Практика Shadowing: Is Your Dream in a Jar? 🏺 | Learn British English Through Story - Изучайте разговорный английский с YouTube

B2
Is your dream currently in a jar or are you living it?
⏸ Пауза
199 предложений
Если предложения слишком короткие или длинные, нажмите Edit, чтобы их изменить.
1
Is your dream currently in a jar or are you living it?
2
Step into a place where forgotten dreams aren't gone.
3
They're waiting.
4
A magical London story where you learn real,
5
natural English without even noticing.
6
Ready to take your dream back?
7
Let's begin.
8
The rain in London has a specific sound.
9
It is a constant rhythmic drumming on the roofs of black taxis and red buses.
10
For Clara, this sound was the soundtrack of her life.
11
At 32, Clara was an accountant in a large firm near Liverpool Street.
12
She spent her days with spreadsheets,
13
her afternoons with meetings and her evenings in a small,
14
tidy flat in Highgate.
15
One Tuesday, the tube was delayed.
16
Feeling frustrated, Clara decided to walk through the back streets of Marylebone.
17
The fog was thick, smelling of wet stone and old chimneys.
18
In a narrow alleyway, hidden between a tailor's shop and a bakery,
19
she saw a soft amber light.
20
A small wooden sign swung in the wind.
21
The shop of forgotten dreams.
22
Clara pushed the heavy oak door.
23
A brass bell rang.
24
A clear, lonely sound.
25
Inside the shop was a forest of wooden shelves.
26
On these shelves sat thousands of glass jars.
27
Some were as small as a perfume bottle.
28
Others were as large as a biscuit tin.
29
They all shared one thing.
30
A faint pulsing glow.
31
Behind a counter made of dark mahogany sat Mr Weaver.
32
He wore a tweed waistcoat and a silk tie,
33
looking like a retired professor.
34
He was polishing a pair of silver spectacles.
35
He didn't look up, but he spoke with a warm, gravelly British voice.
36
Mind the umbrella, dear.
37
We don't want to get the dreams damp.
38
They are very delicate things.
39
I'm sorry, I was just...
40
I've never seen this place before.
41
What exactly do you do here?
42
I am a keeper, Clara.
43
I look after the things people throw away when they decide to be sensible.
44
When a person says, I can't do that anymore,
45
I have bills to pay, their dream doesn't die.
46
It just feels rejected.
47
So, it comes to me.
48
Clara stayed in the shadows as the door opened again.
49
A man entered.
50
He was perhaps 60 years old,
51
wearing a very expensive coat and carrying a leather briefcase.
52
He looked successful, but his eyes were exhausted.
53
He walked to the counter with a heavy step.
54
Right next to a young woman's poetry.
55
It's been waiting for you.
56
Mr Weaver handed Arthur a golden jar.
57
Inside, Clara could see something moving.
58
It looked like the vibration of a string.
59
I was so talented, but my father said music wasn't a proper career for a man.
60
He wanted me to be a solicitor.
61
I made a lot of money,
62
but I haven't been happy since 1995.
63
Money is just paper, Arthur.
64
Music is air.
65
You can't breathe paper.
66
Take it home.
67
Buy a violin.
68
A good one.
69
Arthur took the jar with trembling hands.
70
He looked like a man who had just found a lost child.
71
As he left, a young woman in her 20s hurried in.
72
She was wearing a suit that looked too big for her and she looked stressed,
73
checking her watch every 10 seconds.
74
Mr Weaver, I only have five minutes before my conference call.
75
Do you have my wilderness jar?
76
The one from my gap year?
77
You're in a hurry to get back to your desk, Sarah?
78
The mountains don't have conference calls, you know.
79
I know, but my boss promised me a promotion if I work through the weekend.
80
I feel like I'm suffocating in that office.
81
I need to remember what the air feels like at 5,000 meters.
82
The snows of the Himalayas.
83
You left this here when you signed your first contract.
84
You thought safety was better than adventure.
85
I was wrong.
86
Safety is just a slow way of disappearing.
87
I'm going to book a flight to Nepal.
88
I don't care about the promotion anymore.
89
Sarah grabbed the jar.
90
A brilliant, icy white.
91
And ran back out into the rain,
92
looking like she could fly.
93
Now, it was only Clara and the old man.
94
The shop felt smaller, more intimate.
95
And you, Clara, when was the last time you looked at the world through a lens?
96
How do you know?
97
I haven't touched a camera since university.
98
My parents said art was for people who didn't want to grow up.
99
Growing up shouldn't mean leaving your soul in a box under your bed, Clara.
100
Mr. Weaver climbed a ladder and pulled out a turquoise jar.
101
It shone with a deep, steady light.
102
This is the light of St. Ives.
103
You were 18, chasing sunrises with a second-hand Nikon.
104
I remember.
105
But now I'm 32.
106
It feels too late to start again.
107
It's only too late when you're under the ground, dear.
108
Take the jar.
109
I don't want your money.
110
Just take a photo of the Tams at sunset this Saturday.
111
When the photo is perfect, the debt is paid.
112
Clara took the warm, pulsing jar and stepped back into the London night.
113
The rain didn't look grey anymore.
114
She saw neon patterns in the puddles and stories in every window.
115
The next morning, Clara took a holiday.
116
She went to a small camera shop and bought one that felt right in her hands.
117
That Saturday, as the sun sank behind the Houses of Parliament,
118
Clara stood on Waterloo Bridge.
119
She wasn't thinking about taxes.
120
She was waiting for the light.
121
When the sky turned a deep purple and the river became gold,
122
she pressed the button.
123
Click.
124
At that moment, miles away,
125
the turquoise jar on Mr Weaver's shelf quietly vanished.
126
Clara looked at her screen.
127
She wasn't just an accountant anymore.
128
She was a witness to the beauty of the world and her dream was finally back in her own hands.
129
Mastering English Collocations What is a collocation?
130
Have you ever wondered why we say heavy rain but not big rain?
131
Or why we take a photo but we don't make a photo?
132
These are called collocations.
133
They are pairs of words that naturally go together in English.
134
If you use the wrong pair,
135
you might be grammatically correct but you won't sound like a native speaker.
136
Let's look at our story,
137
The Shop of Forgotten Dreams,
138
and find the word magnets hidden inside.
139
The Office and Career A proper career.
140
My father said music wasn't a proper career.
141
Why we use proper to describe something that is socially acceptable or serious.
142
Conference call.
143
Example.
144
I only have five minutes before my conference call.
145
Note.
146
In modern business, we always have or join a conference call.
147
Sign a contract.
148
Example.
149
You left this here when you signed your first contract.
150
Tip.
151
We don't write a contract in this context.
152
We sign it to make it official.
153
Emotions and the mind.
154
Drive someone mad.
155
Example.
156
The silence in my house is driving me mad.
157
Why?
158
This is much more natural than saying, making me crazy.
159
Trembling hands.
160
Example.
161
Arthur took the jar with trembling hands.
162
Note.
163
We use trembling.
164
Specifically for shaking caused by strong emotion or age.
165
Art and nature Catch the sunrise Example I used to wake up at 4am just to catch the sunrise.
166
Why?
167
We use catch for things that happen quickly or for a limited time,
168
like catching a bus or a flight.
169
Take a holiday.
170
Clara called her office and took a holiday.
171
In British English we usually take or have a holiday.
172
Don't just learn words.
173
Learn partnerships.
174
When you read a story,
175
look for words that are best friends.
176
That is the secret to sounding fluent.
177
Cultural Deep Dive Understanding the British Soul
178
The Gap Year
179
A gap year is a common tradition in the UK where young people take time off to travel
180
and explore before starting university or work.
181
In the story, Sarah's gap year represents freedom and adventure.
182
In contrast, her current desk job shows how that freedom can slowly turn into routine.
183
London's social and artistic geography.
184
In London, different places often reflect different ways of life.
185
Liverpool Street represents the financial world,
186
fast-paced and focused on work and numbers.
187
Marylebone feels more refined and traditional,
188
a place where you might discover something unusual or hidden.
189
And Street Ives in Cornwall is known as an artistic centre,
190
famous for its unique natural light that has inspired photographers and painters for generations.
191
In the story, these locations are not just places,
192
they represent different paths in life.
193
So what about you?
194
Is your dream still sitting quietly somewhere?
195
Or are you finally living it?
196
Maybe it's time to pick it up again.
197
If you enjoyed this story,
198
don't forget to like, subscribe and keep learning English.
199
See you in the next video.

Скачать приложение

ИИ-оценка каждого произнесённого вами предложения

Сканировать для скачивания
Сканировать для скачивания
TRENDING

Популярные

Контекст и фон

В этом увлекательном видео действие разворачивается в Лондоне, где звуки города становятся неотъемлемой частью жизни главной героини, Клары. В возрасте 32 лет, работающей бухгалтером, Клара сталкивается с моментом, когда рутинная жизнь начинает ее угнетать. Этот рассказ о "Магазине забытых мечт" не только погружает нас в атмосферу английской столицы, но и является отличным способом учить английский с YouTube, благодаря естественному языку и описательным сценам. Знакомство с такими историями помогает не просто улучшать навыки, но и расширять словарный запас в контексте реальных ситуаций.

Топ-5 фраз для повседневного общения

  • Is your dream currently in a jar? - Является ли ваша мечта сейчас в банке?
  • The rain in London has a specific sound. - Дождь в Лондоне имеет особый звук.
  • A magical London story where you learn real, natural English. - Волшебная лондонская история, где вы учите настоящий, естественный английский.
  • The shop of forgotten dreams. - Магазин заброшенных мечт.
  • They are very delicate things. - Это очень хрупкие вещи.

Шаг за шагом: руководство по шадовинговой практике

Чтобы эффективно освоить shadow speech, следуйте нашему пошаговому руководству, основанному на видео:

  1. Слушайте внимательно: На начальном этапе просто слушайте видео несколько раз, сосредоточившись на произношении и интонации.
  2. Выделите ключевые фразы: Используйте предоставленный список фраз, чтобы проанализировать, как они используются в контексте.
  3. Практикуйте shadowspeaks: Повторяйте за диктором, стараясь максимально точно воспроизводить его интонацию и ритм.
  4. Записывайте: Запишите свои проговоры, чтобы оценить прогресс и исправить ошибки.
  5. Обсуждайте и обменяйтесь впечатлениями: Найдите сообщества или друзей, с кем можно обсудить видение видимого опыта и улучшить ваши навыки.

Следуя этим шагам, вы сможете обрести уверенность в использовании английского и расширить свой словарный запас, используя метод shadowing английский. Важно не бояться делать ошибки — так вы будете учиться быстрее и эффективнее!

Что такое техника Shadowing?

Shadowing — это научно обоснованная техника изучения языка, изначально разработанная для подготовки профессиональных переводчиков и популяризированная полиглотом доктором Александром Аргуэльесом. Метод прост, но эффективен: вы слушаете аудио на английском от носителей языка и немедленно повторяете вслух — как тень, следующая за говорящим с задержкой в 1–2 секунды. В отличие от пассивного прослушивания или грамматических упражнений, Shadowing заставляет мозг и мышцы рта одновременно обрабатывать и воспроизводить реальные речевые паттерны. Исследования показывают, что это значительно улучшает точность произношения, интонацию, ритм, связную речь, понимание на слух и беглость речи — что делает его одним из самых эффективных методов для подготовки к IELTS Speaking и реального общения на английском.

Угостите нас кофе