Практика Shadowing: Understanding Malaria: Causes Of Malaria - Изучайте разговорный английский с YouTube

C1
Music Across
⏸ Пауза
126 предложений
Если предложения слишком короткие или длинные, нажмите Edit, чтобы их изменить.
1
Music Across
2
the developed world today,
3
the bite of a mosquito might at worst mean an irritating interruption to a warm summer's evening on the porch.
4
If you happen to live in a more tropical climate,
5
however, that itch could be the start of something far worse.
6
In fact, as much as half of the world's population are at risk of a deadly infection called malaria,
7
due to the bite of this blood-sucking menace.
8
The disease isn't actually caused by the mosquitoes.
9
They're what we call a vector.
10
These buzzing little pilots are the vehicles for the actual killer,
11
lurking inside the mosquito's salivary glands.
12
A microscopic single-celled organism called Plasmodium is what's really responsible for the symptoms of weakness,
13
aches, intense fever, and for an unlucky percentage who don't receive treatment, even death.
14
There are five species of Plasmodium that infect humans,
15
but the most dangerous is called Plasmodium falciparum,
16
which is the cause of 90% of all malaria deaths.
17
All these parasite species spread the same way.
18
Mosquitoes pick up Plasmodium by biting a previously infected person who has the parasite in their blood.
19
Later, the same mosquito delivers the parasite to another host the host through its saliva.
20
The dangerous microbes quickly find their way inside red blood cells,
21
where they breed in such numbers that the cells swell up and eventually explode.
22
Luckily not all mosquitoes make for a suitable carrier.
23
In fact just one genus will do for this picky parasite,
24
a type of mosquito called Anophilus.
25
Even then, it's only the female mosquito who feeds on human blood to nourish her young.
26
Males prefer to dine on nectar.
27
There are still more than 40 species of this particular mosquito across the world,
28
which can be found on every continent except for Antarctica.
29
They are all capable of carrying malarial parasites,
30
yet not all countries have cases of malaria.
31
Why not?
32
Plasmodium microbes have no tolerance for the cold.
33
The deadliest species, for example,
34
can't reproduce if the temperature falls to far below 20 degrees Celsius.
35
On the other hand, at 27 degrees,
36
the microorganisms thrive and multiply with staggering speed.
37
Colin Sutherland is a professor of parasitology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
38
According to him, that speed makes a tremendous difference.
39
The mosquito, after it picks up the parasite by feeding on the blood of a person with the infection,
40
then needs 15 to 20 days for the parasite to fully mature inside and it needs to expand inside the mosquito.
41
Now if you think about the lifespan of the average mosquito,
42
20 days is pushing it.
43
So the mosquito has to survive that period of time.
44
Now there's a problem for the parasite,
45
which is in colder regions, it develops slower.
46
So it's a race between the parasite getting ready to go to another person and the mosquito dying.
47
And in colder places, and we used to have some malaria in southern England,
48
but it's much easier to control because it's right on the edge of that temperature that's required.
49
Mosquitoes also need moisture, and a lot of it.
50
These insects lay their eggs in pools of stagnant or slow-moving water,
51
where they hatch into larvae.
52
The adults' delicate bodies are also susceptible to drying out,
53
meaning they prefer humid atmospheres.
54
These conditions tend to rule out cool, dry countries.
55
But for some 90 countries spread around the equator,
56
both Anopheles and Plasmodium have the perfect conditions to thrive,
57
warm enough for the parasite to grow quickly and wet enough for the mosquito to spread it.
58
You might not want to get too comfortable though.
59
As the world continues to warm, climates will change.
60
This tropical humid zone could expand,
61
opening the way for Anopheles mosquitoes to breed in more environments.
62
And just maybe, malaria will move with it.
63
If you're lucky enough to live in a more developed part of the world,
64
there are already ways to keep malaria at bay.
65
We've known about some of them for centuries.
66
Ancient texts on how to plan cities describe the importance of avoiding noxious wetland areas,
67
such as swamps and marshes.
68
The word malaria itself comes from the old Italian words meaning bad air.
69
It's easy to see why.
70
Before people knew much about the transmission of parasites,
71
foul air near stagnant pools were considered responsible for causing illness.
72
While the smell might be relatively harmless,
73
stagnating warm water makes for the perfect mosquito breeding ground.
74
In many parts of the world,
75
humans have done a good job of eradicating mosquitoes by fumigating,
76
clearing away rubbish and draining wetlands as cities expand.
77
In other areas, human activity has encouraged mosquitoes to breed.
78
From digging up the earth for mines,
79
to leaving buildings to crumble,
80
abandoning tyres and other rubbish,
81
to having inadequate drainage where predator-free puddles form.
82
Mosquito eggs can hatch in peace and quiet.
83
Moving populations can also create the right conditions for malaria to spread,
84
not just by carrying the parasite with them,
85
but by changing the landscape to suit breeding mosquitoes.
86
Caroline Maxwell works for the charity group Malaria No More.
87
According to her, as people are forced to move into unplanned settlements,
88
the environment can change with them.
89
One of the biggest challenges around malaria control is things like urbanisation or people moving to spontaneous settlements such as shantytowns.
90
And often when this is done in a very rapid way,
91
it's not in a controlled fashion at all.
92
So you get poor drainage systems,
93
you get stagnant water, and that again can increase the breeding for mosquitoes.
94
And so it's really important that governments or town planners come together
95
and ensure that things are done in a very systemised way,
96
that irrigation projects, drainage and
97
so on are done in a very controlled fashion to reduce people being exposed to the mosquito that carries malaria.
98
Destroying natural environments is also increasing the risk of bringing more people into contact with this deadly disease.
99
Dr Sutherland describes another example where humans moving into new areas can increase the risk of disease.
100
There's a kind of malaria that is at home in the monkeys of Southeast Asia,
101
mainly live in the forests and rarely have interaction with humans.
102
But as the environment is being changed and forests are being cleared for plantations and human habitation,
103
the monkeys are forced to live close to the humans.
104
Now the mosquitoes that bite those monkeys are biting humans who are getting this kind of malaria which the monkeys have.
105
So that's been an increasing problem only in a few countries in Southeast Asia.
106
So that's an example of where humans have changed the environment and malaria risk has gone up.
107
With enough money, countries might be able to afford better sanitation,
108
efficient waste disposal programmes, or ways to keep their environment free of pooling water,
109
wiping out mosquitoes before they can even breed.
110
Governments can designate land as national reserves,
111
preventing it from being cleared.
112
Wealthy nations can also afford treatments to clear the illness from human populations,
113
driving Plasmodium to extinction with preventative medications.
114
Not all nations have such resources, unfortunately.
115
In less economically developed countries,
116
individuals' poverty might mean they can't afford these treatments
117
or don't complete their prescription to keep some drugs on hand for next time,
118
which increases the parasite's resistance to the medication.
119
If we're to ever have hope of controlling and wiping out malaria,
120
we need to consider how to work together in this fight.
121
There's an acceptance that it takes a global level of effort
122
from partnership between many countries and many organisations to make a difference.
123
And it's taken that level,
124
a global level of effort,
125
to push back this disease locality by locality.
126
You know, it's step by step and reducing malaria at the most vulnerable places first and then moving on.

Скачать приложение

ИИ-оценка каждого произнесённого вами предложения

Сканировать для скачивания
Сканировать для скачивания
TRENDING

Популярные

Почему стоит практиковать разговорную речь с этим видео?

Практика разговорной речи с видео о малярии предоставляет уникальную возможность погрузиться в актуальную тему здоровья и повышения осведомленности о заболеваниях. Обсуждение таких вопросов, как симптомы и способы передачи малярии, помогает не только расширить словарный запас, но и формирует у студентов уверенность в разговорной речи. Используя метод shadow speaks, вы сможете повторять за спикером, что способствует улучшению произношения английского и увеличивает уровень разговорной практики. Чем больше вы будете взаимодействовать с содержанием, тем легче станет вести беседы на подобные темы в будущем.

Грамматика и выражения в контексте

В транскрипте видео были использованы несколько ключевых грамматических структур и выражений, полезных для изучения:

  • Present Simple Tense: Частое употребление настоящего простого времени в контексте описания фактов о малярии.
  • Causative Verbs: Использование глаголов, выражающих причину и следствие, например, "is caused by" (вызывается).
  • Passive Voice: Применение пассивного залога, как в словах “is spread by” (распространяется через), что помогает акцентировать внимание на действии, а не на субъекте.
  • Conditionals: Варианты условных предложений, которые помогают выразить зависимости, например, "if the temperature falls" (если температура понижается).

Эти конструкции не только обогащают речь, но и помогут вам более эффективно общаться на английском, используя метод shadow speech для их закрепления.

Распространенные ловушки произношения

Некоторые слова и акценты из видео могут стать сложными для произношения:

  • Plasmodium: Обратите внимание на правильное произношение "плазмодий", с акцентом на второй слог.
  • Anopheles: Это название комара может вызывать трудности; следите за ударением на третьем слоге.
  • Temperature: Убедитесь, что вы правильно произносите слово "температура", чтобы избежать путаницы в резонансе.

Используйте метод shadowing английский для практики этих слов, повторяя их за диктором, чтобы улучшить произношение английского. Это не только сделает вашу речь более естественной, но и подчеркнет вашу способность обсуждать сложные темы.

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