쉐도잉 연습: Liam Byrne's speech on Fresh Ideas - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

C1
Thanks very much Kath and can I start with one word of thanks to an amazing woman.
⏸ 일시 정지
147 문장
문장이 너무 짧거나 길면 Edit를 눌러 조정하세요.
1
Thanks very much Kath and can I start with one word of thanks to an amazing woman.
2
She's Mary Turner, she's the chair of our joint policy committee
3
and she's been the one that's made sure
4
that it is the party in charge of this policy review right the way from the beginning.
5
Thank you very much indeed on behalf of all of us here.
6
As we have gone around the country,
7
what has become clear is that people are now seriously worried about what this government is doing to their families,
8
to their communities and to our country.
9
This week is our chance to show that there is a different way now and different possibilities for the future.
10
That is the single aim of the policy review that Ed has asked me to chair.
11
Because after last year's defeat,
12
the easiest thing in the world would have been for us to turn in on ourselves,
13
gaze fondly, lovingly perhaps, at our navels,
14
sit around in a comfort zone,
15
spend all day arguing with each other.
16
Let's be honest, of us quite like that.
17
But under Ed Miliband, we have chosen to do it differently.
18
We have picked ourselves up,
19
dusted ourselves down and got straight back out there,
20
back in touch, talking to the people who we came into politics and public life to serve about what we got right,
21
about, yes, what we got wrong and how it is we need to change.
22
What we have done this year is take a decision.
23
We are going to go for the prize that has eluded any political party in Britain for 35 years.
24
We are going to be a one-term opposition,
25
a party that is determined to bounce back,
26
back into office, back into power,
27
where we know that we can make a difference.
28
So, I suppose I should give you the bad news.
29
I know that what many people would have wanted this week is a detailed five-year plan,
30
a new budget costed down to the last pound and the penny.
31
I know the hardest question that I get on the doorstep in Hodge Hill is,
32
well, what's your alternative?
33
Where's your plan?
34
What is it that you would do different?
35
Well, I'm sorry.
36
the easiest thing in the world would have been for me
37
and us to sit in a committee room in Westminster and write the next manifesto.
38
But that would not have delivered a one-term opposition.
39
It wouldn't, because we can't revise our policy.
40
We can't reorganise our party until we reconnected with the public.
41
And that is what this first year of the policy review has been all about.
42
We have taken the simple view that policy starts with politics and politics starts with people.
43
That is why we have been back out there this year,
44
back in touch with over a million men and women,
45
members of our party and our affiliates,
46
over 150 events, 6,000 local residents coming along to one of them,
47
20,000 submissions pouring into our party headquarters.
48
And it's not always easy, is it?
49
I've been doing the policy review door to door in Hodge Hill,
50
going along asking people what they thought of us
51
and what we got right and how we need to change
52
and it'll be a
53
while before I forget the man in Charred End who I think I disturbed him in the middle of his dinner.
54
He sort of trundled up to the door and wiped clean his moustache and then,
55
how shall I put this,
56
he can find his remarks to two words,
57
began with F and it finished with F and there were five letters in between.
58
I put him down as against.
59
But whether the conversations have been easy or hard, we've had them.
60
People have been incredibly generous with us about sharing their stories and their views.
61
They've told us about their daily struggles.
62
They've told us about their trouble balancing the bills.
63
They've told us about their hopes for their their memories,
64
their observations, loves, hates, but above all, their common sense.
65
People haven't pulled their punches.
66
They've given it to us straight.
67
They thought that we grew out of touch.
68
They thought that on some issues,
69
close to their heart, we got it wrong.
70
On immigration, on welfare, on control of the banks,
71
and that is why they've told us they want us to change.
72
I know at times that this can feel like an exercise in gratuitous It isn't.
73
We can leave that to George Osborne.
74
People don't expect us to get everything right but they expect us to learn from experience, their experience.
75
Because for most people in this country,
76
things are very different now to 1997.
77
Life hasn't stood still.
78
Times have moved on.
79
Challenges have changed.
80
But what we've heard from people is that there is a new centre ground in British politics.
81
It's not a party, it's not a place that the Labour Party gets to pick.
82
The centre ground is where voters say it is.
83
Our Our challenge now is to change and move on
84
and say the centre ground is our home ground and this is where we will fight.
85
And everything that we have seen from the Tories this year tells us that this is a fight that we can win.
86
Everything we have seen from the Conservative Party tells us
87
that they are now not on the side of people in the centre ground.
88
You are not on people's side if you are cutting jobs and tax credits and childcare.
89
You are not on people's side if you are damaging their chances to work
90
and pay the bills or pay for treats for the kids or take a holiday.
91
You are not on people's side if you curtail chances for children.
92
And you are not on people's side if your idea of responsibility is to fire 12,000 police officers,
93
put charities out of business
94
and single out as the first people who need a tax
95
cut the bankers who put us into this mess in the first place.
96
So this week is our chance to show that we get it,
97
that we have heard what people said,
98
that we are up for the challenge of change,
99
that we are now back as the party on the side of the majority.
100
So this week we will set out what we have heard from people about how they want a different economy,
101
not run on the old rules but on new rules,
102
with a welfare state that works once more for working people and we will say where we think change should begin.
103
We will say what we have heard about the next generation.
104
You remember education, education, education?
105
It was a phrase that symbolised our aspiration for young people.
106
Well, this week we'll say more about how we bring that aspiration back alive for the next generation in jobs,
107
in schools and in housing.
108
And we'll say where we think change should begin.
109
And we'll say what we've heard from good people who want
110
to rebuild in this country a responsible society with rules
111
that bite at the top and at the bottom
112
and at every point in between and we will say where we think change should begin.
113
So this first year is just the beginning.
114
We put first things first because we know that oppositions that stay in opposition are parties that look inwards and not out.
115
That's why I've always said that my greatest hope is that this policy review will change the way that we make policy.
116
Not in committee rooms and dark rooms in Westminster,
117
but through conversation with the public,
118
with our members and with our affiliates.
119
I know we need to work harder to get these debates out to where you are.
120
So if you want me to come along and listen to debates you're having, I'd love to.
121
Just give me a ring.
122
Because over the next week and over the next year,
123
we'll begin to set out the new ideas that we think are right for the future.
124
New ideas for the new center ground.
125
New ideas that reflect a simple philosophy that for most people in this country,
126
politics is about the personal.
127
It is about how you get on at work.
128
It is about the safety of your community.
129
It's about the education for your kids.
130
It's about the care for your parents, your husband, your wife.
131
It's about having the chance to earn a better life,
132
to get the good things in life,
133
to live a life that is free from fear.
134
In other words, politics is about the most important things in the world.
135
In everything I've read this year,
136
no one has put it better than a guy called Andrew from Newcastle upon Tyne who wrote this.
137
People want straight answers from politicians, not avoidance or waffle.
138
Talk like people in the factories and offices,
139
in the pubs, give straight answers,
140
try to make Britain a fair society. That is our test.
141
So if we get the politics right,
142
if we're passionate about our belief that politics can make a difference,
143
then and only then will the right policy follow.
144
That is the way that we earn back,
145
again, the trust to serve.
146
And if we get that right, we'll win.
147
Thanks very much indeed.

앱 다운로드

당신이 말하는 모든 문장을 AI가 채점

TRENDING

인기 동영상

맥락 및 배경

리암 번(Liam Byrne)은 최근 연설에서 정치와 정책에 대한 변화의 필요성을 강조했습니다. 그는 당의 정책 검토를 이끌고 있으며, 그 과정에서 국민들과 소통하고 있습니다. 번 의원은 가족, 지역사회 및 국가에 대한 정부의 영향을 우려하는 시민들을 만나며, 당의 미래를 위한 새로운 아이디어를 모색하고 있습니다. 그의 연설은 정치의 본질이 사람들과의 연결에서 시작된다는 점을 분명히 하고 있습니다. 이는 IELTS 스피킹과 같은 영어 토론 능력을 향상시키는 데에도 중요한 요소입니다.

일상 소통을 위한 5가지 주요 구문

  • What is your plan? - 당신의 계획은 무엇인가요?
  • We need to change. - 우리는 변해야 합니다.
  • Let’s get back in touch. - 다시 소통하자고요.
  • We care about our community. - 우리는 지역사회에 관심이 있습니다.
  • This year has been about reconnecting. - 올해는 다시 연결하는 해였습니다.

위 구문들은 일상 대화에서 자주 사용될 수 있는 표현들로, 영어 쉐도잉 연습에 유용합니다. 이러한 구문들을 외우고 반복하여 사용하는 것이 shadowspeaks와 같은 영어 학습 방법에서 중요한 요소입니다.

단계별 쉐도잉 가이드

이 비디오는 다소 어려운 주제를 다루고 있기 때문에, 효과적인 shadow speech 연습의 기본을 다음과 같이 정리할 수 있습니다:

  1. 1단계: 전체 영상을 시청하세요. 내용 이해를 위해 한 번 들어보세요.
  2. 2단계: 주요 구문을 따로 기록해 보세요. 앞서 언급한 5가지 구문을 연습하세요.
  3. 3단계: 긴 문장을 반복합니다. 리암 번의 말투와 억양에 주의하면서 복창해 보세요.
  4. 4단계: 영상을 일시 정지하고 따라 말해보세요. 특히, 의미가 중요한 부분에서 느리게 따라 하는 것이 중요합니다.
  5. 5단계: 마지막으로, 자신이 연습한 내용을 녹음해 보세요. 나중에 들어보면서 발음과 억양을 체크하세요.

이러한 단계를 통해 영어 스피킹 능력을 향상시키고, shadowing site를 활용하여 더욱 효과적으로 영어를 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.

커피 한 잔 사주기