Prática de Shadowing: Ocean Vuong Shares with Oprah What She Meant to Him and His Mother - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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When you called me, this is Oprah.
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When you called me, this is Oprah.
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How are you?
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What?
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This is Oprah Winfrey.
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How are you?
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I recognized the voice right away.
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I just didn't believe that you were talking to me for any real reason.
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But when I heard your voice,
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I said, this is the voice I heard all my life at 4 o'clock when I answered the phone.
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And you know, I wanted to tell you this,
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that your voice was a kind of mediation for all of these women in the nail salon,
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both the workers and the people who went there to get their nails done.
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Because I saw them when they came in with their husbands
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and the husbands would wait for a while and then they would leave.
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And after a while, it would just be all women.
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And I found that their voices changed with your voice among them.
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And as a child, it was so interesting to hear speech,
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everyone talking differently, They were more vulnerable,
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they were more open with each other.
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And I got to see my mother kind of use the show
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as a way to open up for herself and to learn the language.
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She would not always understand what was happening,
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but she would have this little trick where she would,
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every time there was like an inflected moment in the show with your voice,
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my mother would work on a client and she would go, Oh boy.
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And then the client would, it always works.
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You could, any given time,
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you could just say, oh boy.
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And then the client would say, isn't that right?
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And then she would learn what was happening from them because her voice,
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her head is down.
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She couldn't hear it.
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But I saw this kind of town square that your voice created and the themes and what was really touching for me,
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and I didn't understand it at that time.
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For a community that I grew up in,
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working poor, immigrants, reading was very intimidating.
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We didn't step into bookstores or libraries.
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It felt like an impenetrable world that was not for us.
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And it was aligned with elitism and power and institutions and higher learning that we thought,
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well, that ship has sailed for us.
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But when you held up the books in your show,
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my mother recognized that and says, oh, this is accessible.
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making the act of reading both accessibly dignified,
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but also fruitful for people who are outside of these realms of institutional elitism.
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And I saw the women talk about books in your show,
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and then they would walk across the Barnes & Noble,
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across the mall, and they would have language.
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And they would come in and they would say,
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this is the book I want.
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I know how to talk about it.
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And there's a kind of dignified confidence to literacy.
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I don't know if anyone has talked about that,
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but I think that was the major byproduct
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that your show did is that it made working class people who don't have access to centers of knowledge.
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They don't get to be in a classroom and have high philosophy around craft or what have you.
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They get to participate in the vehicle of culture and you make culture legible to them who often don't have that chance.
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So I just want to say thank you so much for that.
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Oh my God.
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Now I'm going to cry.
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Well, I think your mother is with us in spirit today.
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She would be so proud that it is now your book that I'm holding up and telling the world about her son.
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And when you were, you know,
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working in the nail salon,
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you're working at the Boston Market,
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How did you get to be Ocean Vong, the celebrated writer?
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Well, my mother knew I was a nerd.
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And we came up in Vietnam as rice farmers.
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I was the first to go to college, the first to read.
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And we've been rice farmers very happily for hundreds of years.
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It was the war that ejected us from that idyllic world into this one.
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And so by geopolitical violence and accident,
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I'm now a professor in a way.
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But she knew that in this country,
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the sentence will be the medium that can make us change and change our lives.
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She didn't understand it, but she knew it was powerful.
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So she would drop me off before her shift at the nail salon,
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at the public library, and she gave me this mandate.
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She said, you go in there and you read everything,
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especially what you don't understand.
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Wow.
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And it's so interesting because that's what I give my students now.
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I said, you have to move towards the unknown, the mystery.
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The condition of not knowing is the first step of knowledge.
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Wow.
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Don't be afraid of not knowing.
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You owe it to yourself to go to the root of the mystery.
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And that is to work not only a pedagogy and education,
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but also of life.
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It goes beyond books.
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When I called you, I told you that when I told you I was choosing this as a book club,
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I said, I still think about High.
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I still think about Sony.
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I still think about these characters.
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Readers, didn't you love these characters?
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And don't they stay with you?
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And so I am just wondering how this story came to be.
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I'm always fascinated by the process by which authors come to tell their story.
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It feels like the emperor was always inside you somewhere.
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How did it come to be?
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Yeah, you know, America has often been founded on the idea of the nuclear family.
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And one antidote to that might be the found family.
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Yeah.
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But I actually think when we look at the history of our culture,
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it's the circumstantial family founded around labor.
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And so when I worked at Boston Market as a teenager,
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I found that it was actually the relationships that you had with people you don't choose.
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people who are cobbled together working through a shift,
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and you start to know their footsteps.
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You start to feel the cologne they wear,
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the gum, and when that gum will expire.
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You can hear how they cough, how they talk.
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And the intimacy that comes from the circumstantial labor cobbled together is actually the foundation of so much of our country.
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So much of it is founded on labor,
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loneliness, and love in the midst of all that.
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I think that's so powerful, don't you all?
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You have your chosen family.
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You have your family that you're born into.
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Many people have a chosen family that they found.
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But all of us who work,
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and certainly I remember during certainly all the years that I spent here in Chicago,
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25 years just down the street,
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that we were our own circumstantial family
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and were integrated in each other's lives in a way
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that you weren't integrated in the lives of all the people who were your biological family.
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And I have to say,
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you've created the most memorable,
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misfit, motley crew of characters.
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And I love that each one of them had their own level of kindness in their own unique way.
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And I think that that kind of group uh,
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happens all over the world.
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People create camaraderie with each other.

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Por que praticar a fala com este vídeo?

Neste emocionante vídeo, Ocean Vuong compartilha suas reflexões sobre a influência de Oprah Winfrey em sua vida e na de sua mãe. Essa interação não apenas destaca a importância da comunicação, mas também oferece um contexto rico para a prática de conversação em inglês. Ao ouvir e repetir as falas de Vuong e Oprah, você terá a oportunidade de se engajar em diálogos autênticos e emocionantes, melhorando sua fluência e confiança ao falar inglês.

Durante o vídeo, são abordados temas como vulnerabilidade e a luta por compreensão em uma língua estrangeira. Usar este conteúdo em sua prática de shadowing em inglês pode ajudar a expandir seu vocabulário e entender melhor as nuances da comunicação em inglês, especialmente para aqueles que também vêm de comunidades imigrantes.

Gramática & Expressões em Contexto

  • “Oh boy”: Uma expressão informal que denota surpresa ou preocupação, usada para transmitir emoções com simplicidade. Essa frase pode ser um ótimo ponto de partida para praticar expressões emocionais em conversação.
  • “Isn't that right?”: Usada para confirmar uma suposição ou opinião, cria um espaço de diálogo. Essa estrutura ajuda a incentivar interações durante a conversa, sendo uma ótima adição ao seu repertório.
  • “This is accessible”: Uma expressão que destaca a ideia de algo ser fácil de acessar. Ao falar sobre livros ou aprendizagem, essa construção pode enriquecer suas discussões sobre inclusão e aprendizado em inglês.

Essas expressões são fundamentais para enriquecer sua prática de melhorar a pronúncia em inglês e expandir sua compreensão sobre como o idioma é usado no cotidiano.

Armadilhas Comuns de Pronúncia

Durante o vídeo, você pode notar algumas palavras e frases desafiadoras, que podem ser armadilhas comuns de pronúncia:

  • “Vulnerability”: A combinação de sons pode ser difícil, principalmente por conta da letra "u". Tente dividir a palavra em sílabas “vul-ner-a-bil-i-ty” e praticar lentamente.
  • “Recognize”: A pronúncia pode ser confusa, principalmente pela variação do som da letra “g”. Pratique dizendo “recog-naize” com um ritmo suave.
  • “Intimidating”: A ênfase na quarta sílaba pode ser uma armadilha. Pratique dizer “in-tim-i-da-ting” acentuando a força na palavra.

Esses desafios são comuns entre os aprendizes de inglês e trabalhar neles pode ser uma parte vital do seu desenvolvimento. Integrar essas palavras ao seu shadow speech pode ajudar a suavizar sua pronúncia e aumentar sua confiança ao se comunicar.

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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