Prática de Shadowing: Trump holds off 'planned' Iran attack amid 'serious negotiations' - Aprenda a falar inglês com o YouTube

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President Trump says he's holding off on a planned military attack in Iran that he says he was planning to launch tomorrow.
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President Trump says he's holding off on a planned military attack in Iran that he says he was planning to launch tomorrow.
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The president's saying that serious negotiations are happening now.
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Let's get right to CNN's Kristen Holmes at the White House.
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Kristen, what are you hearing about this?
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Has there been a substantial shift in the tenor of negotiations?
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Well, that's really what's unclear at this moment,
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particularly given that we were just learning from a U.S official
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that the U.S does not believe that Iran's latest proposal goes far enough,
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that Iran has made enough concessions,
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particularly when it comes to enriching uranium.
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But what we're hearing now is President Trump essentially saying that his Gulf country partners,
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including Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates,
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have essentially asked him to hold off on this planned military attack that he says was scheduled for tomorrow.
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And this is the quote,
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in that serious negotiations are now taking place,
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in that in their opinion,
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as great leaders and allies,
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a deal will be made which will be very acceptable to the United States of America,
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as well as countries in the Middle East and beyond.
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Then it goes on to talk about no nuclear weapons.
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And then it goes on to say that he's instructed his department of,
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et cetera, that he will not be doing the scheduled attack.
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But I do want to read one line.
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It says,
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I have further instructed them to prepare to go forward with
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a full large scale assault of Iran on a notice in the event that an acceptable deal is not reached.
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Now, of course, we have been reporting that President Trump has been growing increasingly frustrated by the negotiating that Iran is doing,
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essentially feeling as though it's not moving quickly enough.
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I will remind you that a couple of weeks ago,
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I asked President Trump if he believed Iran was slow walking this process.
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He said he really wasn't sure at that point,
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but that was still weeks ago and we seem to be in the exact same place.
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And this is also happening as President Trump has expressed this frustration to aides, to U.S officials as well.
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It's not just about the negotiating,
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but it's also about the Strait of Hormuz and this extended closure,
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which is having a ripple effect throughout the global economy,
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the global oil industry, and of course sending prices here in America skyrocketing.
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There is a real concern that gas could go above $5 a gallon in some places.
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So right now we are hearing President Trump saying
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that he's having these conversations with these Middle East partners that they're telling him to hold off.
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We've heard this kind of thing before,
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where he says he's not going to do something because there's a peace deal in the works.
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It's just unclear now what is happening behind the scenes in the moments after they're telling us one thing,
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that this latest deal didn't go far enough.
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And this post, which came again moments later with President Trump saying,
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we're going to not attack because there's a deal that might take place soon.
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Yeah, a deal will be made.
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That is their opinion, meaning Qatar and Saudi Arabia, according to this post.
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Kristen, thank you so much.
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Let's bring in former Republican Congressman of Illinois, Adam Kinzinger.
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He's back now with reaction on this.
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The president has this habit of making these threats about essentially,
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not even essentially, about destroying Iran and then not following through on them.
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There's obviously questions about whether he should have made the threats in the first place,
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but I wonder what your reaction is to him again finding an off-ramp from his threat.
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Yeah, that's the whole thing.
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This is so damaging.
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You know, regardless of let's just be,
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you know, agnostic on whether he should attack again or not for the moment.
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When you make threats and then you're eager to back down from those threats,
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which he has been every single time.
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I mean, he's gone from we will destroy an entire civilization to we have a deal,
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which we never actually had,
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by the way, claiming the straits open,
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claiming it's closed, claiming he was going to pull the trigger on May 19th.
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And now everybody wants him to deal because we're about to like you lose all of your strategic like strength.
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One of the greatest things the United States had is our ability to say we will do something.
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The enemy knows that.
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And then hopefully we won't have to do that.
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This has just been like threat back off, threat back off.
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And I haven't seen the Iranians move in any way here.
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And we find ourselves in the worst case scenario,
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which is a closed strait, this nebulous future.
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And gas is now having to price in and futures are pricing in the uncertainty.
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I wonder if you think
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that there is a path for the U.S to somehow exit this situation in a better position than it went in.
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Is the only way out of this essentially to have this new Persian Gulf Strait authority
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that Iran has installed in the Strait of Hormuz intact and to essentially find some form of concession
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that Iran will accept in order to reopen the strait to their liking?
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Yeah, I mean, that's what's crazy is we did go in with overwhelming military power,
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and now in the White House,
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they are trying to figure out what Iran needs to be satiated, to be pleased.
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And I mean, this is why they should have thought this through.
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You either, if you're going to do something like attack Iran,
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you have to know what the contingencies are.
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And honestly, those contingencies, you have to be willing to do them.
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Otherwise, you probably should not have gone to this fight in the first place.
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And so what does the future here look like?
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You You know, I don't know.
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Are they going to find something that Iran wants?
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Maybe.
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Are they going to actually denuclearize them or whatever?
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I don't know.
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Is there going to be an Iranian,
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you know, toll on every ship that passes?
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But I know this much.
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I know that my kid,
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who's four and a half years old,
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is going to probably be in a country
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that has a worse situation based on what's going on because of this war than had we done nothing.
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I think Donald Trump needs to figure out if we resume hostilities with Iran,
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you need to have a plan in place to reopen
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that strait and stick to the use of the military until it's done
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or quit these threats because it's just making it worse.
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Tomorrow marks 80 days since the U.S and Israel launched the war with Iran.
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But today, how it ends is anything but clear.
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Iran says it did send a new response to Pakistani mediators about U.S criticisms of its latest 14-point peace proposal.
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President Trump rejected that offer last week,
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saying he stopped reading it after the first sentence.
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Impatient over the impasse, the president is again threatening to destroy Iran,
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saying on Sunday, quote, the clock is ticking and they better get moving fast or there won't be anything left of them.
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Let's talk more about all of this with Democratic Congressman Josh Gottheimer of New Jersey.
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He's a member of the House Intelligence Committee.
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Congressman, thank you so much for being with us.
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We've seen threats like this before.
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Do you think the president is ready to make good on this threat this time?
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Well, obviously, I won't predict what Donald Trump's going to do,
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but he did say that he's going to be meeting with his natural security team in the Situation Room tomorrow.
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We also know what appears to be the response to the latest from Iran on a proposed deal,
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which seems like, according to reports,
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more words and not a lot of substantive action on their nuclear program.
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So between, you know, obviously what we're looking for,
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progress we're looking for from Iran on their nuclear program,
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plus lack of action on scaling back their ballistic program or their terror programs from,
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you know, one of our key enemies, the regime there.
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It seems to put forth a lot of question marks about Iran taking things seriously
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when it comes to action on our side.
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And add to that what's going on in the Straits,
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Hormuz, where you're looking at a thousand ships or so that are still stranded there,
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stuck there, which of course is leading to much higher gas prices for Americans back home.
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In Jersey, where I live,
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average now $4.50 as we head into Memorial Day weekend, right?
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You can imagine that's weighing pretty heavily.
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On the closure of the strait,
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Iran has launched this new entity,
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the Persian Gulf Strait Authority,
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to manage the strait as they're trying to really cement their control over this critical passageway.
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Is it possible that Iran retains control of the strait in perpetuity?
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And certainly it appears that are going to try to do that for several months here in the near term.
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Is there any scenario where that could go on in perpetuity?
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I mean, I don't think that's anything that we could accept as a country.
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You can't have more 20 percent of the world's oil passing through this key artery,
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one of our top adversaries holding the keys, right?
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That seems unacceptable to me,
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you know, both in terms of what that would do to global oil pricing and also impact on our allies as well.
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Let's remember what we're dealing with here.
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The Iranian regime flies under the banner of death to America,
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calls us the great Satan America and has attacked and killed our service members and attacked our bases,
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killed our allies.
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These are no friends of the United States of America.
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But what's been continuing to be unclear is what our ultimate strategy is in the region
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and what our progress has been through the conflict.
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As much as I want to crush Iran,
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I also want to understand what our goals are.
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And so far, what we're seeing is very high oil prices.
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And at least according to public reporting,
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Iran still maintains massive missile and drone capabilities and capacity,
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as well as significant nuclear capacity,
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and has the resources, and I think this is a big issue,
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whether they have the resources to fund their proxy terrorist program,
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Hamas, Hezbollah, Palestinian Islamic Jihad.
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So you have a lot of questions that are still hanging out there,
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not a lot of answers,
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but we'll see what's next.
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The Iranians appear right now not to be concerned about our threats.

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O vídeo "Trump holds off 'planned' Iran attack amid 'serious negotiations'" é uma excelente oportunidade para praticar o inglês falado em um contexto real de comunicação. Ao ouvir e repetir as declarações do presidente Trump, você pode aprimorar sua fluência e compreensão auditiva. Um dos métodos mais eficazes para isso é o shadowing em inglês, onde o aluno tenta imitar a fala do falante original, seguindo o ritmo e a entonação. Essa prática ajuda a desenvolver uma fluência mais natural, além de melhorar a pronúncia, já que você estará exposto a expressões autênticas usadas em contextos sociais e políticos. Ao explorar temas relevantes, como negociações internacionais, você também expande seu vocabulário, tornando-se mais confiante ao discutir assuntos globais.

Gramática e Expressões em Contexto

O discurso de Trump apresenta várias estruturas e expressões que podem ser úteis para estudantes de inglês:

  • Holding off on: Esta expressão significa “adiar” ou “não agir por enquanto”. A habilidade de usar expressões idiomáticas como esta é crucial em conversações diárias.
  • In that: Usado para apresentar uma explicação ou justificativa. Essa construção é comum em inglês formal e é uma boa adição ao seu repertório. Por exemplo, “in that serious negotiations are happening now” pode ser uma maneira útil de conectar ideias em situações de debate.
  • A estrutura “instructed” é importante para descrever ações e ordens. Aprender como e quando usá-la pode ajudar em contextos profissionais.

Essas estruturas não apenas variam o seu discurso, mas também ajudam a dar clareza e sofisticação a suas conversas em inglês. Ao aprender inglês com YouTube e focar em vídeos que utilizam linguagem atual, você amplia seu conhecimento de gramática de forma contextual.

Armadilhas Comuns de Pronúncia

Durante o vídeo, existem palavras e frases que podem ser difíceis devido à pronúncia ou à velocidade da fala. Preste atenção nos seguintes pontos:

  • Negotiations: A palavra pode ser desafiadora para falantes não nativos. Ouça com atenção e tente imitar a pronúncia correta.
  • Acceptable: A ênfase na segunda sílaba pode ser confusa para alguns. Pratique dizer a palavra enfatizando o “cep”.
  • Frustration: Esta palavra tem um som complexo que pode levar a erros de pronúncia. Tente repetir lentamente, focando em cada sílaba.

Praticar com vídeos autênticos, como este, permite que você capture não apenas o texto, mas a entonação, o ritmo e a emoção, elementos essenciais para uma comunicação eficaz. Usar técnicas de shadowspeak pode ajudar a internalizar essas nuances, tornando seu aprendizado mais dinâmico e envolvente.

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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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