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Why Do Some Bodies Respond Differently to Disease? | Erika Moore | TED – YouTube Dictation Transcript & Vocabulary

Welcome to FluentDictation, your best YouTube dictation website for English practice. Master this B2 level video with our interactive transcript and shadowing practice tools. We've broken down "Why Do Some Bodies Respond Differently to Disease? | Erika Moore | TED" into bite-sized segments, perfect for dictation exercises and pronunciation improvement. Read along with our annotated transcript, learn essential vocabulary, and enhance your listening skills. 👉 Start dictation practice

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Interactive Transcript & Highlights for Dictation

1.When I was younger, I just did not heal the same way

2.I would see these scabs, and, like, I'd pick at them, they'd take forever to close, and my brother's skin would just close right up

3.And then, you know, my sisters could have cramps, and they would just take ibuprofen, and it would be like nothing

4.And I would take ibuprofen, I would take a lot of ibuprofen, and I would get no response for my whole body

5.And so I just was like, "Why

💡 Tap the highlighted words to see definitions and examples

Key Vocabulary (CEFR B2)

biological

B2

A biological product.

Example:

"At first, I felt like I got the short end of the biological stick, right?"

differently

B1

(manner) In a different way.

Example:

"by tailoring your macrophages to respond differently to injury?"

macrophage

A2

A white blood cell that phagocytizes necrotic cell debris and foreign material, including viruses, bacteria, and tattoo ink. It presents foreign antigens on MHC II to lymphocytes. Part of the innate immune system.

Example:

"Macrophage immune cells are present."

important

A2

Having relevant and crucial value.

Example:

"These tissue models help us answer some really important questions."

violently

A2

In a violent manner.

Example:

"more violently than others?"

tailoring

A2

To make, repair, or alter clothes.

Example:

"by tailoring your macrophages to respond differently to injury?"

bioengineers

B1

A biologist or engineer whose speciality is bioengineering

Example:

"bioengineers who've asked and developed really cool applications,"

differences

B1

The quality of being different.

Example:

"What if we could cure autoimmune illnesses by accounting for disease differences"

training

A2

To practice an ability.

Example:

"that a lot of other people in academia and in traditional PhD training"

background

A2

One's social heritage, or previous life; what one did in the past.

Example:

"Like, we don't care about the background of the patients.""

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Grammar & Pronunciation Tips for Dictation Practice

1

Chunking

Notice how the speaker pauses after specific phrases to help comprehension.

2

Linking

Listen for connected speech patterns when words flow together.

3

Intonation

Pay attention to how pitch changes to emphasize important information.

Video Difficulty Analysis & Stats

Category
science-&-technology
CEFR Level
B2
Duration
271
Total Words
768
Total Sentences
87
Average Sentence Length
9 words

Downloadable Dictation Resources & Materials

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