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Why being bilingual is good for your brain | BBC Ideas – 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 being bilingual is good for your brain | BBC Ideas" 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.It used to be thought that being bilingual was a bad thing - that it would confuse or hold people back, especially children

2.Turns out, we couldn't have been more wrong

3.Learning new languages is an exercise of the mind

4.It's the mental equivalent of going to a gym every day

5.In the bilingual brain, all our languages are active, all at the same time

💡 Tap the highlighted words to see definitions and examples

Key Vocabulary (CEFR B2)

breakthrough

B1

An advance through and past enemy lines.

Example:

"A key breakthrough came back in 2007 in Toronto,"

important

A2

Having relevant and crucial value.

Example:

"is very important - not only for individuals, but also for societies."

individuals

B1

A person considered alone, rather than as belonging to a group of people.

Example:

"is very important - not only for individuals, but also for societies."

societies

A2

A long-standing group of people sharing cultural aspects such as language, dress, norms of behavior and artistic forms.

Example:

"is very important - not only for individuals, but also for societies."

exercises

A2

Any activity designed to develop or hone a skill or ability.

Example:

"exercises our brain."

challenge

A2

A confrontation; a dare.

Example:

"when speaking another, along with the mental challenge"

discovery

A2

Something discovered.

Example:

"when Ellen Bialystok and her team made a discovery"

suggested

A2

To imply but stop short of saying explicitly.

Example:

"It was the first study which suggested"

similarly

A2

(manner) In a like style or manner.

Example:

"Similarly your brain might be better connected at rest,"

scientists

A2

One whose activities make use of the scientific method to answer questions regarding the measurable universe. A scientist may be involved in original research, or make use of the results of the research of others.

Example:

"Scientists are discovering new upsides to being bilingual"

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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
basic
CEFR Level
B2
Duration
0
Total Words
737
Total Sentences
95
Average Sentence Length
8 words

Downloadable Dictation Resources & Materials

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