Shadowing Practice: Mike Needs Help with His Rookie Dinner | Suits - Learn English Speaking with YouTube

B2
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Excuse me, Mr.
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69 sentences
1
Excuse me, Mr.
2
Spector.
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I was wondering if you might need a hand sometime with one of your matters.
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Anyone.
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Well, Alan?
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It's Aaron.
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I think that says it all, don't you?
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What are you doing?
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I'm looking for a restaurant.
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Where did you go for your rookie dinner?
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I came into the league a sophomore, and you better not be prioritizing that of McKernan Motors.
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I still need something to stall Stensland.
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It's right here.
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You know you can't host your dinner there.
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That's a Wattell-Lifton-Klein restaurant.
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Okay, fine.
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What about this place?
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Yeah, that'd be great if it was 2004.
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Oh, my God.
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Does any of this matter?
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God.
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You see that guy over there by the fax?
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Take a good look.
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He's never gonna make partner.
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Okay, let me guess.
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Because he threw a lousy rookie dinner.
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No.
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Because he doesn't get it.
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Get what?
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He doesn't get that doing good work isn't the whole job.
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Part of getting it is that things like the dinner actually matter, even when you don't think they do.
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Look, you were giving me this morning because I come and go when I want to.
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You know why I can do that?
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Because when I got here, I dominated.
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They thought I worked 100 hours a day.
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Now, no matter what time I get in, nobody questions my ability to get the job done.
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Get it through your head.
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First impressions last.
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You start behind the eight ball, you'll never get in front.
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Hey.
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I said don't be late.
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Late?
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I'm not late.
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When you host your dinner here, not being late means getting here a half hour early.
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Aha.
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So what made you change your mind?
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The food items are samples to help you select your menu.
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So since I could never really afford to eat here myself...
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Hmm.
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Hmm.
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Okay.
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Start there.
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Try that.
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Try that.
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Yes.
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It looks kind of funny.
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So does an egg roll.
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I don't accept that premise.
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You want my help or not?
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Whoa, what is that?
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Squid.
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I think it's still moving.
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I have to admit, you don't suck.
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I wish I could say the same for you.
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Time to pay the piper.
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Just so you know, I took the liberty of ordering some really expensive wines.
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Hope that's okay.
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Ha, ha, ha.
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Sorry, sir, but the check's been paid for in full by a Harvey Specter.

About This Lesson

You're practicing English with "Mike Needs Help with His Rookie Dinner | Suits" using the Shadowing technique — a method originally developed for professional interpreter training.

Focus on sounding like the speaker — not just repeating words. With 15–30 minutes of daily practice, you'll build real-world speaking confidence.

What is the Shadowing Technique?

Shadowing is a science-backed language learning technique originally developed for professional interpreter training and popularized by polyglot Dr. Alexander Arguelles. The method is simple but powerful: you listen to native English audio and immediately repeat it out loud — like a shadow following the speaker with just a 1–2 second delay. Unlike passive listening or grammar drills, shadowing forces your brain and mouth muscles to simultaneously process and reproduce real speech patterns. Research shows it significantly improves pronunciation accuracy, intonation, rhythm, connected speech, listening comprehension, and speaking fluency — making it one of the most effective methods for IELTS Speaking preparation and real-world English communication.

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