Prática de Shadowing: The Great Gatsby Plot Summary - Chapters 1-3 - Schooling Online - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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Welcome to the Roaring Twenties, old sport.
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Welcome to the Roaring Twenties, old sport.
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The 1920s, that is.
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The American economy is booming,
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the champagne is flowing, and the flappers are flapping.
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It's a time when savvy Americans could become rich beyond their wildest dreams.
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But beneath all the glitz and glamour is the whiff of something rotten.
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All is not what it seems.
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Meet our narrator, Nick Carraway.
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He's a patient and honest young man, well-educated and wise.
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Nick's family are the descendants of Scottish dukes and well-established in America's Midwest.
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In other words, Nick comes from old money.
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After graduating from Yale University in 1915,
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Nick went to fight in the Great War, and he enjoyed it.
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Nick's not really the alpha type,
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but alpha males are drawn to him and want to be his friend.
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Nick's a nice guy.
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After the excitement of the war,
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Nick found the Midwest terribly boring,
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so in 1922 he moved to the East Coast.
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Wall Street was pumping, and Nick wanted to be a part of it.
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While he was there, Nick met several interesting characters.
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But the one who made the biggest impression on him was Gatsby.
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Ah, Gatsby.
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What a gorgeous, sensitive soul.
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Nick is now back at home in the Midwest for reasons he'll reveal later.
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In the meantime, he's going to unburden his heavy heart by telling us the tale of the great Gatsby.
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It begins in the summer of 1922.
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Nick had just rented a house in West Egg on Long Island Sound,
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about 20 miles from Manhattan.
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It was a tiny shack compared to the monstrous mansions on either side.
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See that gigantic French-inspired castle next door to Nick's?
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That's Gatsby's mansion.
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But if you think the West Egg mansions are big,
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wait until you see the estates across the bay in East Egg.
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East Egg is the more fashionable of the two egg-shaped landforms on Long Island Sound.
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It's where the old money resides.
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In fact, that's where Nick's taking us right now,
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to the palatial home of his second cousin, Daisy Buchanan.
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Nick went to Yale with Daisy's husband, Tom.
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Now Tom is what you would call an alpha male, a 1920s chad.
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He's also from an incredibly wealthy family,
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and his sprawling estate in East Egg is impressive, to say the least.
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Once inside, we meet Daisy and her friend, Jordan Baker.
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Nick is happy to see Daisy,
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although he barely knows her.
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Jordan only faintly registers Nick's presence.
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She's too cool for him.
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Her face seems familiar, though,
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and she even knows who Nick's neighbour is.
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Who's Gatsby?
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At dinner, Tom shows his racist side.
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He mansplains some very unscientific opinions about non-white races, until the phone rings.
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Tom leaves the room to answer it, and Daisy follows him.
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Then Jordan and Nick hear them arguing.
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It turns out Tom has a mistress.
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Poor Daisy.
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It's bad enough that Tom's affair is common knowledge,
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but to call him at dinner time?
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Well, this is awkward, especially when the phone rings a second time.
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Later, when Nick and Daisy have a chance to speak alone,
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she reveals how miserable she is.
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She's rich, sophisticated and terribly alone.
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Back inside the house, Nick realises that Jordan is a pro golfer who's graced the covers of several sports magazines.
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What an odd evening Nick's had.
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As he drives away, Nick can't help but feel sorry for Daisy and Tom.
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When he arrives home, he sits in the moonlight, mulling it over.
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Then he sees the mysterious silhouette of a man standing on the lawn of the neighbouring mansion.
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It could only be Gatsby.
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But then Nick sees him do a strange thing.
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He stretches his arms out towards a green light far across the bay.
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Was he just stretching?
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Or was he reaching for something?
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A short time later, Tom takes Nick on a train trip to New York.
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On the way, they stop by the Valley of the Ashes,
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a filthy industrial wasteland that lies between the eggs and New York City.
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Tom basically forces Nick out of the train.
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He wants Nick to meet his mistress.
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Like Nick has nothing better to do.
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Myrtle Wilson, the mistress, is married to George Wilson,
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the owner of a garage.
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George is a spiritless young man who has no idea about his wife's affair.
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Tom shows up under the pretense of selling George a car.
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A bit brazen, don't you think?
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When Myrtle appears, she walks by George as if he were a ghost.
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But the chemistry between her and Tom is obvious.
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Poor George must have ashes for brains.
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While George is out of the room,
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Tom and Myrtle arrange a rendezvous at their apartment,
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or love nest, in New York City.
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How cosy.
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Tom even buys her a puppy on the way.
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Well, the rendezvous turns into a party.
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Myrtle invites her sister Catherine,
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as well as the McKees from the flat below.
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Poor Nick, who'd tried to excuse himself earlier in the afternoon,
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ends up getting wasted on Tom's whisky.
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It was all fun, games and gossip until Myrtle taunted Tom by repeating Daisy's name.
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Tom broke Myrtle's nose for that.
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Party's over, folks.
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But, as we all know,
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that wasn't a real party.
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Only Gatsby throws proper parties.
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And soon enough, Nick is formally invited to one.
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Now that's what you call a party.
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Except Nick doesn't know anyone among the crowds of glittering socialites.
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Isn't that the worst feeling?
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Luckily, Jordan Baker rescues him from being a complete loner.
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As Jordan and Nick make their way around the gardens,
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they hear all sorts of juicy gossip about their host.
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Apparently, Gatsby killed a man once.
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Wasn't he a German spy during the war?
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Is he related to German royalty?
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Well, according to a friend of a friend,
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Gatsby grew up in Germany.
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But wasn't he in the American army too?
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Where is Gatsby, anyhow?
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Jordan and Nick look for him in his vast Gothic library.
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They encounter a curious owl-eyed man, but no Gatsby.
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At around midnight, when the party was really cranking,
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a man recognises Nick from the war.
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Then the man invites Nick for a spin in his hydroplane in the morning.
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After a moment of confusion,
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the man finally introduces himself as Gatsby.
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Ah, Gatsby.
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His beautiful, warm smile puts Nick totally at ease.
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But Gatsby has to excuse himself.
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Chicago is on the phone.
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Gee, he does business at funny hours, doesn't he?
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A short time later, Gatsby requests that Jordan Baker join him for a private chat.
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Is Gatsby stealing Nick's date?
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At around 2am, just as things were winding down and getting messy,
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Jordan and Gatsby emerge from the library.
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Jordan tells Nick that she's just heard the most amazing thing,
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but he'll have to see her if he wants the scoop.
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She tells him to look her up in the phone book.
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No cell phones in those days.
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When Nick bids Gatsby goodnight, they're interrupted again.
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This time, Philadelphia is on the phone.
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He must be super important.
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Once Nick escapes the chaos of a last-minute bingle in Gatsby's driveway,
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he looks back to see Gatsby waving a final farewell from his porch.
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But Nick doesn't want you to think that the three nights he's just described are all that absorbed him that summer.
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He also worked hard, fell in love with New York,
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had a fling with a girl at work and started dating Jordan Baker.
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It wasn't true love, more like tender curiosity.
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Jordan was a liar and a bad driver but she charmed him.
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Although it turns out that Nick wasn't entirely free to love Jordan,
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or anyone else for that matter,
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he still had a girl back home to whom he wrote letters signed, Love Nick.
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Nick insists that he's an honest guy,
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but his actions seem to say otherwise.
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Can we trust our narrator?
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We hope you enjoyed this schooling online production.
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For more easy lessons, check out our other videos.

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Sobre Esta Aula

Nesta lição, você terá a oportunidade de praticar suas habilidades de fala em inglês através da análise e resumo dos primeiros capítulos de "O Grande Gatsby". O narrador, Nick Carraway, apresenta um rico cenário da década de 1920 nos Estados Unidos, caracterizado por uma economia em ascensão e a vida glamourosa dos ricos. Você aprenderá a descrever personagens e ambientes, além de praticar a entonação e a fluência da sua fala. Essa prática com shadow speech será ideal para aprimorar sua capacidade de se expressar em inglês, dando ênfase à compreensão dos nuances da linguagem e ao uso apropriado das emoções na fala.

Vocabulário e Frases Chave

  • Roaring Twenties - A década de 1920.
  • Old sport - Uma expressão amigável usada entre amigos.
  • Old money - Referindo-se a famílias que têm riquezas há gerações.
  • Alpha male - Um homem que possui um forte caráter e é dominante.
  • Mansion - Uma grande e luxuosa casa.
  • East Egg - Área onde reside o "novo dinheiro" e a elite da sociedade.
  • James Gatsby - Protagonista enigmático da história.
  • Daisy Buchanan - Prima de Nick e figura central na narrativa.

Dicas de Prática

Para maximizar seu aprendizado, utilize técnicas de shadowing enquanto assiste ao vídeo. Ouça atentamente a forma como os personagens são apresentados e o ritmo da narração. Tente repetir as falas imediatamente após ouvi-las, imitando não apenas as palavras, mas também a entonação e a emoção envolvidas. A velocidade do discurso é bastante natural, então comece devagar e vá aumentando a sua velocidade à medida que se sentir mais confortável. Use um site de shadowing em inglês para facilitar essa prática. Foque em frases curtas e vá progredindo para sentenças mais longas à medida que você desenvolve confiança. Essa abordagem de shadowspeaks ajudará a melhorar sua fluência e a compreensão auditiva. Não hesite em repetir as partes que mais lhe chamam atenção; afinal, a prática constante é a chave para dominar o shadowspeak.

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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