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  • If youre translating in your head, then you know that that’s a frustrating way to speak English.

  • But the good news is there are concrete things you can do and practice to stop

  • translating in your head and start thinking in English.

  • In this video were going to give you tips and strategies to start thinking in English,

  • stop translating in your head, and increase fluency speaking English.

  • And what a better way to start 2020 than with this goal.

  • First, I want you to name one reason why you want to start thinking in English.

  • I want to learn to think in English so I can easily participate in conversation.

  • Whatever your reason is, I know it’s a good one.

  • And I think in 2020, you can make that happen.

  • The first tip is to start simple and name objects around you in English.

  • I remember when I was learning German and I was doing this, I had to learn the article as well, der, die, das.

  • We don’t have that in English, but it doesn’t hurt to really focus on the pronunciation

  • as you're thinking of simple objects.

  • In fact, that’s why I started my YouTube channel and even my Academy

  • when I was learning German, French, and Italian as an opera student,

  • I couldn’t find any resources that focused enough on pronunciation.

  • And I knew that to be effective, I needed the right pronunciation right from the beginning.

  • So I created my YouTube channel and my Academy to put pronunciation forward.

  • So take a moment as youre naming objects to think about pronunciation.

  • Closet.

  • Box.

  • Million subscriber button.

  • Cool.

  • Globe.

  • Window.

  • And if youre not sure about the pronunciation, listen to some native speakers.

  • You can use an online dictionary. Also, Youglish is a great resource for this.

  • Computer, compute.

  • Theyre all saying with a flap.

  • Compu-- rarararara. A flap instead of TT, a T sound.

  • Computer. Computer.

  • Middle syllable stress.

  • If you can add this step, of focusing on the pronunciation and listening to native speakers,

  • awesome. If not, if you only have 15 seconds, and youre naming as many as you can, that’s okay too.

  • So that’s step one and it’s simple.

  • Take a moment, look around you, and name all of the objects that you can in English.

  • If you can do that very easily, then you can move on. But if that’s a challenge for you,

  • spend some time on object naming.

  • Every time youre in a new room, a new environment, take a few seconds to do it.

  • Note words you don’t know, look them up, learn them.

  • The context will help you remember them.

  • The next step is to think in simple sentences.

  • Stop right now and think of the beginning of a sentence: I’m---.

  • I’m hungry, I’m tired, I’m working.

  • Do it in English. I’ll wait a few seconds. You're starting with 'I'm...'

  • Now look around you.

  • What can you say about anything in your environment?

  • This chair is comfy.

  • The drawer is open.

  • My desk is messy.

  • That one’s easy because it’s almost always true.

  • If there’s something you can't describe, look up the words you need in a dictionary, memorize it.

  • Memorize that phrase.

  • Learning in context like this will help.

  • Speaking of dictionaries, see if you can do this.

  • Get an English-only dictionary rather than a translating dictionary

  • between English and your native language.

  • If you come across a word in English that you don’t know, use the English-only dictionary,

  • a Learner's dictionary.

  • Can you see what were doing here?

  • Were building your mind to work in English mode rather than translation mode.

  • There is a thing called a Learner’s dictionary, and it describes every word in English,

  • in simple words and terms.

  • Try it. Merriam-Webster has one,

  • Oxford, Cambridge.

  • If you have to learn and understand a word by reading in English,

  • by studying what it means in English, then youll know it as an English word.

  • Not as a translation of your language.

  • So youve named single words, and youve made simple sentences.

  • The next step is

  • Have small conversations with yourself in English.

  • With yourself? Yes,

  • you don’t feel pressure to speak quickly, to come up with the next thing.

  • You can keep the pace slow, relaxed.

  • I absolutely did this when learning Spanish.

  • In fact, I remember a car trip I did by myself

  • from Sarasota to Gainesville where the whole time I spoke to myself in Spanish.

  • If this is hard for you, stop and give up.

  • No! It will get better and easier with practice.

  • Do it every day.

  • Set aside 2 minutes every day to have a simple conversation with yourself.

  • Give yourself 30 days.

  • Do this every day for 30 days. Don't take a day off.

  • If you have five minutes one day, do it for five minutes.

  • A whole conversation, as simple as it needs to be, in English.

  • In 30 days, youll see. Wow. I did improve.

  • This is worth my time.

  • And rededicate 30 more days.

  • Once youre able to do this, I think youre able to do step 4, which is really exciting.

  • Change at least one of your everyday life things to English.

  • Everyday life things?

  • What's that?

  • Switch your calendar to English.

  • Use the English months and days of the week and write what youre going to be doing in English.

  • Or do you do to-do lists? Try it in English. A grocery list. Or change your Facebook settings

  • so that your language is in English.

  • Everything you see, you've got a friend request, and so on, will be in English.

  • Maybe try internet searches in English.

  • Or read an English newspaper, or listen to news in English.

  • Do you write a journal?

  • Try writing it in English. Yes! I love this.

  • Take one everyday thing and do it in English.

  • Switch your brain.

  • Every morning when you wake up, before you get out of bed,

  • take two minutes to think about your day in English.

  • Here’s another idea of an everyday thing you can do in English:

  • take one thing like getting dressed, making breakfast,

  • getting from your car to your desk, cleaning up.

  • As youre doing it, in your head, narrate in English.

  • Laundry day.

  • That's light, that should go there.

  • Let's see. Does this need to be sprayed for stains? Yeah.

  • Better spray it. Al l right, let's load up the washing machine.

  • That's too light, that should go there.

  • Okay, shove it all in.

  • Let's get some soap. Where is that?

  • Here it is.

  • Put it in there, close the door, press 'start', there we go!

  • And here's another one I love: learn how to do one thing in English.

  • It can be really small, like, how to poach an egg.

  • Research it and learn about it in English only,

  • watch only English videos and read only English instructions.

  • Or maybe it’s something bigger, a bigger project like how to knit or how to draw.

  • Take an online course in English only on that topic.

  • Pick something youre dying to know how to do anyway.

  • This will make it a super-enjoyable lesson.

  • The next step is something

  • youre actually going to want to be doing all along, with all the steps, and that’s...

  • keep track so youre doing it every day.

  • Once you choose that you want to think English and stop translating in your head,

  • write down every day what you do.

  • And of course, do this in English.

  • It could look like this:

  • Today I named everything around me that I could think of in English two different times.

  • I watched a 3-minute news story in English.

  • Just having a place to write it down can motivate you to do it.

  • And the last thing is something you can do every night after you lay down for bed,

  • but before you fall asleep.

  • Recap your day in English.

  • Youre taking advantage of this opportunity that youll have every day,

  • no matter where you are or what your day was like:

  • no one I know falls asleep the moment their head hits the pillow.

  • What a lovely day that was.

  • I got to meet my mom for lunch, go for a walk in the afternoon,

  • and I even had time to watch a movie after I put the kids down to bed.

  • And who knows, by putting your mind in English mode just before bed,

  • maybe youre even setting yourself up to dream in English, continuing your practice.

  • The brain does amazing things with what it’s learned that day while you sleep.

  • What have you done to build a consistent English practice to help you start to think in English?

  • Put it in the comments so others can learn from your best tips.

  • Which of these ideas is new to you?

  • Or which are you most excited about?

  • Let me know.

  • The next video I want you to watch is one with tips on increasing your vocabulary.

  • This can help with naming objects, and, of course,

  • starting to have those conversations with yourself in your head.

  • Please don’t forget to subscribe with notifications,

  • I make new videos on speaking English every Tuesday.

  • That’s it, and thanks so much for using Rachel’s English.

If youre translating in your head, then you know that that’s a frustrating way to speak English.

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A2 初級

英語で考える方法|頭の中で翻訳しなくてもいい! (How to THINK in English | No More Translating in Your Head!)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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