跟读练习: How to Live Greener in the City | B1 Listening Practice #luyennghetienganh - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

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Hey everyone, welcome back.
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Hey everyone, welcome back.
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I'm Jamie, and with me as always is Alex.
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Hey, really excited about today's topic because honestly,
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it's something I've been thinking about a lot lately.
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Same.
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Today we're talking about urban gardening and sustainable daily habits.
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Basically, how to live a greener life even when you're stuck in a concrete jungle.
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And we'll be using clear,
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natural English throughout, so it's great listening practice whether you're learning or just here for the tips.
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Let's get into it.
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Okay, Alex.
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Let's just address the number one excuse right away.
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I don't have space to grow anything.
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Oh, I've said that myself.
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I live in a pretty small apartment and my balcony is tiny.
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Right, but here's the thing.
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Tiny doesn't mean impossible.
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The first step is just paying attention to your sunlight.
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Like walk out to your balcony at different times of day.
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Morning, afternoon, evening.
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Where does the sun actually hit?
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That's something I never thought about.
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I just assumed my balcony was too shady.
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A lot of people do.
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But most vegetables only need about four to six hours of direct sun per day.
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So even a partially sunny balcony can work.
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Once you know your light situation,
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you can choose the right plants.
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Okay, so sunlight first.
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What's next?
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Think vertical.
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Instead of spreading plants out across the floor,
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which takes up your whole balcony, you grow upward.
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Wall-mounted shelves, hanging planters, stacked pots.
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You can literally double your growing area without using any extra floor space.
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That actually sounds kind of cool.
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Like a living wall.
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Exactly.
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And for what to grow?
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Stick with compact varieties.
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Dwarf tomatoes are great for pots.
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Leafy greens like lettuce and spinach grow fast and don't need deep soil.
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And herbs, but we'll get to those later.
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All right, so let's say I've set up my vertical planters.
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What's the biggest mistake beginners make next?
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Watering.
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Either too much or too little.
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And on a high-rise balcony,
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the wind dries out your soil way faster than at ground level.
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So you really need a system.
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A system?
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Like an irrigation system?
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Yeah, but nothing fancy.
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A DIY drip system is just a thin tube that slowly releases water right at the roots.
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You can connect it to a timer so your plants get watered automatically,
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even when you're not home.
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Oh, that's really practical.
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What about self-watering pots?
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I've seen those at the store.
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Those are awesome for beginners.
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There's a small reservoir at the bottom that holds extra water,
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and the plant draws moisture up as it needs it.
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So you're not guessing every day.
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Smart.
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What about soil?
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Can I just use regular dirt from outside?
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Please don't.
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Regular garden soil is too heavy for balconies.
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It can stress the building structure,
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and it drains really poorly.
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You want a lightweight potting mix.
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Something nutrient-rich but airy so water flows through easily.
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And I've heard mulch helps too?
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Yes.
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Put a layer of organic mulch on top of your soil.
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Dried leaves, straw, wood chips.
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It slows down evaporation so the soil stays moist longer.
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Really helpful during hot summers.
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Okay, composting.
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I feel like everyone talks about it,
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but it sounds kind of complicated or smelly.
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That's the biggest myth.
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Modern composting methods for apartments are actually odorless.
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Let me explain two options.
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Please do, because I really don't want my kitchen to smell like garbage.
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So the first option is a bakashi bin.
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It's a Japanese method.
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You put your kitchen scraps in an airtight container,
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add a special powder with microorganisms,
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and it ferments everything, fast and odorless.
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The cool thing is, it works with almost all food waste,
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including meat and dairy.
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Wait, really?
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Because I thought you couldn't compost meat.
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That's true for traditional outdoor composting.
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But Bakashi handles it.
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The second option is a worm farm.
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You keep a small bin of worms that eat your scraps and produce incredibly rich compost called worm castings.
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Okay, the worm thing sounds a little intense,
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but I'll take your word for it.
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Ha!
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Once you start, you actually get attached to your worms,
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and the liquid they produce,
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worm tea, is like a superfood for your plants.
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What about simpler stuff like coffee grounds?
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Great for acid-loving plants like tomatoes.
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And vegetable keels soaked in water for a few days make a gentle liquid fertilizer.
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Totally free.
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So composting basically closes the loop.
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Your kitchen waste feeds your garden.
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Exactly.
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That's the whole idea of a sustainable cycle.
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Nothing is wasted.
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Alright, let's zoom out a little.
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Urban gardening is great, but it's just one part of living more sustainably, right?
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Totally.
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And I think the easiest place to start is the kitchen.
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Specifically, reducing single-use plastics.
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Single-use meaning you use it once and throw it away.
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Right.
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Plastic bags, plastic wrap, disposable cutlery.
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These things take hundreds of years to break down,
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and a huge amount of them end up in the ocean.
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So what are the easy swaps?
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Beeswax wraps instead of plastic wrap.
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A reusable bottle instead of plastic bottles.
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Bamboo scrubbing brushes instead of plastic ones.
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Bamboo is great because it grows incredibly fast.
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Some types grow almost a meter per day.
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So it's one of the most renewable materials out there.
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I love that.
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What about clothing?
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I feel like fast fashion is something a lot of people don't think about environmentally.
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It's actually one of the most damaging industries on the planet.
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Fast fashion means cheap clothes.
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made fast, worn a few times, thrown away.
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The production process wastes enormous amounts of water and uses toxic chemicals.
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So the alternative is buying secondhand?
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Secondhand, vintage, or just buying less and choosing higher quality.
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In 2026, secondhand shopping is super mainstream.
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There are so many apps and platforms for it now.
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Better for your wallet, better for the environment.
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And energy at home, is that part of this too?
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Absolutely.
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Simple things like turning off lights,
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unplugging devices, washing clothes in cold water.
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And now, a lot of smart home systems use AI to optimize your energy automatically,
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learning your habits, and adjusting heating and cooling to reduce waste.
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The big idea here is being intentional, right?
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Making conscious choices.
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Exactly.
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You don't have to be perfect.
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You just have to be aware.
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So individual habits matter, but is there a bigger picture here?
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Like, what happens when people act together?
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This is where it gets really exciting.
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Community gardens and rooftop gardens are growing fast in cities all over the world.
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Unused rooftops get converted into shared growing spaces.
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They produce food, reduce the heat in cities,
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support local wildlife, and give residents a place to connect with nature.
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I love the idea of a rooftop garden in my building,
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though I'd have to convince my landlord first.
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Ha!
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That's actually a form of advocacy,
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speaking up for something you believe in.
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You could also join a seed swap,
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which is where gardeners trade seeds and tips,
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either in person or online.
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And there's a mental health angle to this too, right?
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Like, being around plants is actually good for you.
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Research backs this up completely.
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Regular interaction with nature reduces stress,
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improves mood, and gives you a sense of purpose.
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In a loud, busy city,
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having even a small green corner to tend can really change how you feel day to day.
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So, it's not just about the environment.
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It's about your own well-being, too.
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Exactly.
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And when you have the vocabulary to talk about these things,
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you can bring other people into the conversation and actually influence change around you.
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Language gives you the power to advocate.
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It really does.
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Okay, before we wrap up,
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what's the listener challenge this week?
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Pick just two things from today's episode.
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Maybe swap one single-use item in your kitchen.
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Maybe start saving your coffee grounds for your plants.
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Maybe look up a seed swap community near you.
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Just two things.
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Small steps done consistently.
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That's really the whole message today.
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And for your English practice,
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try writing five sentences using words from today and say them out loud.
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That's how vocabulary actually sticks.
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Thanks so much for listening, everyone.
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share this with a friend,
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whether they're learning English into sustainability or both.
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We'll see you next time.
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Keep growing.

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关于本课

在本课中,您将学习如何在城市生活中采取更环保的习惯,并专注于城市园艺的实践。通过聆听 Jamie 和 Alex 的对话,您将了解如何在有限的空间中种植植物,以及该如何选择适合您环境的植物。和我们一起提升您的英语口语能力,特别是在与可持续生活相关的主题上。此内容也适合所有想要提高英语水平的学习者,帮助您更好地理解并运用相关词汇。

关键词汇与短语

  • city gardening(城市园艺)
  • sustainable habits(可持续习惯)
  • limited space(有限空间)
  • sunlight(阳光)
  • vertical gardening(垂直园艺)
  • dwarf tomatoes(矮小番茄)
  • watering tips(浇水技巧)

练习建议

在这段视频中,Jamie 和 Alex 的对话节奏适中,非常适合进行 shadowspeak 练习。建议您尽量跟随他们的语速,尤其是当他们讨论观念时。您可以先聆听一遍,然后尝试模仿他们的发音与语调。这种练习不仅能提高您的英语发音,还能增强您的 英语口语练习 能力。

为了有效利用这次练习,您可以每次选择其中一句进行反复练习。可以考虑在不同的时间段来提升您在不同场景中的英语表达能力。记得注意语音的连读和重音,这是提高您英语沟通流畅度的重要部分。此外,建议使用 shadowing site 自带的音频特性,让您可以方便地重复播放更难的句子,以便更好地学习。

一旦您感觉掌握了基本的发音,可以尝试用自己的话复述视频中的主题,像是在进行 shadow speech。这有助于您更深入理解内容,同时提高您用英语表达环保相关观点的能力。

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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