Prática de Shadowing: How I Learned English with Movies and TV-Shows - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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Hi everybody!
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In this video I'm going to share how I improved my English,
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my pronunciation, and my fluency with TV shows and movies.
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First of all, both as an English learner and as an English teacher,
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I highly recommend to focus on pronunciation very early on.
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Working on it early makes you like the sound of your speech,
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which can be incredibly motivating.
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When you like how your English sounds,
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you're more likely to keep practicing it more consistently.
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So from the very beginning of my English learning journey,
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I developed a pretty solid American accent and that was because of the movies and TV shows I started watching early on.
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One day I turned the TV on and there was this old American TV show soap opera called Sunset Beach.
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So I started watching the actors very carefully.
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I was paying attention to every single sound they were making with their mouths.
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Their speech patterns, their intonation,
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their melody, their rhythm, everything.
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And what was really shocking to me was that every single word was connected in a way that you couldn't separate them.
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You didn't know where one word ended and the other one started,
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which I later found out that that's called connected speech.
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But in school, we weren't learning English like that.
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And then I started working on the sounds that were very different from Romanian.
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For example, the sound r.
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I would repeat out loud every single word that the actors were saying that contained the letter r or the sound r.
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And the sound r is pretty tricky
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because it depends on where exactly it is inside the word and what letter comes before and after it.
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So I would walk around the house
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and repeat word worry try cry girl work morning row throw 30
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so this became part of my daily practice whenever i would
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see a word containing the sound r i would say it
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many many times until i liked the way it sounded next i focused on the sound both voiced
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and voiceless the voiced sound means that you activate your vocal cords
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when you say if you touch your throat here you will feel it vibrating
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like this that those and the voiceless is when you say it
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but you do not activate your vocal cords for example in
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thank you you only start vibrating your vocal cords at a from thank you
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and not right compared to those there and it was pretty funny
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because i was looking at those actors mouths and i could see
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when the tip of their tongue was coming out to say thank you
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or three or there and then i would just imitate that
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and say thank you three there
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and obviously i was over exaggerating it you only need a little bit of your tongue to say thank you
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but i was doing thank you too much too much tongue
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and yeah i'm sure i looked pretty awkward
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and ridiculous trying to figure out how to move my lips and my jaw and my tongue and everything,
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but that's what needed to be done.
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And the more I observed those actors,
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the more I repeated and imitated them,
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the more natural it started to feel.
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And eventually this practice turned into shadowing,
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where I would simultaneously repeat after the actors as they were speaking.
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And my grammar and vocabulary were far from perfect.
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I was just starting to learn English,
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but I was developing a good melody and accent,
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something that is not really taught in schools.
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I liked the way I sounded.
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I sounded better than my classmates and that kept me motivated and I wanted to keep doing it.
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So I've been wanting to learn Spanish for a while
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and I decided that I'm going to do it the same way I learned English through TV shows
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and movies and podcasts and books and music and all of that.
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And because I talk about shadowing native speakers as the best method to improve your fluency,
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a lot of the times people ask me where can I find these shows
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or what shows do you recommend to do shadowing with?
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So here's the language learning platform I'm going to use.
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It's called Lingopi and it combines education and entertainment.
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They have TV shows, movies,
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audiobooks, music, and even podcasts.
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Lingopi is also the sponsor of this video so big shout out to them and a big thanks for their support.
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And the reason why I'm excited to use it is because I know for a fact that imitating native speakers works.
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And on Lingopi, I can dive into the Spanish culture,
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learn common expressions, slang, all those little phrases that you don't typically learn in school.
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For example, if I want to shadow and practice my Spanish with the show Closed Rooms.
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And now I can click on it.
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And then it gives me the pronunciation again.
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I can repeat it.
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Hasta luego.
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Hasta luego.
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A little bit slower.
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And then I can record myself.
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Hasta luego.
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And then I can listen to myself.
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Hasta luego.
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Pretty good.
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And then each word I clicked and pronounced and repeated and learned is added into my personal vocabulary,
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which I can then review later.
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How cool is that?
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And they've got over 14 languages and more than 3,000 shows and movies,
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so there's always something new to watch.
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I can track my progress,
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I can practice with sentences,
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and I can also use their new short stories to read and shadow at the same time.
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So if you're serious about learning a new language and you don't want to just improve your vocabulary and grammar,
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but you want to develop your fluency,
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your accent, your pronunciation, and your cultural understanding of the language,
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Lingopie is the perfect tool to get you there.
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So click the link in the description,
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try it out, and see how much faster you can level up your language skills.
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Okay, another area that movies and TV shows helped me with was melody, rhythm, and intonation.
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My native language, Romanian, has a very different structure and tone compared to English.
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If I translated just the words from Romanian into English and keep the Romanian structure and tone,
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my English will sound very unnatural.
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That's why it's so important to match the meaning and the message of your words to the correct tone and melody.
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Native speakers are used to hearing certain word stressing and intonation patterns.
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If you stress the wrong word,
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the meaning can shift completely and sometimes even mean the opposite of what you were trying to say.
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For example, you're so smart with the wrong facial expression and the wrong tone can sound very sarcastic and passive aggressive.
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But if you say you're so smart,
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this sounds like a genuine compliment.
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Another example, if you say,
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oh really, this is flat intonation,
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no curiosity, no genuine interest.
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But if you say, oh really, then that's genuine curiosity.
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So watching movies gave me access to these very powerful social cues.
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I realized that I wasn't just learning vocabulary and grammar,
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but I was learning how to communicate in a different culture.
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When I repeated after the actors,
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I wasn't just repeating the words.
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I was stepping into their role.
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I was imitating their facial expressions,
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their intonation, even their body language.
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In a way, I was acting too.
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So this trick made me feel the language instead of just memorizing the words.
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And this is especially effective when you're watching shows with regular everyday conversations.
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And by shadowing the actors,
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I learned how fast should I say certain things,
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when should I pause, when should I slow down,
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when should I raise my voice,
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when should I lower my voice.
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And this whole melody of speech is actually called prosody,
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but I obviously had no idea about it back then.
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It's also one of the most overlooked aspects of language learning.
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In school, the focus was mostly on structure,
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grammar, vocabulary, and lots of writing and reading.
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Listening was minimal and intonation was barely even mentioned.
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And I had no idea that speech melody could influence how clearly I express myself
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and how strongly it would affect my ability to connect with native speakers.
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And prosody is really hard to teach,
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especially because usually teachers in traditional school systems have very strict curriculums and they focus a lot on exercises,
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vocabulary, and grammar.
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And that's why a lot of students will graduate with perfect grades,
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but they will sound very unnatural when speaking in real life.
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Okay, now let's talk about vocabulary.
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The way you learn vocabulary through TV shows and movies is very different compared to word banks and vocabulary lists.
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Many times, the words that you're trying to learn are presented to you in isolation,
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just taken out of context.
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But when you learn through movies,
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you get the full package.
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You get the sound of the word,
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you get the visual positioning,
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the situation where it's used,
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and you get the correct articles and prepositions and sentence structure.
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For example, instead of memorizing the phrasal verb look as in look after,
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look into, look out, look away,
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if you're learning them all at once,
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all you're going to remember is just the word look
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and then you're going to be confused about the rest of the prepositions and which is look in,
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which is look into, which one is look out, which ones look after.
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But in a movie, you just learn that one situation where you know that okay here I use look after.
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Imagine a scene that somebody is saying oh I need to go away
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but I need to find someone to look after my dog
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and then later somebody says have you found someone to look after your dog
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and you don't need to think that oh this is a phrasal verb with look and after.
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No you just remember that look after is taking care of someone.
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So this way, I wasn't struggling to memorize multiple phrasal verbs or multiple vocabulary words.
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I was just looking, watching,
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and remembering the situation and how that specific verb or word was used then.
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And every time I would repeat those lines,
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they would come as a full package.
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There's the correct articles, correct prepositions,
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the correct sentence structure, and I would see it visually when and how to use it.
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So subconsciously, I wasn't just learning the verb look after,
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for example, but I was also learning how to use it inside a sentence.
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And this could sound to you as a much slower process than just taking a big chunk of vocabulary words
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and just memorizing them.
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But trust me, memorizing those words won't actually help you speak.
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And most likely, if you don't end up using those words consistently and regularly,
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you will just forget them and you just waste your time.
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So the reason why I started sounding more fluent earlier on than my other classmates was
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because I was speaking in complete phrases already.
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I had these expressions ready to go because I would repeat them consistently,
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I would hear them a lot in these movies or TV shows
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and I didn't have to pull every single word at a
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time from my mind vocabulary every time I wanted to say a sentence.
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I had these phrases and expressions ready to go
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because I've lived through them with these actors and the scenes they were in.
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So the next time you're watching something and you want to do some shadowing,
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don't just repeat the words but try to imagine you're in the scene.
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Jump into the character.
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Repeat the lines, copy the expressions,
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exaggerate the sounds, and basically become that actor for that moment.
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You'll be surprised how much faster you start sounding natural in English
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when you treat it as a performance and not just as homework.
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Because at the end of the day,
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English is not just memorizing words and grammar and rules.
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It's about stepping in a new role,
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finding a new rhythm, and finding a new way of connecting with people.
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So grab some popcorn, pick a show you love,
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and remember you're not just watching Netflix, you're practicing your English.
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Thank you so much for watching.
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I hope you enjoyed this video and I will see you next time.
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Bye!

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Por que praticar a fala com este vídeo?

Assistir e imitar diálogos de filmes e programas de TV é uma das melhores maneiras de melhorar a pronúncia em inglês e ganhar fluência. Neste vídeo, o orador compartilha sua experiência ao aprender inglês através de conteúdos audiovisuais, enfatizando a importância da prática de conversação em inglês desde o início. Ao focar na pronúncia e na entonação dos atores, você não só aprende palavras novas, mas também como essas palavras são articuladas no cotidiano, o que é vital para se comunicar de forma eficaz.

Gramática e Expressões em Contexto

Durante o vídeo, várias estruturas gramaticais e expressões aparecem de forma natural. Alguns exemplos incluem:

  • Palavras conectadas: O conceito de connected speech demonstra como as palavras se unem naturalmente em uma conversa, oferecendo um desafio para quem está aprendendo.
  • Uso do som R: O orador fala sobre a dificuldade do som da letra "r", destacando a variação conforme a posição dentro da palavra, como em "worry" e "cry".
  • Sonoridades: A distinção entre sons sonoros e não sonoros, como em "thank you" versus "there", ilustra a importância de treinar a articulação dos sons.

Essas estruturas ajudam a compreender melhor como a língua é utilizada em contextos reais e facilitam a prática de conversação em inglês.

Armadilhas Comuns de Pronúncia

A pronúncia pode ser desafiadora, especialmente para falantes não nativos. No vídeo, o orador menciona algumas questões comuns que podem surgir:

  • Som da letra R: Este som pode ser complicado, principalmente por sua variação em diferentes contextos, exigindo prática insistente.
  • Variação de entonação: Observar como os atores articulam suas falas ajuda a entender a emoção e a ênfase que devem ser aplicadas na pronúncia.
  • Tongue placement: A posição da língua, como em "thank you" e "three", é essencial para corrigir a pronúncia e evitar erros frequentes.

Adotar a técnica de shadowing em inglês pode ser altamente benéfica para superar essas armadilhas. Repetir e imitar as falas ajuda a criar uma conexão entre a audição e a articulação, resultando em uma prática mais eficiente.

O que é a Técnica de Shadowing?

Shadowing é uma técnica de aprendizado de idiomas com base científica, originalmente desenvolvida para o treinamento de intérpretes profissionais. O método é simples, mas poderoso: você ouve áudio em inglês nativo e repete imediatamente em voz alta — como uma sombra seguindo o falante com 1-2 segundos de atraso. Pesquisas mostram melhora significativa na precisão da pronúncia, entonação, ritmo, sons conectados, compreensão auditiva e fluência na fala.

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