쉐도잉 연습: How to learn vocabulary in ANY language with sentence mining! - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Raise your hand if you've spent hours trying to memorize vocabulary lists just to forget the words the next day.
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Raise your hand if you've spent hours trying to memorize vocabulary lists just to forget the words the next day.
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My hand is also raised.
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I used to think that writing out long lists of words was an effective way to learn a language.
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A few years ago, I realized I had been learning languages so ineffectively,
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so inefficiently this whole time.
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So in this video, I'm going to share with you the number one tip,
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literally the one thing that you should know about learning any language
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that you can implement today to completely change the way you learn languages.
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I'm not going to gatekeep or keep you hanging.
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It's called sentence mining.
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Or as I've shared in a lot of my other videos,
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like this one, this one, and this one.
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Learning languages in context, chunking, or learning from phrases.
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And I'm going to show you exactly how I use sentence mining in my language learning.
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And please stay to the end because I have an interesting way
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that you can reverse this method and have it work as well.
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Let's begin with what is sentence mining.
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It's as simple as this.
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Instead of memorizing isolated words,
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you learn words in context of phrases or full sentences.
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And the best way to learn this is from content that you're already consuming.
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This could be shows you're watching,
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movies, people you're talking to,
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books you're reading, articles you're reading,
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social media, anything that you can find in this language you can use to harvest or mine sentences from to learn.
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Here is the magic formula.
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Find sentences where you know every word except one, one or two.
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I do this mostly from books so I like to read books
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that are a bit of a higher level than my actual level so I'll just buy books in Hungarian,
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Korean, or Japanese that are things I'm interested in.
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These books are pretty good
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because as I read I'll be like hmm I can kind of understand the whole sentence
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but there's this one word I don't know and if I learn this word in the context of its full sentence,
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if I mine and harvest this sentence,
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I'm going to remember that word a lot faster
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because I have some kind of emotional connection as I like to call it with the word
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and then I can also naturally learn sentence structure
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or absorb new grammar instead of just learning the word randomly on its own somewhere.
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The more you read or learn or expose yourself to a certain topic or a theme,
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the more these words are going to pop up.
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I can say with some confidence that I can have a pretty good conversation about Mästæsíges intelligencia,
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which is artificial intelligence in Hungarian.
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This is because I love reading about tech,
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but I'm good at this specific topic,
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and I've learned a lot of words related to this through the method of sentence mining.
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But here's the great thing,
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you can do sentence mining at any level for any language.
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This is something you can implement today.
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If you're a beginner, you can start with something simple, like children's books.
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If you're intermediate, you can watch TV,
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shows with subtitles, you can read blog posts,
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you can browse social media in that language.
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Something I like to do is just go to a search engine
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and type in any word that I know that I'm interested in,
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see what pops up.
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And if you're advanced, you can listen to native podcasts,
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podcasts in the language and in literature,
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books, etc. Then YouTube videos are a great way to learn from comprehensible input.
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Generally, YouTube videos, things like vlogs,
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travel vlogs, a topic that somebody's talking about that you're interested in,
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you can get a transcript for these or subtitles.
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And you can also use tools like Y2Doc to import the video and get a summary of it.
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I love Y2Doc because because it also supports multiple languages.
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Here's an example where I've actually taken one of my videos,
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I edited the text a little bit,
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and I translated it to Spanish.
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Now, since I love talking about languages in my videos,
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I can now learn a bit more in Spanish because I can sentence mine from my own video but in Spanish.
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Y2Doc lets you extract text from videos and create summaries,
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presentations, posters, and more.
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Obviously, you can do this with any video that you find on YouTube.
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You just import it into Y2Doc and then it will summarize it in a document for you.
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You can also choose multiple output methods.
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You can create a poster,
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a presentation, you can get quizzes,
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a slide deck with key points.
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So this is really good if you're learning languages or studying for anything academic in general.
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What's awesome is Y2Doc can handle videos up to four hours long.
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It generates in-depth output up to 10,000 words per document,
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so you won't miss any key details of a summary.
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The output is consistent and structured so it's really easy to read or summarize anything.
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You can check out Y2Doc for yourself.
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Try it for free using the link in the description below.
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Let me show you my sentence mining with Hungarian.
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This one I'm going to do through listening.
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So I listen to Hungarian radio and then I recorded it
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and got it transcribed and then I use
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that transcription to find new words this is everything from the
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radio show i can get the full piece like it's amazing and then
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here's the best part i click on translate
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and i say i want to translate it to english i have the whole piece
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that i recorded if i just go to transcript i can get it line by line
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and i can toggle between Hungarian or English.
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It also saves the audio.
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I can switch back to the Hungarian.
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This is a new word to me,
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but now I know that it means to compete
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because nem a like not gpekel is with machines kel is a should
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so not with machines should compete so now i've just learned a new word
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and you've seen me learn a new word live and
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because machines will never merta gpeg because machines wow tulajdon shag i bon tulaj let's listen What?
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What I'm going to do is just check the translation.
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Properties.
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Here we go.
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Qualities.
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Human qualities.
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So that's the properties.
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Well, I know that's a suffix.
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Maybe, there we go.
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A property singular would be helping me learn new vocabulary and grammar at the same time.
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And then Kel is like we should,
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and then Feiyasdani I think is to develop or improve,
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which we have over here.
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And the reason I remember Feiyasdani is because during my italki lesson a while ago,
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I was talking about AI and we were talking about like developing,
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developing an app, developing AI, something like that.
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And the word that came up the whole time was,
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was FAYASDENI, which is to develop.
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FAYASDENI is developer, FAYASDENI.
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Okay, so develop.
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Oh, so AI tools are developing fluently, fluidly?
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Continually.
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Oh, continually.
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FAYASDENI.
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FAYASDENI.
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Okay.
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So the tools are developing continuously and in the future it will...
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And the reason I love reading about the same topics
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and why I'm so freaking obsessed with the topic of AI in Hungarian is
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that the same words are going to keep popping up.
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Like, the news started, okay.
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Same words are going to keep popping up.
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Like, of course, somebody's going to talk about improving or developing when we're talking about tech or AI.
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I am bound to encounter the word fejasteni or tuloidonschag so many times when I'm listening and reading about the same topics.
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And this is basically how I learn Hungarian.
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I'm not putting any of this into like a flashcard deck.
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I'm just surrounding myself and making sure I get interesting content that I like in context.
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It is so by coincidence,
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I'm not even kidding, that I was listening to live radio and they were talking about Mestashiges Intelligentsia.
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So I just...
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AI is everywhere these days and it's everywhere on Hungarian radio too, apparently.
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And now for Korean, here's a bit of a different example.
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There is this really great textbook.
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Where is it?
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This one, Korean Vocabulary for Foreigners.
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Love the title.
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And you learn vocabulary basically through example sentences.
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This is an awesome book.
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I bought it maybe two years ago in Korea,
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in Kyobo Books and I haven't finished it yet
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but this is a really really good method for learning a language
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because you have so many example sentences
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which really show you how the word is used in different contexts so
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if you are learning Korean I highly recommend this book I
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will also link to it where you can buy it on Amazon
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and yes you can create a sentence mining content dump a
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lot of people do this on Notion a spreadsheet I'm really a pen
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and paper type of girl so I put it in my notebooks.
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Here I've also done sentence mining from my French lessons.
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We were learning the conditionale passé which I hate.
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It is the auxiliaire avec le participe passé.
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Par exemple, il aurait aimé partir en vacances,
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elle aurait partagé quelque chose,
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etc etc. So a lot of what are in my language learning notes from lessons are just full sentences.
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Then here is my
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trusty dusty Hungarian notebook which came with me to Hungary
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and a lot of what I write down here is sentences
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from my language exchange chats with people on language exchange apps
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and basically here I have entire sentences just chunks of what this person has been saying to me.
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This page is a wonderful example
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because you can very clearly see where I have highlighted the words
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that I don't know this is from my friend arpi hello arpi
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if you are watching see ya hold watch
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and here i can learn the words in context for example
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to port is a lakeside you'll be here nice to support
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on like i had a great rest i i chilled it was nice to chill at the lakeside
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but now in in context of
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that sentence i remember ah to port is the lakeside etc
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in my last hungarian lesson we were talking about entrepreneurship
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and what is important to be a good entrepreneur
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and my teacher asked me well what's what's the first thing a good entrepreneur needs
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and i was like well they need an idea i don't know how to say idea idea is outlet
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and you can see in my example here i didn't just
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write outlet idea i mind the sentence i love saying that and i wrote fontos hodila jen edge your outlet
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it's important to have a good idea.
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And now I know your outlet is a good idea,
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and that's how I'm gonna remember it.
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Over here, my Japanese notebook from a few years ago.
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This is mostly for learning grammar.
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I would write the full sentence that has the grammar explanation in green over here
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and then go into detail about any new words.
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You can see at times I even write the full sentence out quite a few times just to drill it in.
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Many people don't like doing this,
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I just really enjoy the feeling of writing Japanese by hand as well.
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You can come up with excuses later,
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but for now please send them to me.
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I do however write down single words but this is from a whole sentence.
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I'll write down the sentence first and then the one
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or two or three words that I don't know in the sentence they will go here.
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Here even without any English this is just learning new words and grammar entirely from full sentences.
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Lastly here are some common mistakes with sentence mining and how to avoid them.
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The first mistake is mining sentences with too many unknowns in them.
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If If there's a ton of words you don't know,
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you don't even know if maybe it's a grammar structure
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or a conjugation or a tense or a particle that you're actually thinking is a word,
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but it's a form of grammar.
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So really try and find stuff just at or above your level.
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And it should be sentences that have one maximum two words that you don't know.
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Try and start and be strict with the one unknown word only rule.
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Number two, people fall into this trap.
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I hear it a lot in my language coaching.
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Oh, the content is so boring.
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someone said the other day I was watching a TV show in my target language
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and I just couldn't watch it it was
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so boring that's fine stop watching it stop reading
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that boring book I don't like kids books I refuse to
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read kids stories to learn a language some people love it start with content
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that you're interested in your hobbies
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if you like the culture music lyrics then mistake number three
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and I'm so guilty of this is not reviewing regularly that's why I like to have a small
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handy notebook that I can carry around with me.
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It's super light and I bring it with me everywhere.
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If I'm going to a coffee shop,
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if I know I'm going to be waiting at the doctor's office,
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whatever, and every now and then I'll page through it and be like,
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oh yeah, that's a word I forgot.
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Let's read it again.
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I don't really spend time sitting at my desk
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and reviewing my notes because I already feel like I make a strong connection with it when I hear it.
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So in a lesson or a movie or talking to a friend and when I use it, active recall.
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That is a topic for a whole other day.
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If you want a video about that, let me know.
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But try your best to schedule in some form of reviewing or using these words and sentences.
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And then number four is ignoring audio or pronunciation.
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This is especially important if you're a beginner.
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It is hard to know what accurate pronunciation is if you don't have an example of what it sounds like.
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However, if you're more upper intermediate advanced,
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you probably don't need audio if you're just reading articles and stuff,
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if you already know how to speak confidently.
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So just be sure to start out with something where you can hear it as well.
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And lastly, an interesting tip for you is reverse mining.
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And this is pretty much how I learned about research in design in a Hungarian.
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So research being kutatás.
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I just typed that into Google and then I found some website that has articles about user research and tech.
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And now I'm never going to forget the word kutotash because I see it everywhere.
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And I'm pretty sure I said like this exact example in a few videos.
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So that's how effective it was for me.
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Then there are so many other things I can say.
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Grammar mining, graded sentences, themed mining,
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how to build up on sentences, so much more.
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So if you do want a second more in-depth video about this topic,
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please leave a comment below.
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Here's a little challenge for you.
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Try mining five sentences this week.
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Or try finding five words that you want to learn and then go look for sentences with those.
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So if this video changed how you think about learning vocabulary,
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please subscribe and hit the bell to get notifications.
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Thank you so much for watching.
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I hope it was useful and I'll see you in the next video.
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Bye!

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당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

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맥락 및 배경

언어 학습은 많은 이들에게 도전 과제가 될 수 있습니다. 특히 단어 목록을 외우려고 하다 보면 하루 만에 잊게 되는 경험이 반복될 수 있습니다. 이러한 과정을 겪은 많은 사람들은 언어를 더 효과적으로 배우기 위한 방법을 찾아야 한다고 느낍니다. 최근 영상에서는 '문장 채굴(sentence mining)'이라는 기법이 소개되었습니다. 이는 고립된 단어를 외우기 보다는, 구문이나 전체 문장의 맥락 속에서 단어를 배우는 방법입니다. 이제 이 방법을 통해 영어 회화 연습과 쉐도잉 연습을 더 효과적으로 할 수 있습니다.

일상 소통을 위한 5가지 핵심 구문

  • “I used to think…”: 이전의 생각이나 경험을 나타낼 때 유용하게 사용됩니다.
  • “I realized I had been…”: 자기의 깨달음을 표현하는 좋은 예입니다.
  • “So in this video, I’m going to share…”: 정보를 공유할 때 자주 쓰이는 구문입니다.
  • “The best way to learn this is from…”: 특정 방식을 추천할 때 사용합니다.
  • “This is something you can implement today.”: 당장 적용할 수 있는 아이디어를 제시할 때 적합합니다.

단계별 쉐도잉 가이드

문장 채굴 기법을 통해 언어 배우기를 시작하려면 다음 단계를 따라 해보세요. '쉐도잉 사이트'를 활용하여 영어 쉐도잉 연습을 진행할 수 있습니다:

  1. 신뢰할 수 있는 콘텐츠 찾기: 자신이 관심 있는 주제의 비디오나 책을 찾아보세요.
  2. 문장 선정: 이해할 수 있는 문장 중에서 한두 개의 모르는 단어가 포함된 문장을 선택하세요.
  3. 쉐도잉 연습: 해당 문장을 반복하여 발음하고 의미를 이해하려고 노력하세요. 이를 통해 자연스럽게 단어와 문장 구조를 학습할 수 있습니다.
  4. 감정적 연결 만들기: 문장의 맥락과 관련된 개인적인 이야기를 생각하며 기억을 강화하세요.
  5. 반복 학습: 같은 주제의 다양한 문장을 접하면서 같은 단어와 표현을 여러 번 연습하세요.

이러한 방법을 통해 영어 회화 연습shadow speech 능력을 향상시킬 수 있습니다. 매일 조금씩 규칙적으로 연습하면서 자신만의 shadowspeaks 스타일을 개발해보세요!

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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