跟读练习: Give me 9min, and I'll improve your storytelling skills by 176% - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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Hey there!
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Storytelling is one of the most powerful tools to hook your listeners and keep them glued to every word you say.
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But hey, a lot of the advice that is out there make it sound way too complicated.
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But the truth is storytelling is actually pretty simple if you know what really matters.
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If you just give me 9 minutes,
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you'll discover the 5 storytelling techniques to tell insanely good stories.
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But before we do that,
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let me show you a quick example by John Krasinski,
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whom you might know from The Office.
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It's a 20 second story,
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so really short, but it's so powerful.
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By the end of today,
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you'll know exactly how to tell stories just like him.
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And then I said, yeah,
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and he says, who are you visiting here?
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I said, my wife.
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And he says, is she an actress?
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And I said, yeah.
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He said, would I know her?
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And I, I don't know, man.
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Her name's Emily Blunt.
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And he goes, he goes, you?
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And I went, yeah.
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And he goes, you?
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You married Emily Blunt.
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And I go, yeah.
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And he goes, he goes, okay, go.
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Did you notice what he did there?
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He didn't just summarize the events.
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He didn't say, oh yeah,
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back then I was at customs and the agent asked me what I was doing
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and I responded I was an actor and he was very surprised.
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He doesn't do that.
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He doesn't summarize the events.
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Instead, he zoomed into the moment of the story.
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The best stories don't just summarize events.
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They don't stay at that helicopter level.
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They zoom into the moment.
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They take us into the trenches.
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They let us be part of that physical moment.
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The good thing is it's not that difficult.
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I'm now going to show you five techniques that you can use in all of your stories.
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First technique, location.
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Say where you are.
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The best stories start by stating the location.
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Where are you physically?
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Examples.
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Two weeks ago, I'm sitting on my couch in my living room,
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taking a deep breath.
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Or September 2019, I'm standing in front of the conference room,
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ready to walk inside.
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Now, why does it matter to state the location?
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Because the moment you say conference room or living room,
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your audience will start to visualize it.
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They're like, oh yes, I know a conference room.
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And they start to visualize their version of that conference room.
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Now, beginner storytellers, they often do the mistake that they give too many details.
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They're like, oh, in that conference room there was a big table,
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a television and a wooden floor.
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Don't do that.
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Don't do that.
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It doesn't matter.
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Just state the location as long as they can visualize it.
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It doesn't matter all the details.
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They have their own version of that location.
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Second technique, actions.
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What are you doing in that specific moment of the story?
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Instead of giving way too much context about all the random stuff that doesn't matter,
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matter, just say what are you doing in that specific moment.
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That can be walking, biking,
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shouting, reading, waiting, whatever it is.
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Just state the action, state the verbs.
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Examples, I'm in my office,
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I open my laptop and start reading a message by my manager.
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Or two weeks ago, I'm at the airport waiting in line at security.
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Why does it matter to state the actions?
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Because Because it brings in forward momentum.
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It takes the listener right into the moment.
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When you do that, your audience will immediately know that you won't waste their time.
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You're straight away taking them into the most important part of the story.
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Third technique, thoughts.
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What are you thinking?
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We as humans have thousands and thousands of thoughts every single day.
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A lot of those thoughts are hopes,
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dreams, plans, fears, worries, crazy thoughts.
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Now share some of those thoughts of that crucial moment of the story.
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Example, instead of saying, I was excited to meet my crush,
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say, I thought, ah, this would be so cool, right?
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Finally, I can see her after all that time.
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Or instead of saying, I was very disappointed about that presentation,
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say, I thought, oh man, this is bad, right?
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Everyone will think now I'm stupid.
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I can never go back there.
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Do you see the difference?
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It's a tiny tweak, but it makes any story more interesting.
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But hey, a common mistake is that people share thoughts that sound too professional, too intellectual.
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They say something like, I thought this represents a supreme opportunity.
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Would your thoughts actually sound like that?
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Probably not, right?
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And so what you want to do is when you share your thoughts,
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give us the raw, unfiltered thoughts.
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Give us those a little bit like ranchy,
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juicy, a little bit neurotic thoughts.
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Now that will make your story much more relatable.
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Fourth technique, emotions.
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What are you feeling?
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The best stories, they're emotional.
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They take the listeners on this emotional journey.
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And now with the thoughts with the previous technique,
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you know now one technique to make it more emotional.
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But there's another one.
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The simplest way is to just state an emotion.
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So you say something like, I was disappointed.
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I was relieved.
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I was happy.
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Now that is pretty standard, right?
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That is what most people do.
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But it's not ideal because it is not really visual, right?
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When you hear someone saying I was disappointed,
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well you cannot visualize it.
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And so the better way is to show the emotion,
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show how it looks on the body,
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on the face when you experience that emotion.
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Let me give you some examples.
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Instead of saying I was relieved,
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say in that moment I leaned backward and let out this
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big or instead of saying he was anxious say he kept tapping his pen on the on this table
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and he kept glancing up to the clock every few seconds
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do you see the difference showing the emotion makes it much
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more visual it takes us into the specific moment of the
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story technique number five dialogue what are you hearing many of
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your stories will have more than one character maybe a manager your friend,
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a co-worker, your dog, whoever it is.
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Now, what did the character say in that crucial moment of the story?
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What were the exact words?
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Examples.
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Instead of saying, my friend was very disappointed.
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Say, in that moment, my friend looked at me and said,
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Philip, what on earth was that?
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Or instead of saying, my manager was very happy with my work.
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Say, in that moment, my manager looked at me and said,
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wow, that was really the best presentation you've ever given.
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Now, do you see the difference?
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Dialogue is such a simple tool to make any story much more interesting.
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It is actually the tool that I use the most.
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But I guess there's just one thing to keep in mind.
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Similar as with the thoughts,
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share the dialogue that is a little bit more interesting,
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a little bit more juicy.
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If you say something like,
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in this moment, my manager said,
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well, I'm very dissatisfied with the inadequate execution of that project.
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Well, that would sound super boring, right?
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Instead, pick much more juicy,
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much more concise and catchy dollar.
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Alright, now that you know the five most important elements in storytelling,
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let's watch a quick one-minute video to see those elements in action.
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That story is by Sarah Willingham,
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who's a British entrepreneur, investor and CEO of Nightcap when you watch the story see how she zooms into the moment.
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Can you spot when she shares the location,
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the actions, the thoughts, the dialogue and the feelings?
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So in my mid-20s I was running acquisitions for Pizza Express and walked into a meeting room.
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I was two minutes late for the meeting and the person on the opposite side of the table,
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the lawyer, looked up and said oh thank goodness for that.
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Mine's white with one sugar please.
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So I I thought, okay, this is a moment.
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Walked round to the coffee,
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made him his coffee, put the coffee in front of him and said,
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would anybody else like a coffee?
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And nobody said anything.
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Nobody wanted one.
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I made myself a coffee and then sat back down again opposite him.
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And as he looked up,
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I watched the colour drain from his face as he realised this enormous assumption that he'd made.
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And it was such a beautiful moment in my career,
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really empowering, when I sat there and realized that actually this moment where I'd had imposter syndrome anyway,
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running a meeting like this,
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but I'd been completely misjudged by the people on the opposite side of the table,
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was actually this incredible superpower.
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Because guess who walked out with the deal?
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What an incredible storyteller, right?
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Today, you learned the foundations.
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You learned how to tell insanely good stories.
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But hey, there are also a few more advanced storytelling techniques out there.
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In case you want to go deeper on this journey,
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I would suggest to check out this next video in
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which you'll learn how to be a better storyteller than 99% of the people.
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See you there.

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为什么通过这个视频练习口语?

在当今社交媒体发达的时代,讲故事的能力变得愈发重要。这个视频提供了实用的技巧,帮助您提高故事叙述的技巧,从而让您的听众保持关注。通过练习视频中的叙述方式,不仅能够提升您的雅思口语练习能力,还能在日常交流中更加自信地分享自己的故事。学习如何选择合适的叙述细节和情感表达,是提高英语发音和口语流利度的关键。

语法与表达在语境中

视频中的叙述风格使用了多种有效的表达方式,以下是其中的几个关键结构:

  • 具体定位:故事开始于明确的地点,比如“我坐在客厅的沙发上”,这种方式能让听众更容易代入情境。
  • 对话形式:使用直接引语(如“我说,我的妻子”,或者“It’s you?”),可以增加故事的生动性。
  • 时态运用:根据故事的需要灵活运用过去式和现在式,使叙述更具时效性与真实感。

掌握这些有效的语法结构可以提升您的雅思口语考试表现和日常交流能力。在练习时,试着模仿视频中的表述,可以通过shadow speaks或shadowing site来加深您的语感。

常见发音陷阱

在视频中,有一些发音和重音方面的挑战,特别是与表达情感和细节相关的部分。以下是一些需要注意的点:

  • “you”:这个词在对话中频繁出现,注意重音部分,使其更自然。
  • “actress”和“married”:这两个词的发音在快速对话中可能会被忽略,建议慢下来练习,确保发音清晰。

通过重复这些发音,并结合shadow speak的练习,您将能有效提高您的发音准确度,并在与他人的对话中更加自信。记住,讲故事不仅仅是内容,更是音调和情感的结合,努力让自己的表达生动起来!

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。

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