跟读练习: 'Don't Waste Your Youth': Trump Offers Life Lessons In University Of Alabama Commencement Address - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
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ever, ever, ever before it's going to be.
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ever, ever, ever before it's going to be.
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As you embark on this great adventure,
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let me share some of the biggest lessons I've learned from a lifetime spent building dreams and beating the odds.
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I beat a lot of odds.
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A lot of odds.
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A lot of people said, I don't know.
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But it worked out okay.
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Where are we?
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Oh, gee, I'm President.
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How did that happen?
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Now, you're going to be in the same position,
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but some of the things — would you like to hear some of the ideas,
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or should I just skip over that part, huh?
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That's going to be more interesting than all the other stuff which was slightly political, right?
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I'm going to give it to you,
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though, just as I see it and as I've learned it,
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the hard way and the easy way.
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First, if you're here today and think that you're too young to do something great,
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let me tell you that you are wrong.
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You're not too young and have great success at a very young age.
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You're all very young.
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In America, with drive and ambition,
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young people can do anything.
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I was 28 when I took my first big gamble to develop a hotel in Midtown Manhattan,
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the Grand Hyatt, and it worked out incredibly well.
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But I was very young at the time.
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I was like a very young person in sort of an old person business.
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Steve Jobs was 21 when he founded Apple.
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Walt Disney was 21 when he founded Disney.
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James Madison, James Monroe, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson.
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They were no older than 25 when they began the journeys that etched their names into the history books for all time.
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So to everyone here today, don't waste your youth.
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Go out and fight right from the beginning,
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from the day you leave this incredible university.
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Go out and fight, fight tough, fight fair.
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But go out and fight.
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You're going to be very successful because now is the time to work harder than you have ever worked before.
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Push yourself further than you have ever pushed yourself before.
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Find your limits and then smash through everything.
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Go and smash through.
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You've watched that football team smash through.
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You're going to do the same thing.
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You're at the age when you have the time
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and vitality to do really incredible things
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if you give just give it your all you'll look back
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and a decade from now you'll be astounded by what you've achieved you'll remember this day you remember
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when the guy named trump was giving the commencement address
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and he said i could do it
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and guess what i did i think you're going to remember that very fondly i hope so Second of all,
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and very importantly, you have to love what you do.
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Okay?
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You have to.
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I rarely see somebody that's successful that doesn't love what he or she does.
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That's way really, like, work like work isn't work.
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It's fun.
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I find it fun.
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I work all the time and I find it fun.
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If I didn't find it fun,
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I wouldn't be successful, whether it was real estate or in showbiz.
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I had a lot of different careers,
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but I loved real estate so much and I was very successful in real estate because I loved it.
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I learned a lot from my father because I watched him work.
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He was a workaholic.
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He worked.
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He loved to work.
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He's a good man.
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He was a tough guy.
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Tough as hell, actually.
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Now that I think back,
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I don't know if you could even get away with that nowadays.
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He was tough, but he was a good man, I'll tell you.
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And he worked seven days a week.
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He worked Saturdays, Sundays.
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It didn't matter.
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And I learned by watching him, he loved his life.
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He loved what he was doing.
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He had a great long-term marriage,
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a long, long, many, many, many years.
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He beat me on that one.
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Now, I've minded very successful,
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but they haven't lasted quite as long.
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It was close to 70 years.
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That was a long time.
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I said, Pop, you beat me on that one.
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But you know what I learned from him?
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That he just loved life,
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and all he did was work.
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I see people that don't work hard, and they're miserable.
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So go out and find.
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But he loved what he was doing.
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And you have to find something that you love.
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And you have to follow your own instincts.
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Listen to your parents.
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They're very wise.
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But you have to follow your instincts and your heart, your soul.
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And you want to be the very,
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very best you can be.
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Treat every day like a home game against Auburn.
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Fight like hell and enjoy doing it.
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And your coach can tell you all about that.
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Third thing is to think big.
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You know, you're going to do something,
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you might as well think big.
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Because it's just as tough.
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You can think small.
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I know a lot of people, they thought small.
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They're very smart.
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I know others that weren't nearly as smart,
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but they had a better picture of the big picture,
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because it's just as hard to solve a small problem as a big problem,
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and it's just as much energy and everything else except the result is going to be a smaller one.
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So love what you do,
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but think big if it's possible.
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Now, if it's not possible, that's okay, too.
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You do something, you have to do something that you love.
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You will have all the same headaches and challenges,
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all the same delays and setbacks,
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so you might as well do something that's just amazing.
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America doesn't aim small.
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Alabama doesn't aim small, and neither do you.
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So think big when possible.
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Think big.
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Fourth is work hard.
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Work hard.
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Never, ever stop.
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An example is a great athlete, actually, Gary Player, golfer.
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Great, great golfer.
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He wasn't as big as other men.
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And he was actually on the small side.
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Don't tell him that, friend of mine.
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Don't tell him that because he doesn't understand that.
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But he worked very, very hard.
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He made up for it.
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He never stopped.
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He won 168 golf tournaments.
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Think of that, 100.
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I said, Gary, you're winning like every weekend.
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Do you ever choke or anything?
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I don't know what choke means.
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And he made a statement years ago that I read,
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and I thought it was sort of an incredible statement.
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He said, it's funny, the harder I work, the luckier I get.
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Right?
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Think of that.
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The harder I work, the luckier I get.
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So you really have to work hard,
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and you're going to be successful because you have the talent to get into this school is not easy.
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To get through it is even more difficult.
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You have a lot of talent.
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Fifth is don't lose your momentum.
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You just want to keep it going.
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And you have to know if you are losing it,
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you have to know when you're losing it.
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So maybe you stop and maybe it's time to stop.
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Listen to the feedback.
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Think through your plan very carefully and keep moving fast.
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The word momentum is very important.
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I mean, I'll just tell you a little story about a great real estate developer named William Levitt.
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He built Levittown.
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Some of you might live in a Levittown.
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He was the biggest developer in the whole country in the 1940s and so.
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And he built these jobs.
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He started with one house,
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then two houses, then 20 houses,
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then thousands and thousands of houses.
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And a company, Gulf and Western,
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came along and they said,
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we're going to make you an offer to buy your company.
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And they offered him a lot of money,
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a lot of money, more money than he ever thought he could make.
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And he retired.
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He lost his momentum.
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He retired, and he led a beautiful life.
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He had a wife, I must tell you.
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It was his second wife.
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It was a trophy wife.
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What can I say?
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I don't like telling you everything,
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but we're all friends, right?
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Can we talk?
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We're all friends.
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He had a trophy wife.
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And he lived a different life.
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He moved to the south of France.
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He lived — it was a life of tremendous luxury.
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He had so many millions of dollars,
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he was given a fortune for the company.
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And 10 years went by,
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and then 15 years went by,
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and he got a call from this big conglomerate,
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Gulf and Western, and they said,
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we're not doing well with the purchase,
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because he used to pick up every nail,
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every piece of sawdust, every piece of wood,
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every chip, everything, and he'd sell it.
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He'd make a couple of bucks.
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He'd — everything was perfect.
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They can't do that.
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You know, these big companies, they don't do that.
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You see it a lot when an entrepreneur sells to a big company
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and then he ends up buying the company back for peanuts later on.
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Happens a lot.
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But he was the best at what he did.
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But 15 years went by and he was so excited and they sold him back, his company.
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And he started and he was going to tear apart the world because he got bored with a life of luxury.
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And he started building and building and building.
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And the markets turned on him.
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And he went bad.
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He lost everything.
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And he went bankrupt.
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Absolutely bankrupt.
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And it was a sad story to read.
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It was such an amazing story because he was so rich.
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But he paid them.
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And he bought it for the right price.
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Bought it low.
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But he went wild.
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But he lost his momentum.
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He wasn't good at it anymore.
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And he was at a party on Fifth Avenue, I'll never forget.
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And it was a party of a very,
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very powerful man who was having the party in a magnificent apartment overlooking the park.
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And I walked in, and there were 50 or so people.
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I recognized most of them,
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all the biggest business people in the world, actually.
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Very glamorous.
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I was doing well.
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I was young and I was doing well.
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And I was invited to parties like that.
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And I looked in the corner and there was Mr. William Levitt sitting all by himself on a chair looking very glum.
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Nobody was talking to him.
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Because you'll find that when you're not successful,
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you lose a lot of friends.
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It's not a good situation.
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But there was nobody talking to him.
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But I wanted to talk to him because I was in the real estate business and he was.
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And most of these people were in different businesses.
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And I went over and talked to him and I said,
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how are you, Mr. Lovett?
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He goes, Donald?
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He knew who I was.
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Not well.
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I'm not well.
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I said, so can you come back?
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He said, no, son.
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I lost my momentum.
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I shouldn't have done it.
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I lost my momentum.
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And I never forgot that expression.
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He lost his momentum.
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If he would have kept going,
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instead of selling and relaxing and going into a different life
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he probably would have been three times bigger than he was
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but he lost his momentum and you have to know
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when it's your time i mean there'll be a time
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when you do lose you see it with fighters you see
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it with a lot of people they have a great record
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and they retire and then four years later say i'm going back i can beat
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that guy and they get knocked to hell
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and it's not good it's not good
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so he lost his momentum you have to know when your momentum time is up i call it momentum time
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But follow your momentum.
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It's a very important word.
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You don't hear it from too many, but I've seen it.
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I've seen it a lot.
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Number six, if you want to change the world,
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you have to have the courage to be an outsider.
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In other words, you have to take certain risks and do things a little bit differently.
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Otherwise, if that weren't the case, everybody would be successful.
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It doesn't work that way.
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Progress never comes from those satisfied with the failures of a broken system system.
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It comes from those who want to fix the broken system.
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And you'll make the bigger money,
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you'll make them more success by acting that way.
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The other way may be more secure,
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but if you want to go to the top,
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you're just never going to do it unless you break the system.
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Change is never easy.
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And the closer you get to success,
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the more ferociously those with a vested and interests in the past will resist you.
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They want to resist.
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So I just say, trust me on that,
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because I know you really do.
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You have to break the system a little bit and follow your own instincts.
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But if your vision is right,
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nothing will hold you down.
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Nothing.
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You have to have the right vision.
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为何通过这个视频练习口语?
在特朗普的毕业演讲中,他向年轻的毕业生们分享了许多宝贵的人生经验和见解。这一演讲不仅富有启发性,还充满了激励力,适合用来练习口语。通过观看并模仿演讲中的表达方式,您可以提升自己的英语口语能力。使用该视频作为口语训练工具,能够帮助您更好地理解如何在正式场合传达信息,并增强您的自信心。您可以通过看YouTube学英语,结合视频中的实用表达,构建自己的口语能力。
语法与表达在语境中的运用
在演讲中,特朗普使用了多个关键语法结构和表达,帮助我们更好地理解其演讲的情感和核心内容。以下是几个值得注意的点:
- 条件句:比如“如果你今天在这里并认为自己太年轻,告诉你,你错了。”这种句式强调了一种假设及其结果,适用于讨论未来的可能性。
- 过去时的使用:在提及他个人经历时,他使用了过去时,比如“我在28岁时进行了我的第一次重大冒险。”这能有效地引导听众理解他的成长轨迹。
- 否定句:例如“不要浪费你的青春。”通过否定句的形式,增强了句子的劝说力和警示性。
- 动词短语:短语“push yourself further”强调了努力和超越自我的重要性,有助于学习如何在鼓励他人时运用动词短语。
常见发音难点
当在模仿特朗普的演讲时,有几个词汇和发音需要注意:
- “successful”:这一词在快速说话时容易发音模糊,应注意重音的把握,确保发音清晰。
- “youth”:此词的元音在不同口音中发音会有所不同,留意这种细微差别可以帮助你更好地掌握美式发音。
- “incredible”:由于包含多个音节,发音时需要注意节奏感,避免快速连读导致发音不清。
通过不断的练习和模仿,您可以在口语交流中使用这些技巧,增强流利度和自信。这不仅是语言学习的一部分,更是您在实际交流中不可或缺的能力提升。
利用shadowspeaks、shadow speech等方法,伴随视频进行口语练习,必定能使您在英语学习的旅程中达到新的高度。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
