쉐도잉 연습: How to Practice English by Yourself (Vlog) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Hello everybody today we're will we're will me..
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Hello everybody today we're will we're will me..
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Hello everybody today we're filming a walking/hiking video and Dan is here to help us with more vocabulary. He's just better than me.
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We are just arriving at the train station here.
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I think it's every 20 minutes and we missed it.
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We just saw it pass by us.
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So we should have checked the schedule on our phones but...
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we are now in a small town in Germany.
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Dan's about to kill me. This is our train that's leaving.
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I just remembered that I forgot my power bank at home charging, which you're not supposed to leave unattended in case you didn't know.
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We got the power bank. I, I swear to God this vlog is just going to be us going home and back to the train station. Okay. A bit of vocabulary. So we have traffic lights.
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Those are traffic lights. Then we have tracks.
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These metal things are train tracks. That is a trash can.
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Do you know that there's actually a lot of idioms that are connected to the trains and the word train.
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So you know when you say that somebody is off the rails, like they've gone crazy. They're gone like berserk.
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So it's like a train that jumps off the rails, which is crazy to happen.
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Right. You can also be a train wreck. So many like things with train accidents.
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Okay. The train is here. We can finally get on it.
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All right. We arrived in the center. Let's go. Wait, I think it's that way though.
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It's so nice. It's 20 degrees today. I'm very hot already. So let's go hiking.
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Technically this is the most popular spot here in Karlsruhe.
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This is literally the palace of the founder of the city, but it is in renovation right now and we were lucky enough to have visited it when we came here like a few months ago.
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Our host was like, you guys need to go now because the castle is going to be closed for 10 years for renovations. Can you imagine?
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So we actually got inside and um, visited the museum and everything, but now it's closed so we can just walk around it.
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So look at these trees.
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I don't know if they like chop them up like that or that's how they grow.
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Oh my goodness. There's so many people out.
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Look at this beautiful shaded area. Oh, I wish I had a blanket to just throw on here and just take a nap.
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Look at these flowers.
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These are technically bushes or what's the other word for bushes?
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Shrubs. These are shrubs. Such a beautiful day today. Oh wow.
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There's a little pond here, which is a small lake.
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There's some ducks there. There's some people biking.
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This looks like a little meadow. It's so beautiful.
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More dandelions. They smell amazing. Wait a second.
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What kind of dandelions are these?
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Why is there like five of them on one stem?
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Why is there smoke over there? Oh my goodness.
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That is so funny. That's a train. So cute.
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Oh, that's so cute.
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I want to get on one. I wonder how much is it. Oh, look at this pathway.
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There's literally not a single soul here.
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It's so quiet except for the birds and the wind.
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Can you hear the birds?
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I'm not sure what this metal fence is for.
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Maybe surrounding the park somehow.
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But then there's is this called the stone wall?
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Yeah, sure. Yeah, it's not a brick wall, right?
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Although these do look like huge bricks.
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So if you're ever in a park by yourself walking around, you can always comment on everything you see around you and pretend you're doing what I'm doing, like vlogging.
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OK, so there's train tracks here that are going into the forest over there.
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So I have to be careful not to get hit by a train, by the train, not a train, because literally there's only one train that is for tourists going through this entire park.
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Can someone explain why this trunk has a crown on top?
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It's pretty cute, though. I like it.
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OK, we found a bridge here.
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I think it's to.
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Oh, yeah, you cross that highway on this bridge.
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You can bike or walk on it.
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So it's for bikers and pedestrians.
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Look at this highway.
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So clean. Oh, hello there, friends.
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We having lunch. There's so many dogs.
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Be a lady. This one's green and that one's purple.
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Drinking some water, scratching the wings, swimming, having some fun.
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This is so relaxing. This one's still doing her thing.
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OK, our walk is done.
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We are now looking for a place to eat.
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And I think we're choosing between Asian food or Turkish food, because that's what's around us.
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Look at this sculpture.
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It's so cool and weird.
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It's a little disturbing if you ask me.
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Wow. Look at this building.
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You guys, we came to a Turkish restaurant and we have gozlemes here with spinach and cheese.
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And then we have a doner calzone, which is like insane.
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And it's so big. Like this is my hand.
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These gozlemes. Hold on. Look.
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Mm. There's spinach and cheese.
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And then we have the doner calzone.
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This is like a small Turkish restaurant here in Karlsruhe.
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And you just order at the counter.
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This is the restaurant we went to. It's called Truvas.
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OK, sorry for the abrupt jump into this video, but I forgot to film an outro at the park.
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But basically what I wanted to add is that this is how I practice my English, because I speak English to my husband and I speak English whenever I travel and I need to communicate with really anybody.
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Being a content creator has given me this opportunity to always have the motivation and the drive to record these videos, right?
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And speak English.
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However, not everybody wants to be a content creator or needs to be a content creator in order to be able to practice English.
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And I just wanted to be clear.
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Practicing English is not learning English. OK, a lot of people get caught into this trap of thinking that whenever they practice, they have to either be corrected, make sure they're saying things perfectly and learn new things.
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You learned a couple of words or an expression or a grammar rule.
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And then the next step is for you to actually put that into practice and repeat it hundreds of times until it becomes something that you are familiar with and you're used to.
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So, for example, if I were to go to the park and comment, it could it could also be just in your head.
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Like you don't have to actually say things out loud, but sometimes I'll go and I'll just whisper like this.
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Nobody really cares.
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You can put some headphones on and then people will just think you practice something while you're talking to someone on the phone.
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The point is, if you go to a park like I went today, I forgot the word shrubs, for example, right, for bushes.
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And I knew this word because I used to work on a blog about plants and I could see this word ten times a day.
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Shrubs, shrubs, shrubs, perennial shrubs.
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Things that I don't normally use or words I don't normally use in my daily life.
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So when I went to the park and I wanted to say that, my brain had to, you know, search for it, look through my vocabulary list in my head and produce that word.
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And if you do that with daily words, daily expressions.
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Can you hear the chicken?
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Anyway, but when I think another chicken is trying to shut her up.
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So when you do that with daily expressions and words and you rotate them frequently in your brain on your lips, you're going to get so much more used to them.
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So it might seem like you're not learning something new or you're not adding vocabulary words, but that's not how you're going to master the skill of speaking.
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For example, when I worked as a cook in a restaurant in Alaska, I was being taught how to chop, slice, and cut certain things a certain way.
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And I had to become really good at it and fast at it because I needed to be quick.
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So for example, the first time they showed me how to cut, I don't know, chives.
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For example, I had to make them super, super, super tiny and thin because they were used as a garnish on a certain dish.
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So I was supposed to hold my hand a certain way, hold the knife a certain way, and then do the little motions and control how I was moving my hand and my other hand with the knife.
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So I get the result I wanted.
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And at the beginning, it was very awkward because my hand was not used to be held like that, like I never held my hand like this when I was cutting something.
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So I had to do the same motion multiple times a day for two weeks straight until I was able to actually master it.
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So when you learn something in English, do you take it and practice as much as I did without motion?
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Because if you're not getting your muscles used to the sounds and to the melody and to the tone and whatever you're saying, and you don't practice it multiple, multiple times, then it'll forever feel foreign on your lips.
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And in your mind, because you're not going to be able to control it as well.
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So I said this multiple times, but I'll say it again.
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If you study something for five minutes, make sure you practice it three times longer than that.
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So 15 minutes.
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If you study something for 10 minutes, you have to practice for 30 minutes because you cannot expect your brain and your muscles to communicate and to produce the result you want them to produce only by ingesting information.
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You are basically lying to yourself when you're sitting down to study, thinking that after that you'll be able to speak better.
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And I get these comments every day.
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People ask me why they can understand everything I say, but they can't speak the same way.
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And that is the reason it's because you ingest, you absorb a lot of information that is passive knowledge that you're getting, but you are not turning it into active.
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And when I am speaking, I'm doing that actively.
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I'm using my vocabulary, my grammar rules, whatever I learned actively.
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And if you don't know exactly what activities to do every day or how to practice or how to put yourself in a position where you have to speak English or produce English, I have an English workout routine.
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It's a weekly set of exercises for every single day of the week, except Sundays, that you can rotate every week.
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So you get it once and then you can just rotate it because each activity is very flexible and it is adaptable to the topics and the fields that you're interested in.
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You can find the link to my routine in the description below and in the pinned comment and let me know if you have any questions about it.
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comment and let me know if you have any questions about it.
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Thank you so much for watching and I'll see you in the next one.
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Bye.

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일상 대화를 위한 5가지 표현

  • traffic lights: 신호등
  • train tracks: 기차 선로
  • trash can: 쓰레기통
  • shrub: 덤불, 관목
  • meadow: 초원

이 표현들은 일상적인 대화에서 자주 사용되며, 영어 스피킹 연습에 큰 도움이 됩니다. 각각의 표현을 반복하여 사용하는 것이 중요하며, 상황에 맞게 적용해 보세요.

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이 영상에서 제공하는 영어 발음 교정을 위한 효과적인 단계별 섀도우잉 방법을 소개합니다:

  1. 첫 번째 단계: 영상을 처음부터 끝까지 시청하며 전반적인 맥락을 이해합니다.
  2. 두 번째 단계: 각 문장을 들으면서 내용에 집중하세요. shadow speech을 적용해보세요. 들은 문장을 따라 발음해보세요.
  3. 세 번째 단계: 문장을 반복하면서 shadow speak을 연습합니다. 발음뿐만 아니라 억양과 감정도 함께 연습해보세요.
  4. 네 번째 단계: 중요한 어휘와 표현을 메모합니다. 예를 들어, 'traffic lights'나 'train tracks'와 같은 표현을 자주 사용해보세요.
  5. 다섯 번째 단계: 자신의 목소리를 녹음하여 발음을 비교하고 개선할 점을 찾아보세요. 이는 IELTS 스피킹 준비에도 도움이 됩니다.

이와 같은 방법을 통해 영어 말하기 실력을 향상시키고, 스스로 학습하는 것이 가능합니다. 꾸준한 연습과 체화가 중요합니다!

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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