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Why water is really, really weird | 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 water is really, really weird | 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.Water

2.You might not see it, but this is

3.Here's why

4.Every molecule of water on the Earth and inside you or any other living thing has existed for billions of years

5.After it came to Earth, that water has been through rocks, air, animals, plants and back again

💡 Tap the highlighted words to see definitions and examples

Key Vocabulary (CEFR B2)

subscribe

A2

To sign up to have copies of a publication, such as a newspaper or a magazine, delivered for a period of time.

Example:

"Thanks for watching. Don’t forget to subscribe! :)"

featureless

B1

Without distinguishing features.

Example:

"and take a good look at this colourless, featureless"

cycling

A2

To ride a bicycle or other cycle.

Example:

"After it came to Earth, that water has been cycling"

objects

A2

A thing that has physical existence.

Example:

"objects from the edge of our solar system."

hydrogen

A2

The lightest chemical element (symbol H), with an atomic number of 1 and atomic weight of 1.00794.

Example:

"hydrogen and oxygen."

floating

A2

Of an object or substance, to be supported by a liquid of greater density than the object so as that part of the object or substance remains above the surface.

Example:

"floating ice has enabled complex life to survive and evolve on our planet,"

despite

A2

Disdain, contemptuous feelings, hatred.

Example:

"despite the many ice ages that have frozen the Earth's surface solid."

they're

A2

A A2-level word commonly used in this context.

Example:

"They're so good at it"

molecules

A2

The smallest particle of a specific element or compound that retains the chemical properties of that element or compound; two or more atoms held together by chemical bonds.

Example:

"Water molecules can float upwards, against the force of gravity."

incredible

A2

Too implausible to be credible; beyond belief; unbelievable.

Example:

"Each molecule has been on an incredible voyage"

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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
education
CEFR Level
B2
Duration
196
Total Words
532
Total Sentences
65
Average Sentence Length
8 words

Downloadable Dictation Resources & Materials

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