跟读练习: 🏛 Museums | IELTS Speaking Part 1 | Model Answers and Vocabulary (2025) - 通过YouTube学习英语口语

B2
Hello, lovely.
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Hello, lovely.
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I'm Maria.
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And my name is Rory.
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And we are the hosts of the IELTS Speaking for Success podcast.
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The podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills,
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as well as your listening skills along the way.
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We've started this podcast to give you gorgeous grammar and fabulous vocabulary for your high IELTS score.
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Your band 9th score.
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Ay, Rory, you're so old.
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You're like a dinosaur.
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I know, I should probably put myself in the Natural History Museum now.
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But before that, let's talk about museums.
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Mmm, dear listener, museums!
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Do you often visit a museum?
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No, uh, oh wow, only when I have to for work really.
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I'm going to sound like a complete philistine now,
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but having gone to museums once,
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I don't often see the point in going back to them.
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Even if there's a new collection or something,
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I just have other things to do.
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When was the last time you visited a museum?
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Probably this summer.
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In fact, it was.
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I took my class to see the Museum of Oxford,
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which is a place dedicated to the social history of the city,
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for lack of a better term.
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tiny, but there was a lot to do, which was quite nice.
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Are there many museums in your hometown?
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Quite a few, actually, yes.
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The first one, in my opinion,
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is the McManus Galleries, which sounds like an art gallery,
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but is actually a collection of artefacts from around the world,
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and they're linked to Dundee,
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my hometown, in some way.
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I think that's quite cool,
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and it's free of charge to get in as well.
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Do you think museums are important?
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Um, well, it's probably quite important to have these repositories of items connected to people,
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places and things, yes.
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It can give people a chance to find out something new and develop a sense of connection to whatever the focus is.
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But they're not the most important thing by a country mile.
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Available for one month.
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After one month it goes into our super secret archive.
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To sign up for the archive click the link in the description below.
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See you soon!
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Rory was talking about galleries and you can say that this MacManus galleries sounds like an art gallery.
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You could say that about just about any museum to be honest.
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It sounds like a...
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Like, for example, maybe we have...
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Well, we could say, well,
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for example, in my country,
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we have Edinburgh Castle, which sounds like it's just a castle,
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but it's also a museum as well, a collection of artifacts.
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Yeah, or like the Louvre sounds like a museum,
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but it's much more than just one museum.
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It's this, I don't know, a cultural center.
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And a great place to pick up some free art if you're an art robber,
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an art thief.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Have you heard the news, dear listener?
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That the Louvre was robbed.
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Oh, what a joke.
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And the joke was like,
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oh, the Louvre was robbed and they found the jewels at the British Museum.
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I love that.
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The British Museum sounds like it's a museum about Britain,
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but actually it's a collection of artifacts stolen from around the world.
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Yeah, from Louvre, from Peru, from Machu Picchu. From everywhere.
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Oh, what a joke.
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Yeah, if you haven't heard the news,
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go have a read, to be in the know of the events,
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like what's going on.
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So people are starting talking about,
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oh yeah, we need a new film,
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how the louvre was robbed you know
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and a new sherlock holmes series the next phrase is um
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having gone to museums once i don't see the point in going back to them
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so we go back to different galleries we go back to museums we visit them again
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so yeah nice phrase of up to use the other thing is it's having gone to museums
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so it's like oh my god what would
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that be like ing form plus third form yeah it's crazy perfect participle we
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because like um i've gone to this museum so i've been there once
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and i don't understand why i should go back there you see
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and we make it more complicated so having gone to this museum once i don't see the point in going back.
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The next one is quite nice.
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I describe myself as a bit of a Philistine, dear listener.
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Someone who is not culturally connected or aware or has very simple opinions about things.
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A Philistine is a bit negative,
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a person who refuses to see the beauty or the value of art
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or culture so i'm a bit of a philistine usually you say you're a bit of a philistine
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but it's it's negative it's disapproving
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and i think museums can help people feel a sense of
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connection yes to the past connection to culture connection to art a sense of connection Ooh,
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you're connected to the world.
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What else can you have a sense of?
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A sense of...
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Fashion.
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A sense of fashion would be good.
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A sense of self or self-awareness.
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Yeah, a sense of achievement, for example.
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Ooh, yes.
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Yay, nice.
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And, dear listener, we say that we visit a museum or we go to museums.
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And Rory, what's going on with articles?
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So do I say I go to a museum,
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I go to the museum,
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or just I go to museum? museum.
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Or I say I go to museums.
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Definitely not I go to museum.
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We need some kind of article or something to tell us about the number here.
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Museums would be many.
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I go to many museums.
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That would be like a regular thing.
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I go to the museum would be talking about a specific museum.
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So you already need to talk about it before you say that.
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And then I go to a museum.
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Well, that would be like when you start to talk about it.
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Like I go to a museum.
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It's the natural history museum.
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Yeah, so you can say just museums.
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I like museums, I don't like museums,
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I never go to any museums,
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or the last time I visited a museum was last week or last year.
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So museums or maybe like a museum.
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When was the last time you went to a museum?
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Oh la la.
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That's a very good question.
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Perhaps in summer?
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I don't even remember.
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Maria, you philistine.
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No, no, no, no. I like museums.
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Like, what about...
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Does an art gallery count?
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Does a photo exhibition count?
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No. Sorry.
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No, okay, okay.
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Alright.
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Yeah, because I went to a photo exhibition to look at photos.
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Museum.
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Wow.
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That's a hard one, isn't it?
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It is a hard one,
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because it should be a proper museum, dear listener, yeah?
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Okay, maybe it was a year ago then, a proper museum.
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Something like history museum.
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Yeah, I remember nothing.
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So there we go.
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We need to, if you're listening,
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this is a problem, because if you haven't been to a museum recently,
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then might be a good time to go to the free museum.
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And we say that museums have a collection of something.
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So there is a collection of clothes or a collection of artifacts, different exhibits.
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And we can also say that this museum is dedicated to the social history of the city.
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So my favorite museum is Tata-ta,
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which is dedicated, which is about the history of the city,
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about the culture, about, I don't know, war.
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And when we talk about the things in the museum,
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we talk about the collection.
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For example, there might be an Egyptian collection,
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especially if it's the British Museum because they steal things.
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Maybe one day they will give them back. Who knows?
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No, no, no. Yeah, you have dinosaurs at the British Museum, right? Do we?
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I thought you only had them at the Natural History Museum.
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No, I don't know.
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I might be mistaken.
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I think you have some dinosaurs at the British Museum too, no?
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Maybe.
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I don't know.
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I've not been in about 10 years.
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Yeah, I've been there once.
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Yeah, amazing.
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is massive dear listener the british museum in london it's just massive huge yeah
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and you can say like okay it has a collection of
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artifacts different exhibits different things from all over the world
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and it's free of charge yeah the museum is free
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and i love it about london you know like you go
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to the national gallery it's free the british museum is free yeah the louvre is far from free
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but one day i think a month you can get there for free
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and i did that and then you stole the paintings no no it was ages ago yeah
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but it's funny jewels were stolen from from the louvre wow
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and maria has just got a whole lot of new jewelry what a coincidence yeah rory you said um repositories
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So.. a repository.
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Oh, a repository is really just a place where you store things.
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Usually a repository of knowledge,
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but could be something else.
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Yeah, like a repository or repository.
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A place where things are stored and can be found.
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So, for example, like, Rory is a repository of knowledge.
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So, like, Rory stores knowledge.
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He keeps all this knowledge inside his head.
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And you can say that this is a very nice museum,
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which is a repository of items connected to people, places, things.
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Rory, what did you mean when you said museums are not the most important thing by a country mile?
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Oh, if something happens by a country mile,
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it's just like by a big distance.
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So museums are not the most important thing.
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Like, they're not even close to being the top of the list of most important things.
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Is it an idea?
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It might be.
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Is it a C2 level idiom?
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Well, the Cambridge-like dictionary doesn't say actually,
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but they say country mile, mainly humorous.
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It's like, ha ha.
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If it doesn't say, then it must be C2.
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And it means like a large amount in this context.
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For example, the show was better than the last show by a country mile.
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Like it was much better.
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or for example like i missed my goal by a country mile
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and museums are not the most important thing by a country mile
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so it's like it really is not the most important thing in our life
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but it just does add i don't know more color it
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does they museums they add the knowledge they add the culture
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to our life they add they develop our sense of connection to the past right to the present and future.
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But you know what?
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Like my favorite museum, I love the museum of Van Gogh.
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But it's actually, it is a museum of Van Gogh in Amsterdam.
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But you can call it an art gallery because you see paintings.
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Van Gogh museum.
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Love it.
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And there you can see his masterpieces.
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Yeah, dear listener, just Google a couple of museums that you like or you would like to visit,
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for example, the Louvre, and read about them.
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Write out maybe like three five words about the museums for example my favorite is van gogh museum
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which contains his masterpieces masterpiece you know a nice word rory
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are we ready for a joke i have a museum joke we've heard vocabulary now we need a joke
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so the joke is delissa you ready i took my kids to the dinosaur museum today
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I spent the whole day looking up at the giant sculptures of dinosaurs.
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And I discovered a new species.
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My neck is sore.
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Come on, it's funny.
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It's very funny.
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You see, so at Dinosaur Museum,
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and when you look at the dinosaurs,
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they're usually quite tall, and you kind of,
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you look up, you know,
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and you spend a lot of time looking up and then what happens to your neck when you just look up?
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It gets sore or painful.
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Like that joke.
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You feel pain in your neck and we say that my neck is sore.
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Sore meaning like pain.
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Or for example, I have a sore throat.
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If you have pain in your throat.
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so like i was looking up at the giant sculptures of dinosaurs
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and i discovered i invented a new type of a dinosaur
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which is called my neck is so and
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if you remember different names for dinosaurs like oh what are they called like tyrannosaurus stegosaurus yeah like decasaurus
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or something like but my neck is sore.
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What did you say?
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Dekasaurus.
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Dekasaurus?
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Well, let's see, there's a Dekasaurus.
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No, I don't know, I don't know.
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Names of dinosaurs, but they're like funny names.
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Yeah, Tyrannosaurus, Stegosaurus, Velociraptor, Spinosaurus,
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so it's something like Saurus, you see?
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And the joke is like,
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I discovered, I invented a new type of dinosaur.
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My neck is sore.
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My neck is sore.
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My neck is sorus.
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Oh, it's funny.
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Come on.
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It's really good.
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Thank you very much for listening.
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And we'll get back to you in our next episode.
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Okay?
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Bye.
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Bye.
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Do you often visit a museum?
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No. Oh, wow.
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Only when I have to for work, really.
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I'm going to sound like a complete philistine now,
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but having gone to museums once,
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I don't often see the point in going back to them.
275
Even if there's a new collection or something,
276
I just have other things to do.
277
When was the last time you visited a museum?
278
Probably this summer.
279
In fact, it was.
280
I took my class to see the Museum of Oxford,
281
which is like a place dedicated to the social history of the city for lack of a better term.
282
It's tiny, but there was a lot to do, which was quite nice.
283
Are there many museums in your hometown?
284
Quite a few, actually, yes.
285
The first one, in my opinion,
286
is the McManus Galleries, which sounds like an art gallery,
287
but is actually a collection of artefacts from around the world,
288
and they're linked to Dundee,
289
my hometown, in some way.
290
I think that's quite cool,
291
and it's free of charge to get in as well.
292
Do you think museums are important?
293
Um, well, it's probably quite important to have these repositories of items connected to people,
294
places and things, yes.
295
It can give people a chance to find out something new and develop a sense of connection to whatever the focus is.
296
But they're not the most important thing by a country mile.

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本节课概述

在这一节中,您将通过观看一段关于博物馆的对话,来提高您的英语口语练习技能。通过此视频,您将学习如何自由地谈论博物馆的主题,增强您的表达能力。此外,您将会接触到与博物馆相关的重要词汇以及短语,这将有助于您在雅思口语考试中表现得更加自信。

重要词汇与短语

  • 博物馆 (Museum): 一个展示历史、艺术或科学的地方。
  • 社交历史 (Social history): 研究人类社会、文化发展及其演变的领域。
  • 文物 (Artefacts): 有历史或文化价值的物品。
  • 免费入场 (Free of charge): 无需支付费用。
  • 重要性 (Importance): 事物的意义或价值。
  • 链接 (Linked): 与某事物连接、相关。
  • 发现新事物 (Find out something new): 学习或了解之前未知的事物。

练习技巧

为了更好地利用本视频进行英语口语练习,您可以尝试以下方法进行shadow speaking(阴影说话)练习:

  • 首先,听录音时请注意两位讲者的语速和语调。视频中的对话语速适中,非常适合练习。
  • 暂停视频并模仿他们的语音语调。尽量跟随他们的节奏,让您的语调更自然。
  • 可以在观看视频之前,先阅读相关的词汇和短语,帮助您更好地理解对话内容。
  • 录下您自己的发音,与视频中的发音进行对比,找到需要改进的地方。
  • 持续重复这些练习,帮助您在雅思口语练习中变得更加灵活和自信。

通过这些练习,您将能够提升自己的听力和口语能力,让您的看YouTube学英语体验变得更加高效!

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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