don't see that we are and that is the biggest issue.
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That is why I have all of my YouTube videos to inspire you guys and to maybe inspire you to record yourself.
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This is something that I always mention in my YouTube videos.
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If you don't want to create a YouTube channel,
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that is absolutely okay, but maybe you can create voice recordings
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or some little videos just for you so
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that you can see how much you have improved
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and have those nostalgic moments when you're just watching your older videos and thinking,
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wow, like I have improved so much and I'm so proud of myself and so grateful for my journey.
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Getting used to a new accent doesn't happen quickly.
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It's a process.
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I grew up in Russia.
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I always spoke Russian as my only language.
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Getting used to a new accent doesn't happen quickly.
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It's a process and that is absolutely okay.
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I grew up speaking only one language,
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so that is absolutely normal that now that I'm learning English and Spanish,
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when I'm speaking English, sometimes I don't know how to say certain words,
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sometimes I mispronounce things, sometimes my accent is not perfect,
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and that is absolutely okay,
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because when you're learning a new accent,
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you're actually training your ears to listen to those new sounds and to learn to pick up on them,
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to actually differentiate the sounds of English from the sounds of your native language.
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The same thing with your mouth you're actually training slowly your mouth
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and tongue to be able to even create those sounds that you have never created before.
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Everything in your body has to start working in this new way,
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so it is absolutely okay that getting used to a new accent takes time.
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Okay, so now that I've shared my journey with English with you,
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with my American accent, let's actually move to my final takeaways.
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All of the things that played a crucial role in my journey.
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The first lesson is that devotion is so much more powerful than discipline.
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I talk about this concept devotion versus discipline on my self-improvement channel
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but here I just want to mention that at the very beginning of my English journey when I was a teenager,
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I started practicing English regularly not because I was disciplining myself.
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No, it wasn't discipline.
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It was devotion.
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I was truly passionate about those youtube videos about the content
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those american youtubers were creating about the books i was reading
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and that is also the reason why i didn't like my classes
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when i was in elementary school in middle school
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and in high school
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because all of the materials there were boring just regular textbooks with a lot of grammar drills
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and long boring texts and when you're practicing from this place of devotion
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that actually becomes your identity because the most powerful shift
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when you want to start building new habits
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and language learning is a habit is your identity shift i
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know it's like a joke in the language learning community
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when you're learning a language really hard you want to sound exactly like a native speaker
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and then you meet a native speaker
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and the first question they ask you is where are you from
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which means that you know your accent is not perfect
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but right now i don't care that is absolutely okay i mean i'm not from the united states of america Yes,
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and that is okay.
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Like, I actually want to share my story with people.
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I like when people ask me this question because I know it's not taking away my efforts.
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This question is meant for connection.
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People are not trying to undervalue your achievements.
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So the next big lesson that we can take away from my journey is that listening is absolutely everything.
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And not just random listening,
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but listening that is fueled by comprehensible input.
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Again, when I was in school,
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my listening skills were absolutely horrible.
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I could understand anything, like all of my answers and my tests were wrong.
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But then when I learned that listening is actually the most important skill,
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I started focusing on listening.
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Enjoy the process, choose the materials that you like,
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and then eventually your listening skills will improve and they will help you so much with your pronunciation,
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with your accent, with your grammar and vocabulary, with absolutely everything.
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That is why I believe that listening is the most important skill when it comes to language learning,
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especially when it's comprehensible input kind of listening.
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And finally, lesson number three is yes, YouTube.
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I absolutely have to talk about YouTube in this video because I think YouTube is a goldmine.
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This free content on YouTube has changed my life forever,
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and one channel that I recommend to every single person is Rachel's English.
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When I was in college and my English professor told me that she would support me in my accent journey,
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her channel was the first one I found, Rachel's English YouTube channel.
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Her videos helped me so much because at the beginning,
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I knew absolutely nothing.
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Like, I didn't know any rules when it came to the American accent,
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and Rachel's explanations were just so easy to understand.
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I especially enjoyed her longer videos where she would take an episode of friends
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and she would literally break it down sound by sound.
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I was repeating all the phrases word for word and that process helped me so much.
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Like why Americans say these certain sounds and how I can learn to make these sounds too.
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Okay guys, I think it's going to be it for today's video.
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If you liked it, please don't forget to give it a thumbs up and subscribe to my channel.
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Also leave me a comment.
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If you want to share something with me,
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your feedback is always appreciated.
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If you want to know why I stopped trying to sound native in English,
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I highly recommend checking out this video right here,
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because here I talk about the dark side of wanting to change your accent,
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of wanting to sound exactly like a native speaker.
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We often think that sounding native means success, but does it?
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You'll learn all of the answers in this video.

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이 비디오로 말하기 연습을 해야 하는 이유는?

이 비디오는 미국 영어 억양을 익히고자 하는 이들에게 큰 영감을 줄 수 있습니다. 강사는 자신의 여정을 공유하며, 영어 발음을 개선하기 위한 실제적인 팁과 함께 여정의 전환점을 강조합니다. 이렇게 자신의 이야기와 경험을 나누는 것은 다른 학습자들에게도 많은 도움을 줄 수 있으며, 자신이 겪는 어려움을 공감하게 합니다. 영어를 배우고 있는 여러분이 이 비디오를 활용한다면, IELTS 스피킹 능력 향상에 기여할 뿐만 아니라 자신감도 높아질 것입니다. 또한, 비디오에서 제공하는 여러 자원을 통해 영어 쉐도잉(영어 쉐도잉) 연습에 도움을 받을 수 있습니다.

문맥 속에서의 문법 및 표현

  • “I was born and raised”: 이 표현은 과거의 경험을 설명할 때 사용할 수 있으며, 자신이 자라온 배경을 언급할 때 유용합니다.
  • “I really hope”: 희망이나 기대를 표현할 때 흔히 쓰이는 구조로, 감정을 더 풍부하게 전달하는 데 도움을 줍니다.
  • “reminded me how powerful it is”: 어떤 것을 상기시킬 때 사용할 수 있는 표현으로, 느낌을 강조하는 데 유효합니다.
  • “I have created”: 자신의 노력을 강조할 때 쓸 수 있는 현재 완료형 구조로, 지속성을 나타내는 데에 유용합니다.

이러한 문법 구조들을 사용하여 영어 문장을 만들 때, 문맥을 고려하면서 자연스럽게 대화하는 연습을 하는 것이 중요합니다.

일반적인 발음 함정

강사의 발음에서 주목해야 할 몇 가지 단어들이 있습니다. ‘English’, ‘journey’, ‘powerful’과 같은 단어들은 흔히 발음을 잘못하는 경향이 있으며, 특히 강세와 억양이 다를 수 있습니다. 영어 발음 교정에 있어서는 이러한 단어들을 반복적으로 연습하는 것이 효과적입니다. 영어 발음 교정을 위해 'shadowspeak' 기법을 활용하여 이러한 단어들을 따라해보세요. 이런 방식으로 연습하면, 각 단어에서의 억양과 강세를 더욱 분명하게 배울 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.

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