Prática de Shadowing: Practice Shadowing a Business Presentation in English - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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Hello and welcome to another shadowing practice video with me, Claire, a native speaker from the US.
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162 frases
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Hello and welcome to another shadowing practice video with me, Claire, a native speaker from the US.
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I'm also a trained opera singer, so I've studied the International Phonetic Alphabet or IPA, so I've studied the correct pronunciation of sounds in multiple languages.
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In this video, So we're going to practice shadowing with a professional business presentation.
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Even if English is not your native language, you may need to use English at work or even give presentations in English if you work for an international or US company.
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You want to be understood.
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So even though you don't need to sound just like a native speaker, pronunciation and intonation are crucial.
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And of course, knowing some key phrases or common business English terms are also important to build confidence and overall fluency at work.
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So I'll first read through the presentation at a natural pace.
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Then we'll go through some of the key phrases and of course pronunciation tips.
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Finally, we'll shadow it together so you can sound more natural and confident at work.
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Let's go!
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English made easy with Claire Good morning everyone!
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Thanks for being here today.
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I want to walk you through our latest project and what the next steps are.
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As you know, our team has been working on optimizing the user experience on our website.
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Over the past month, we've run several tests and gathered valuable feedback from our customers.
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One key improvement is our new checkout process.
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We've reduced the number of steps from 5 to 3, which has already increased conversions by 20%.
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Looking ahead, we're planning to roll out these updates globally by next quarter.
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That means we need to finalize testing and prepare our teams for the launch.
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If you have any questions, feel free to reach out and I'd be happy to discuss this further.
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Thanks again for your time.
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Alright, so that was the initial read through at a normal speaking pace.
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Let's go through it slowly together.
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So we'll take the first section.
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Good morning everyone.
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Thanks for being here today.
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Thanks for being here today.
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That whole phrase can really be connected.
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So individually, we of course have the pronunciation of words like for, being, and today.
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in natural, quick speech, we in American English tend to close down some of the vowels or turn these vowels into the schwa sound.
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So the schwa sound is the uh sound, like in the word banana.
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There's two schwas in banana.
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And that happens in today.
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Today.
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Not today, but today.
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Today.
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So very rapid speech.
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Those vowels get dropped or, you know, changed into this schwa sound.
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And for becomes for in rapid speech.
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Thanks for.
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Thanks for being here today.
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For the words that end in ing, we don't need to completely drop the g every time so that it's thanks for being here today.
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That might come with certain dialects, but what we want to do is connect the ing sounds to the next word, like with this connected speech.
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Being here, being here.
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Otherwise we have being here.
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And many native speakers don't speak like that.
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We don't have to separate each word, but have this really connected speech,
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which often then modifies the vowels like for today, or you can elide sounds at the ends of words that squish on to the following word.
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So shadowing practice is really helpful for learning full phrases that you might use.
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And this is a really common one.
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Thanks for being here today.
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because if you start a business presentation, that's a really polite way to start the meeting.
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Okay, let's keep going.
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I want to walk you through our latest project and what the next steps are.
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So again, I wanna, that isn't just reserved for casual speech.
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You could be giving a business presentation and instead of saying want to say wanna and most native speakers speak like that all the time.
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I want to walk you through our latest project so that's completely acceptable.
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Now walk you through.
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Walk through is a phrasal verb which means to explain something step by step and this is a great one to know for business English.
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I want to walk you through our latest project and what the next steps are.
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Okay, moving on.
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As you know, our team has been working on optimizing the user experience on our website.
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Now really important when you have a comma, you always want to pause.
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don't just plow through the commas.
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As you know, our team has been working, right?
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There's a, it implies a pause there.
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As you know, and then further, and you'll notice that my intonation goes up a little bit when there's a phrase with a comma.
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And there's a little, there's more phrases like this to come and I'll point them out as well.
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As you know, our team has been working on optimizing the user experience on our website.
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So every time you have a comma, you can imagine the intonation going up at the, once you get to the end of the comma phrase, and then for the next phrase that ends in a period, the intonation goes back down.
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It happens again in the next sentence.
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over the past month, pause, we've run several tests and gathered valuable feedback from our customers.
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Intonation goes down right before the period, and it goes up right before the comma.
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And this makes it really clear the structure of your sentence.
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So even though we can't see what you're saying when you're giving a presentation, We understand the structure of the sentence because of your intonation.
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So even if you don't pronounce all of the words exactly like me, intonation is really, really important for this, for being understood.
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Now, in the previous sentence, we had a word ending in ing with the same concept of alighting with the word after it.
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Our team has been working on, working on.
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So we don't need to drop the G completely working on, but we do allied the sounds.
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Just it's a little bit softer than working, working on.
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That helps with giving it a flow as well.
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Our team has been working on.
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Our team has been working on.
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So it all kind of flows together.
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Okay, next section.
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One key improvement is our new checkout process.
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I want to point out the word key here, which I think I've used quite a lot in this video already.
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And key as an adjective means important or major.
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So one important improvement is this one key improvement, a word that we use a lot in business English.
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We've reduced the number of steps from five to three.
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Again, my intonation just went up because there was a comma, so there's more to come.
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I'm not done with my sentence.
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Which has already increased conversions by 20%.
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And then my intonation goes back down.
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Again, we have the linking of the words, which is already, which is already increased.
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And this happens a lot with the word has.
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if we are speaking in the present perfect, has increased, which is, which is already, right?
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Which has.
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So because which ends with the CH sound, we can align that with the beginning H
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of has, which is, and has the vowel modifies to is.
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It's more of a clipped vowel modification due to rapid speech.
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Again, so which has already increased conversions by 20%.
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It's kind of like when we have contractions anyway, like we've reduced.
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We don't always have to say we have reduced.
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We don't tend to write out these contractions that we would say in rapid speech, like which is increased, but we do speak like that.
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So the same principle, we've reduced,
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that's all squished together with this contraction there is an unwritten contraction for
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which is increased looking ahead we're planning to roll out these updates globally
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by next quarter looking ahead that is connected speech as well looking ahead and we pause after the comma we're planning to roll out these updates.
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Roll out means to introduce something new and is often used in a business context.
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That means we need to finalize testing and prepare our teams for the launch.
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So again, in American English, a lot of the smaller words, the vowels are dropped or modified.
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We need to finalize.
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To finalize.
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Prepare our teams.
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Often the word our can sound like our in rapid speech.
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Prepare our teams.
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That's also very connected.
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For the launch.
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So for instead of for.
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Again, those aren't really necessary for being understood, but that's for those of you who would like to work on the American accent.
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And the word here, launch, means the beginning of something, usually a campaign or a product in the marketing world.
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If you have any questions, feel free to reach out and I'd be happy to discuss this further.
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Thanks again for your time.
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So we have the phrase, feel free to, feel free to, feel free to reach out, feel free to contact me, feel free to write me an email.
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And it's a casual way to say, don't hesitate to do something.
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So if you wanted to be more formal, you could say, don't hesitate to reach out, but feel free is a nice phrase to have.
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And right at the end, another great business phrase we have, thanks for your time.
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And that's used to acknowledge people's time.
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And it's a polite business phrase to use at either the beginning or the end of a meeting or presentation.
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Okay, so a lot of what we covered in today's shadowing video
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was the concept of connected speech and maybe learning phrases not as individual words,
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but together in a phrase where you can connect the speech to sound a little more natural and fluent.
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We also talked about linking the ends of words with the beginning of the next word.
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Like we do this very often for words that end in ing.
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Or if the sounds are similar at the beginning, at the end and the beginning of the next word, like which and has, which is.
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And we also covered a few business phrases and phrasal verbs that are really useful to know, especially when speaking.
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So now let's shadow the full presentation together.
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Try to match my rhythm and intonation and word stress as well as pronunciation as best you can.
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If you want, you can pause the video after each section or sentence and repeat after me,
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or better yet, say the words with me at the same time and try and shadow how I say it or maybe both work well.
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First repeat after me and then afterwards try and shadow with me.
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Good morning everyone.
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Thanks for being here today.
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I want to walk you through our latest project and what the next steps are.
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As you know, our team has been working on optimizing the user experience on our website.
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Over the past month, we've run several tests and gathered valuable feedback from our customers.
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One key improvement is our new checkout process.
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We've reduced the number of steps from five to three, which has already increased conversions by 20%.
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Looking ahead, we're planning to roll out these updates globally by next quarter.
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That means we need to finalize testing and prepare our teams for the launch.
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If you have any questions, feel free to reach out and I'd be happy to discuss this further.
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Thanks again for your time.
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I hope this video was helpful and even if your goal is not to perfect the American accent or try and change your own accent,
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it's still really important to practice the correct stress of a word or the stressed word within a sentence or the intonation of that sentence so that the structure is clear.
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All of these things are really important for being understood.
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So take what you want from the video and leave what you don't, but hopefully you learned something new and it was helpful.
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Of course, if you did think so, give it a like and subscribe to my channel if you want more videos like this.
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I have a playlist for shadowing videos, and I'll be in your feeds with another video next week.
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So bye for now.
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Thank you.
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Sobre Esta Lição

Nesta prática de shadowing com foco em uma apresentação de negócios em inglês, você terá a oportunidade de aprimorar sua pronúncia e entonação. A prática de "shadowspeak" é uma técnica eficaz que permite aos falantes não nativos replicar a fala de um nativo em tempo real. Neste vídeo, Claire, uma falante nativa americana e treinada em técnicas vocais, guiará você através de um conteúdo pertinente ao ambiente empresarial, o que é essencial para quem quer melhorar a pronúncia em inglês e se sentir mais confiante ao se comunicar em inglês no trabalho.

Vocabulário e Frases Chave

  • Good morning everyone! - Bom dia a todos!
  • Thanks for being here today. - Obrigado por estarem aqui hoje.
  • User experience - Experiência do usuário
  • Conversions - Conversões
  • Next steps - Próximos passos
  • Plan to roll out - Planejar implementar
  • Feel free to reach out - Fique à vontade para entrar em contato
  • Valuable feedback - Feedback valioso

Dicas de Prática

Para maximizar sua prática de shadow speak e realmente aperfeiçoar sua pronúncia e fluência, siga estas dicas:

  • Repita em Tempo Real: Acompanhe Claire e tente imitar sua maneira de falar no mesmo ritmo. Essa técnica é essencial para se acostumar com a entonação e a conexão das palavras.
  • Preste Atenção aos Sons: Fique atento aos sons que são alterados em fala rápida, como os sons das vogais que frequentemente se transformam em 'schwa' (uh). Isso ajudará a você a soar mais natural em conversações.
  • Pratique o Conector: Ao praticar frases, conecte as palavras, como em "Thanks for being here today". Em vez de articular cada palavra individualmente, procure fluidez e naturalidade.
  • Foque em Frases Comuns: Estude as frases que aparecem frequentemente em um ambiente de trabalho. Frases como “feel free to reach out” são essenciais para a comunicação eficaz.
  • Grave e Reouça: Grave sua prática e escute sua própria pronúncia. Compare com a pronúncia de Claire e identifique áreas de melhoria.

Essa prática vai não só ajudar a você aprender inglês com YouTube, mas também a se sentir mais à vontade para se comunicar em um contexto profissional. Lembre-se, a prática leva à perfeição, e cada sessão de shadowspeaks é um passo em direção ao seu objetivo de fluência em inglês!

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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