ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษด้วยเทคนิค Shadowing จากวิดีโอ: Speaking English: How to Gain CONFIDENCE!

B2
When you're speaking English, if people are constantly saying, What?
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245 ประโยค
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When you're speaking English, if people are constantly saying, What?
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Huh?
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What'd you say?
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Could you repeat that?
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I didn't understand you.
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Or they look confused when you're speaking,
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then I know that you're probably not feeling very confident in your English speaking skills.
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So the question is, how much of your native language shows up in the way you speak English?
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I teach intermediate to advanced non-native speakers of English,
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how to sound more natural speaking American English. And
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so much of it has to do with finding a totally
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different voice than the voice they use to speak their own native language.
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Scan this QR code or go to RachelsEnglish.com slash free to get my free course,
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The Top Three Ways to Master the American Accent.
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It will blow your mind.
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It will give you totally new ideas on how to get the sound you've always wanted.
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The American accent is not about fitting the sounds of American English into your native language.
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It's about developing a completely different way of speaking from the bottom up,
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the way a baby learns a language.
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For you, what's the biggest thing standing between you and the way you want to speak English?
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What's the gap?
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That's a question I put out on my YouTube channel a while back,
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and today I want to feature Patinya and show her
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and all of you one pretty simple trick that solves one of the big issues in developing the American accent.
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Hello, my name is Patinya.
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My friend called me Tiki.
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I am from Thailand and my native language is Thai.
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My biggest problem in English is like my native language is they don't have a connected speech.
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So when I speak English it's not connected.
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She's exactly right.
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If I was working with her in a live class,
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which is something I do once a month with my students in Rachel's English Academy,
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that's probably the first thing I would have chosen to work on with her.
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Each of her words is separate.
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That's not what we want in an American accent.
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That's not what we want in an American accent.
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That's not what we want in an American accent.
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Do you hear that smooth connecting?
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In this video, you'll see me working with students in Rachel's English Academy.
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Rachel's English Academy is absolutely hands down the best place to improve your American accent and English speaking skills.
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Over 50,000 students from all over the world,
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in every profession you can think of,
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and of nearly every native language out there,
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have fundamentally changed the way they speak English and enjoyed the life that opened up for them.
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If you're curious about becoming one of my students,
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scan this QR code or visit rachelsenglishacademy.com.
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I'm accepting new students right now and I would love to have you as a student.
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Sometimes when I speak it's cut cut cut cut like a dump.
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That's not what we want in an American accent.
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Very different from each word being choppy and having a feeling of separateness from the rest of the sentence.
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I call that choppy speech and it's the exact opposite of the smooth speech that sounds natural in American English.
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There are a couple of different ways to work on this,
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and today we'll focus on the one that gets the quickest results.
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This is linking consonant to vowel.
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That would be one word ends in a consonant,
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and the next word begins with a vowel.
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For example, in a.
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In a minute.
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In a day.
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In a while.
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In a week.
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In a month.
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The trick is you think of the consonant beginning the second word.
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So that would be in na.
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Na.
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Na.
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Now link them together. In Inna.
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Link them slowly, really focusing on that N.
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Do this out loud with me.
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Inna.
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Na.
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Na.
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Inna.
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Inna.
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Inna.
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It's like one two-syllable word, not two one-syllable words.
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In a minute.
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In a rush.
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In a sec.
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In a while.
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Now you do it and repeat each part with me again.
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In a, na, na, na.
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In a, in a, in a, in a, in a.
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Repeat out loud.
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In a day, in a day.
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In a while, in a while. In a sec.
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In a sec.
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In a week.
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In a week.
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I'm Rachel, and I've been helping non-native speakers of English with their English-speaking skills for over 20 years.
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My background is in opera singing,
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and my passion and my speciality is helping you get the American accent that you've always wanted.
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Your speaking skills shouldn't be holding you back from your dreams.
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Scan this QR code
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or follow the link in the video description to get my cheat sheet for the sounds of American English.
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It's a great reference guide for the mouth positions of all of the sounds and it's yours free.
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Now, let's do a phrase where there are two consonant to vowel links in a row.
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Work as a.
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We have an ending K linking into as.
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And now in this sentence,
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we're actually going to pronounce AS like IS.
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This is called a reduction,
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changing or dropping a sound,
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but that's a topic for another video.
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Let's stay focused on linking consonant to vowel.
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The ending K of WORK links into AS and it becomes cuz, cuz, cuz.
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Like K sound, is, cuz, cuz. WERE, cuz.
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Now here we can't hold out the linking consonant.
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When we were working on in-uh,
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we could hold out that N.
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That's a sound that can be as long as you have breath.
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In-uh.
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But the K sound is not that way.
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K, k, k.
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It's made with a stop of air and a release,
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so there's no holding it out.
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Work-as, ks.
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Work-as.
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Work-as.
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So we're going to take it off of were and we're going to attach it to is. Were.
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Cause.
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Work is.
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Work is.
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Now do it with no break,
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but keep that K connected.
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Work is.
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Work is.
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Repeat out loud after me.
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Work is.
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Work is.
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Now the ending Z of as links into the article uh, z, z.
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Were, kuh, z.
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Linking ending consonant to beginning vowel.
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Do that with me.
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Work-a-z.
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Work-a-z.
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Work-a-z.
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Work-a-z.
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Work-a-z.
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Work-a-z.
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That smoothness that we get through the linking is what we're always after in American English,
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not choppy, separated words.
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Work as a.
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Work as a.
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Work as a.
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The phrase work as a,
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I work as a, is a phrase that I got from working with a student in Rachel's English Academy.
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Before this, she'd been too careful.
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Her words were overpronounced, a little separated.
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So we worked together using something called the play it say it method
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which is what all the audio training in my courses is
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based on the idea is you don't think you just repeat over
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and over with the native speaker and your body starts to hear it differently and make little adjustments to match better
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here's a clip from
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that class now we're gonna do play it say it i'm
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gonna say it you repeat it i say it you repeat
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it a lot of times in a row I work as
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a work as a I work as a I work as
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a work as I work as a I work as a
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I work as a I work as a I work as
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a I work as a I work as a I work
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as a I work as a I work as a I
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work as I work as a I work as a yeah okay good I started to like
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that in the middle it seemed like you maybe your mind like you were doing an awesome job,
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very purely imitating.
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Then I felt like something in your mind said,
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oh my gosh, I need to think about my W.
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And then the word work felt a little bit long.
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Did I get it?
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Was that what it was?
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I heard that and it made your imitation less good, which is surprising.
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You know, we think, well,
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we know our problems, so let's think about our problems and figure it out.
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But I actually think knowing our problems,
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like you probably got that feedback from Laura or from another teacher.
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Knowing our problems shows us where to work.
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And you know, you watch the video and you learn,
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but it really shouldn't be part of what we do when we're practicing like the play it,
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say it method.
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At that point, we don't really want to think about what we think our problems are
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and what we need to focus on.
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At that point, we just do the play it, say it.
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And honestly, that takes care of things.
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The more purely you can imitate,
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the more you'll be able to relax and match the qualities of the linking we want to hear.
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I work as a life coach.
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But my husband and I work as a team.
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I work as a recruiter.
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And I work as a janitor.
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I work as a social worker with addicts at an Austin hospital.
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Beauty parlor where I work as a shampoo technician.
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I work as a decorator.
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Yeah, I work as a mechanic.
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Here's another example.
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American English.
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American English.
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We want to take the N in American and attach it to the beginning vowel of English.
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Nnnnglish.
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Do that with me.
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Nnnnglish.
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Nnnnglish.
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American English.
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It helps to do it really slowly so you can feel
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that link and get comfortable with that before you start speeding it up.
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American English.
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American English.
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American English.
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Here, I'm working with a student whose native language is Vietnamese.
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So I said American-ing.
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I took the N and I linked it right into the vowel and you wanted to put a break.
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American English.
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We don't need breaks between words.
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We don't want breaks between words.
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Can you take the N and connect it with the continuous sound?
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American English.
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English.
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Yes, American English.
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Yes, there we go.
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That's a link.
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And that's what we want all the time.
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Now let's take a few more phrases and I want you to practice out loud.
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See if linking this way feels natural or totally unnatural.
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The goal is to link all your words together
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and have it feel so natural that you don't even have to think about it.
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That's the kind of habit you can build with the audio training in Rachel's English Academy.
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Let's get started.
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All alone.
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All alone.
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All alone.
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Aska.
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Aska.
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Aska. at 8
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bad idea big eyes
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close it far away
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give each
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Up above.
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What I.
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How's it feeling?
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Thank you so much for studying with me,
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and don't forget to subscribe with notifications on.
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If you know anyone who could use help with linking,
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please send them this video,
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and keep your learning going now with this video.
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That's it.
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Thanks so much for using Rachel's English.

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เกี่ยวกับบทเรียนนี้

ในบทเรียนนี้ นักเรียนจะได้ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษให้มีความมั่นใจมากขึ้น คุณจะได้เรียนรู้วิธีการออกเสียงที่เชื่อมโยงกันอย่างมีประสิทธิภาพ ซึ่งจะช่วยให้คำพูดของคุณฟังดูเป็นธรรมชาติมากขึ้น และลดจุดอ่อนจากการใช้เสียงที่แยกจากกันเหมือนกับภาษาแม่ของคุณ การปรับปรุงสำเนียงภาษาอังกฤษแบบอเมริกันนั้นไม่ใช่เรื่องยาก หากคุณทำตามวิธีการและเคล็ดลับที่เราแบ่งปัน

คำศัพท์และวลีสำคัญ

  • เสียงที่เชื่อมโยงกัน (Connected Speech)
  • ความมั่นใจ (Confidence)
  • สำเนียงอเมริกัน (American Accent)
  • การฟังอย่างใส่ใจ (Active Listening)
  • การฝึกฝน (Practice)
  • การแสดงออก (Expression)
  • การสื่อสาร (Communication)
  • การฝึกพูด (Speaking Practice)

เคล็ดลับการฝึกฝน

เพื่อเพิ่มพูนทักษะการพูดภาษาอังกฤษของคุณ นักเรียนสามารถใช้วิธี ชาโดว์อิ้งภาษาอังกฤษ โดยการฟังและเลียนแบบเสียงที่พันธมิตรทางการสอนของเราพูด สิ่งที่ควรทำคือ:

  • ฟังวิดีโอหรือเสียงที่มีการพูดที่เชื่อมโยงกันในระดับความเร็วที่เหมาะสมกับคุณ
  • จับจังหวะและแนวทางการพูดของผู้พูด ด้วยการเลียนแบบน้ำเสียงและการเน้นในคำที่สำคัญ
  • ฝึกพูดตาม พยายามที่จะทำให้เสียงของคุณมีความนุ่มนวลและติดต่อกันโดยไม่ตัดคำ
  • ทำซ้ำการฝึกฝนนี้อย่างสม่ำเสมอ เพื่อให้คุณคุ้นเคยกับการเชื่อมโยงเสียงและสร้างความมั่นใจเมื่อพูด

หากคุณต้องการเรียนรู้เพิ่มเติมเกี่ยวกับวิธีการ ฝึกพูดภาษาอังกฤษ อย่างมีประสิทธิภาพ เราขอแนะนำให้คุณค้นคว้าข้อมูลเกี่ยวกับ shadow speech และ เรียนภาษาอังกฤษจากยูทูป เพื่อทำให้การฝึกของคุณสนุกและสร้างสรรค์มากยิ่งขึ้น!

เทคนิค Shadowing คืออะไร?

Shadowing เป็นเทคนิคการเรียนรู้ภาษาที่ได้รับการรับรองทางวิทยาศาสตร์ พัฒนาขึ้นสำหรับการฝึกนักแปลมืออาชีพ วิธีการนี้เรียบง่ายแต่ทรงพลัง: คุณฟังเสียงภาษาอังกฤษจากเจ้าของภาษาและพูดตามทันที — เหมือนเงาที่ตามผู้พูดด้วยช่วงเวลาห่าง 1-2 วินาที การวิจัยแสดงว่าเทคนิคนี้ปรับปรุงความแม่นยำในการออกเสียง ทำนองเสียง จังหวะ การเชื่อมเสียง การฟังเข้าใจ และความคล่องแคล่วในการพูดได้อย่างมีนัยสำคัญ

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