쉐도잉 연습: Why Vietnamese Is the Hardest Language to Hear (Not Just Speak) - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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This symbol in Vietnamese means ghost.
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This symbol in Vietnamese means ghost.
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Change nothing but the pitch of your voice, and it means mother.
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Change the pitch again, horse.
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Again, rice seedling.
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Again, tomb.
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Again, but.
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Six completely different words.
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The only difference between them is what your voice does in less than half a second.
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In English, pitch is decoration.
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You raise it to add a question, drop it to sound certain, push it around to show you're angry or excited.
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The word underneath stays the same.
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In Vietnamese, pitch is the word.
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Vietnamese uses pitch the way English uses consonants.
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Get it wrong and you haven't said a word badly.
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You've said a different word entirely.
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Mistake on the tone in that and you've called your mother a ghost.
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Mandarin does this with four tones.
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Cantonese does it with six.
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Vietnamese does it with six too.
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And then stacks glottinal steps, creaky voice, and breathy voice on top of them.
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This is the rare language where your ears matter more than your mouth.
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Welcome to the Air Learn Language Show.
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Vietnamese has a reputation for being one of the hardest languages on earth for an English speaker, but the hard part isn't what people expect.
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It's not the grammar.
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The grammar is almost shockingly simple.
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It's not the writing.
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It uses the same alphabet you're reading right now.
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The hard part is that before you can speak it, you have to learn to hear it.
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And most adult English-speaking brains have spent decades learning to ignore exactly the thing Vietnamese cares about the most.
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We're going to break it down tone by tone, sound by sound.
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And if by the end you actually want to try wrapping your ears around a tonal language, that's the kind of challenge AirLearn is built to walk you through.
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Links in the description.
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Let's start with what a tone actually is.
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Here's the thing English speakers have to unlearn first.
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You already use pitch every single day.
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You're leaving.
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Flat pitch.
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That's a statement.
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You're leaving.
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Raising pitch.
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Now it's a question.
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Same words, different melody, different meaning.
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So you'd think tones would be easy.
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You already do this.
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But notice what changed in that example.
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The sentence changed meaning, not the word.
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Leaving still means leaving.
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Either way, in English, pitch lives at the level of the whole sentence, and it carries emotion and grammar.
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In Vietnamese, pitch lives inside the single syllable, and it carries vocabulary.
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Take this syllable.
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Say it flat, and it means to grant or a board of Now, bend the pitch downward.
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And it means table.
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Push it sharply up.
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And it means to sell.
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Drop it low and tight your throw.
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And it means friend.
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Four unrelated words.
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Same letters.
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The only difference is the shape of the pitch.
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That's the leap.
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You're not learning to add feeling to words.
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You're learning that the melody is the word.
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And your brain has spent your whole life trained to treat that melody as a away information.
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Northern Vietnamese, the standard, based on Hanoi, has six tones.
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Each one has a name and each one reshapes the syllable.
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There's Nyang, the level tone, flat, steady, the default.
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There's Huan, a low falling tone, like a sigh.
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There's Shaq, a sharp rising tone, like the lift at the end of a question.
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And there's Hoi, a dipping tone that sags down and then curls back up.
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Those four are about the direction the pitch moves.
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An English speaker can, with effort, learn to hear those because English already slides pitch up and down.
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It's the last two that break people.
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Nga doesn't just rise.
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It rises with a catch in the middle, where your vocal cords briefly clamp shut and reopen, a tiny glottal stop buried inside the vowel.
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And Nga drops low and then chokes off abruptly.
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The syllable cut short in the throat.
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These last two aren't about pitch direction at all.
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They're about voice quality, what your throat is physically doing.
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And that's the wall.
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People assume all tonal languages are equally hard.
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They're not.
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And this is the part Mandarin speakers themselves will tell you.
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Mandarin has four tones, and they're all what linguists call contour tones.
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Flat, rising, dipping, falling.
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They're defined purely by the path the pitch travels.
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And that's why they're learnable for an English speaker, because English already uses rising and falling pitch.
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You're borrowing a skill you already have and applying it to a new place.
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Vietnamese has those contour tones too, but two of its tones, gna and ngang, are glottonized tones.
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They're distinguished not by where the pitch goes, but how the voice is produced.
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Creaky, constructed, interrupted by the throat.
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English has no equivalent to nothing.
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You have never in your life used the tightening of your vocal cords to tell two words apart.
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So learning these tones isn't a refining skill you have.
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It's building a muscle you've never used.
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Mandarin speakers who pick up Vietnamese consistently describe it as a different category of difficulty, precisely because of this.
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Knowing one tonal language doesn't save you.
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The throat work is Now make it harder.
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Everything we just described is Northern Hanoi Vietnamese.
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The six tone system the writing is based off.
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Travel south to Ho Chi Minh City
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and the system shifts southern vietnamese merges two of the tones hoi
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and ni collapse into one
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so the south effectively runs on five tones not six you'd think fewer tones means easier it doesn't
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because the south makes up for elsewhere pronouncing whole sense of consonants differently than the north And here's the strange coincidence.
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The writing system still marks all six tones.
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It was standardized on the Northern model.
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So a Southern speaker grows up writing distinctions they don't actually say.
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Imagine if English spelling forced you to write a sound your accent had dropped centuries ago.
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It's a bit like British versus American English, except the differences aren't just accent.
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They change which word you're saying.
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Tones aren't even the only obstacle.
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Vietnamese is stacked with sounds English simply doesn't have.
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Take the most common Vietnamese surname in the world, Nguyên.
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Something like four in ten Vietnamese people carry it, and most English speakers cannot say it, even after coaching.
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I probably said it wrong.
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Look at what's packed into one syllable.
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It opens with an NG, a nasal sound English only ever puts at the end of the words like sing,
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never at the start, then a gliding diphthong, then the NGA tone with a glottinal catch.
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Three separate things your mouth has never had to do all at once, bundled into a single name millions of people answer to,
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and Vietnamese tends to swallow its final consonants.
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The word cong, meaning no, barely seems to release that final ng.
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The word NON!
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A common name meeting Jade ends in a sound that to an English ear lands somewhere closer to a P.
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Your brain keeps reaching for a consonant and recognizes and coming up empty.
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Here's the cruelest twist.
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Vietnamese uses the Latin alphabet, the exact letters you're reading right now.
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Learners see that and relax.
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Oh good, at least I can read it.
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It's a trap.
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The letters do not behave the way you expect.
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Vietnamese has extra vowels, English doesn't.
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All of these, each a distinct sound.
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It stacks diacritics on top of each other, so a single vowel can carry one mark telling you its quality
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and a second mark telling you its tone at the same time.
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And clusters that look familiar, GI, KH, NH, NG, TR, sound nothing like they would in English.
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And the reason for all of this is historical.
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The alphabet was built in the 1600s by Catholic missionaries trying to write Vietnamese sounds using European letters.
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The Portuguese Jesuit Francisco de Piña,
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who arrived in 1617, was the first to master the spoken language and pioneer the Romanization.
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After his death, other Portuguese missionaries refined it, and a Jesuit from Iveignon,
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Alexandre de Rhodes, pulled the work together and popularized it, publishing the first Vietnamese-Portuguese-Latin dictionary in 1651.
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What you are looking at, in other words, is a 400-year-old compromise.
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Southeast Asian sounds forced into an alphabet that was never designed to hold them.
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The diacritics piling up on every vowel are at the seams of that compromise still showing.
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It would be easy to file all of this under fun trivia about a hard language, but here's something deeper.
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Vietnamese is spoken by around 85 million people in Vietnam
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and millions more across the world is one of the most spoken languages in the United States, Australia, and France.
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This isn't an obscure tongue.
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It's one of the major languages of the planet, built on a logic of sound that English speakers find almost invisible.
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And it may go deeper than habit.
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Research on tonal languages suggests something remarkable.
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Speakers of tonal languages tend to process linguistic pitch on the left hemisphere of the brain,
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the language side, while English speakers process that same pitch more on the right side, the side associated with music.
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The same physical sound traveling down a different neurological road depending on the language you grew up in.
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Learning Vietnamese as an adult may quite literally ask your brain to reroute how it hears.
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So, here's what Vietnamese really teaches us.
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We tend to think the hard part of a language is the vocabulary.
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All those words to memorize are the grammar, all those rules.
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But Vietnamese grammar is simple and its vocabulary is no worse than any other.
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The wall is sound.
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You can memorize every word in the dictionary and still be completely intelligible if your tones are off.
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You can nail all six tones and still fall short if your throat won't make that catch.
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Vietnamese doesn't really ask you how to learn new words.
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it asks you to hear differently.
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To take a part of sound of your brain decided long ago was just decoration, just emotion, just music, and promote it to the level of meaning.
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To listen to half a second of pitch and pull a word out of it.
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And for most English speakers, that turns out to be the hardest thing any language has ever asked of them.
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Not the speaking, not the hearing.
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If that challenge sounds less terrifying and more fascinating to you.
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If you want to find out whether your ears can be retrained, that's exactly the kind of journey AirLearn is made for.
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Start where it's hardest.
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Links in the description.
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See you in the next one.

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왜 이 비디오로 말하기 연습을 해야 할까요?

이 비디오는 영어를 사용하는 사람들이 베트남어를 배우는 데 있어 가장 어려운 점인 발음과 억양에 대한 깊이 있는 통찰을 제공합니다. 베트남어는 억양에 따라 의미가 완전히 달라지는 언어로, 단어를 잘못 발음하는 것이 다른 단어를 말하는 것과 같다는 것을 이해하는 것이 중요합니다. 이러한 난이도를 극복하기 위해 영어 쉐도잉을 통한 연습은 매우 효과적입니다. 비디오의 내용과 발음을 따라하면서 shadow speak 스킬을 향상시킬 수 있습니다. 이 과정에서 귀를 적극적으로 사용하여, 듣기 능력을 극대화할 수 있습니다.

문법 및 표현의 맥락

이 비디오에서 발표자는 다음과 같은 몇 가지 중요한 구조를 사용하여 베트남어의 억양을 설명합니다:

  • Pitch vs. Sentence Meaning: 영어에서는 억양이 문장의 의미에 영향을 주지만, 베트남어에서는 각각의 음절이 단어의 의미를 결정합니다.
  • Example-Based Learning: 발음을 통해 각각의 단어가 어떻게 다르게 해석되는지를 예시를 통해 설명합니다.
  • Contrastive Approach: 영어와 베트남어의 발음 차이를 강조하며, 어떤 부분에서 바뀌는지를 시각화합니다.

이러한 문법과 표현 구조는 베트남어의 억양에 대한 깊은 이해를 돕고, 이를 통해 영어 발음 교정 연습에 큰 도움이 됩니다.

일반적인 발음 함정

비디오에서 주목해야 할 몇 가지 발음 함정이 있습니다:

  • Pitch Variations: '어머니'와 '유령' 같은 다소 간단한 단어가 억양만으로 다르게 발음된다는 점은 영어 사용자에게 도전이 될 수 있습니다.
  • Multiple Meanings: 같은 음절이 서로 다른 억양에 따라 매우 다른 의미를 가질 때, 발음 실수가 의사소통에 심각한 오류를 일으킬 수 있습니다.
  • Tonal Confusion: 베트남어의 여섯 가지 억양을 정확히 구분하지 못하면, 아예 다른 단어를 사용하게 됩니다.

이런 함정을 피하기 위해 영어 쉐도잉 기법을 통해 듣고 발음하는 연습을 지속적으로 해나가는 것이 중요합니다. shadowspeak 를 통해 생동감 있게 연습하며, 현실적이고 효과적인 방법으로 발음 실력을 향상시킬 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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